Charlotte Stoker


Charlotte Matilda Blake Thornley Stoker was an Irish charity worker, social reformer and writer, best known for being the mother of author Bram Stoker.

Early life

Charlotte Matilda Blake Thornley was born in 1818 in Sligo, Ireland, to Captain Thomas Thornley, a former soldier and member of the Royal Irish Constabulary, and Matilda Thornley. Stoker's father was Anglo-Irish and her mother was Irish. Stoker was the eldest of three siblings.

1832 Sligo cholera outbreak

Stoker lived in Sligo during the 1832 Sligo cholera outbreak. Two weeks into the epidemic, they fled to stay with relatives in Ballyshannon, returning when the epidemic resolved. When her family escaped, it impacted the rest of her life. In 1873, she recorded her experiences in Experiences of the Cholera in Ireland. Bram Stoker incorporated some of her stories about the epidemic into his literature, such as "The Invisible Giant" in Under the Sunset. Marion McGarry posites that her description of the epidemic also inspired Dracula.

Career

When her youngest child, George, turned eight, Stoker began her activist work for women, the poor, and the disabled. She belonged to the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland. Seeing the harsh workhouse conditions and speaking with women who wanted to be more than servants in poor households, she reported her findings to Dublin newspapers. She recommended that women in workhouses be taught cooking and framework so they could emigrate to English colonies, to "new countries there is a dignity in labour, and a self-supporting woman is alike respected and respectable."
In May 1863, Stoker supported the establishment of state schools for deaf-mute children. Her speech supporting the school was heard by William Wilde.

Personal life

In 1844, Thornely married Abraham Stoker, a senior civil servant. Together they had 7 children:
The Stoker family lived in Dublin, later moving to Clontarf. Charlotte, though untutored, provided their early education. Charlotte and Abraham had taken on considerable debt due to educating their sons. To survive on Abraham's pension more comfortably, they moved, with their two daughters, to France in 1872. They later moved to Italy, where Abraham died.
In 1885, Stoker returned to Dublin, where many of her children lived. At the end of her life, as Charlotte's eyesight failed, she feared going blind and hoped to die first.
Stoker died on 15 March 1901, in Rathmines, Dublin, Ireland, from influenza. She was either buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery or Saint Michan's.

Publications

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