Heywood Manuscript
The Heywood Manuscript is a collection of handwritten copies of letters and poems of the Heywood family, and letters from their relatives and friends, which was completed in 1798, and to which some explanatory passages have been added. Most of the letters and poems are by Hester "Nessy" Heywood and younger brother Peter Heywood, and the transcription and reproduction of their correspondence and poetry may have been instigated by Peter as a lasting monument to his sister Nessy, who had devoted herself to him and his release when he was imprisoned on HMS Hector awaiting his court-martial in connection with the Mutiny on the Bounty, and had died very young.
There are five known versions of the manuscript, which were produced for members of the Heywood family. Two are privately owned, the other three are in libraries:
- Manx [National Heritage Library], Heywood Manuscript
- Newberry Library, Chicago, Nessy Heywood, Correspondence 1790-92
- State Library of [New South Wales], Mary Heywood, Letterbook .
In the library catalogue of the New South Wales State Library there is a note that the manuscript was possibly produced by Nessy's older sister, Mary Heywood. It is assumed that the inscription Mary Heywood on the first page is Mary’s handwriting. A second inscription Aunt to Bessie Fleetwood Castle Lawn Douglas suggests that Mary left the manuscript to her niece Elizabeth Fleetwood, the daughter of Mary's and Nessy's youngest brother Edwin Holwell.