Mary Gainsborough


Mary "Molly" Gainsborough Fischer was the eldest surviving daughter of English painter Thomas Gainsborough and his wife, Margaret Burr. In her later years, Mary suffered from a mental disorder; it is often speculated that she experienced depression or early-onset dementia.

Biography

Birth and background

Mary was born on 31 January 1750 in Sudbury, Suffolk. Before her birth, her mother had given birth to a daughter of the same name, Mary. She had a younger sister Margaret.
Her father Thomas Gainsborough, an accomplished English painter and her mother Margaret Burr, the illegitimate daughter of the Duke of Beaufort, married in 1746.

Childhood

By 1752, at the age of two, Mary and her family had settled in Ipswich. Although the numbers of commissions for her father's portraiture increased, his clientele was primarily made up of local merchants and squires.
In 1759, her family moved within England again to Bath, living at number 17 The Circus. There, her father was capable of attracting fashionable clients. A year later, Mary was baptized on 3 February 1760.

London

In 1774, Mary and her family moved to London to live in Schomberg House at Pall Mall. A commemorative blue plaque was established on the house in 1951. In February 1780, Mary married Johann Christian Fischer, a contemporary of her father and German composer. She was thirty years old and he was seventeen years her senior.
Mary and her husband soon formed an attachment, however to her father's dismay, Fischer continued his flirtation with Peggy. In October 1780, the pair divorced; the marriage between them lasted only eight months, owing to Fischer's discord and deceit.

Later life and death

After her divorce and father's death, the sisters reconciled and soon returned to their parents' house. The two women lived together with their mother in Schomberg House until 1793. Peggy became the nurse and protector of Mary, now suffering from mental health issues. They stayed together until her sister's death in 1820. Less than a decade later, Mary died on 2 July 1826 at the age of 76. She is interred in the St Mary's Church in Hanwell.

Cited works

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