Mary Symonds
Mary Ramsden, née Symonds, was an English watercolour painter. In 1801, she travelled with her sister, Elizabeth Gwillim, and her sister's husband, Sir Henry Gwillim, to Madras, India (now Chennai, where Henry was appointed puisne judge to the newly created Supreme Court of Madras. She resided in Madras until 1808, and during this time she produced a series of watercolours of local landscapes as well as a series of watercolours of Indian fish. Her letters are noteworthy for the insight they offer about life in early nineteenth-century Madras.
Biography
Mary Symonds was born in 1772, in Hereford, to Esther and Thomas Symonds. She had four sisters, Frances, Ann, Elizabeth, and Hester, and one brother, Thomas, who died in infancy prior to Mary's birth, in 1767. Frances also died in infancy.Her father, Thomas Symonds, was a builder, an architect, and a surveyor in Hereford. In 1775, he was employed as clerk of works for Richard Payne Knight, proponent of theories of picturesque beauty, at Downton Castle. Upon Thomas Symonds's death on 12 March 1791, his wife Esther Symonds assumed operation of the family business. She died in 1806.
In 1801, Mary travelled with her sister, bird artist Elizabeth Gwillim, and her sister's husband, lawyer Henry Gwillim, to Madras, India. Henry Gwillim had been appointed a Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court at Madras. Mary resided in Madras until 1808, at which point she returned to England with Henry Gwillim, arriving on 13 May 1809. Elizabeth had died in Madras the year prior.
Mary Symonds married John Ramsden, a captain in the East India Company’s mercantile fleet and the captain of the ship on which she returned from India, on 30 November 1809, at St Helen’s Bishopsgate. The couple settled in Bishopsgate. In 1818, they moved to Ivy Lodge, London Road, Twickenham. John was the son of Jesse Ramsden, a celebrated mathematician and scientific instrument maker, and Sarah, daughter of the optical instrument maker John Dollond.
Mary and John had two sons. Their second, John George Ramsden, was born in 1815 ; the first was born in 1813 and died in infancy. Following her husband's death, she remained in Twickenham and resided with her son and his wife. Mary died in 1854 and was buried at St Mary the Virgin in Twickenham on 28 January 1854.
Correspondence
Both Mary Symonds and her sister Elizabeth are significant historical figures due to the letters they sent from India to their mother and sister Hetty in England. The sisters’ letters, of which there are 70 in total, are held at the British Library. They cover such topics as climate, cuisine, botany, daily life in India, the inhabitants of India, and the sisters’ art practices. Mary wrote to a few other correspondents in addition to her mother and sister, including Reverend Thomas Clarke, Prebendary of Hereford, Herefordshire, and father of Richard Clarke, to whom she describes a visit to a "zenana," a Muslim women's residence. Mary also wrote a letter to Hetty recounting the cause and events of the Vellore mutiny, heavily criticizing "the ridiculous orders of government which principally occasioned the mutiny."The as well as can be accessed at the website of the research group The Gwillim Project.