Henrietta Liston
Henrietta Liston was a British botanist and wife of diplomat Robert Liston. The National Library of Scotland has digitized her journals.
Biography
Early life
Henrietta was born on 19 December 1751 in Antigua to Scottish planter Nathaniel Marchant and his wife Sarah Nanton. Henrietta Marchant was baptized on 17 March 1752. Five of her 10 siblings died in childhood. She lost her mother when she was seven and her father when she was nine. Her father's will stated: 'To my daughter Henrieta Marchant £2000 c at 21 & 4 negros, her legacy if she die without issue to my 5 sons'. Henrietta therefore directly profited from slavery.After the death of her parents, she moved with her brothers to her maternal aunt's residence in Glasgow. Her step uncle James Jackson ensured she was educated. She could speak French, owned a guitar and music books, and read novels and newspapers.
Later life
Henrietta married diplomat Robert Liston when she was 44 and he was 53, on 27 February 1796. Unusually for the time, her marriage contract allowed Henrietta to maintain control over her own wealth. After their wedding, they traveled directly down to London where Robert met with King George III, ahead of his posting to the United States in 1796.While in the US, Henrietta Liston visited 16 states with her husband and collected botanical specimens that she sent back to Scotland. The couple also established friendships with George Washington and John Adams, of whom Henrietta's diaries contain favourable impressions. She also praises Alexander Hamilton, as "lively and animated in his conversation, gallant in his manners and sometimes brilliant in his sallies." She and her husband are credited with preparing an early foundation for the long-term "Special Relationship" between the United States and United Kingdom.
From their Philadelphia home, the Listons had travelled hundreds of miles north to Quebec in Lower Canada and south to Charleston, South Carolina. In May 1800, the couple had their portraits painted by Gilbert Stuart. They left the U.S six months later.
Henrietta later accompanied her husband to The Hague in 1802 and Copenhagen, Denmark in 1803. In 1812, her husband was reappointed ambassador in Constantinople. Henrietta kept a journal of her time in the Ottoman Empire and sent back botanical species from Turkey to her home in Scotland. Robert was knighted in 1816 and Henrietta became Lady Liston.
Robert retired in 1820 and the couple moved back to Scotland. They received many friends and visitors, including novelist Walter Scott. Henrietta died on 6 October 1828 and was buried in Gogar Kirkyard, Edinburgh. Her husband died in 1836.