Fanny Murray
Fanny Murray (1729 in Bath – 2 April 1778 in London[1][2][note 1]), née Fanny Rudman and later Fanny Ross, was an 18th-century English courtesan, mistress to John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich and dedicatee of the fateful Essay on Woman (1763) that led to the downfall of John Wilkes. A contemporary of Kitty Fisher and Charlotte Hayes, the "celebrated Fanny Murray" was one of the most prominent courtesans of her day; a celebrity and fashion leader who rose from destitution to wealth and fame, before settling down into a life of "respectable prosperity".[3] The Memoirs of the Celebrated Miss Fanny Murray are one of the first examples of the "whore's memoir" genre of writing,[4] although they are unlikely to have been actually written by Murray.[5]
Early life
The details of her life are not clear, coming as they do from often biased sources such as the Memoirs attributed to her. Most sources agree that Murray was born in
While she was in London, she was noticed by Jack Harris, a famous
Fame
With the support of Harris, Murray quickly rose to the top of London
"If Fanny Murray chuses to vary the fashion of her apparel, immediately every Lucretia in town takes notice of the change, and modestly copies the chaste original. If Fanny shews the coral centre of her snowy orbs—miss, to outstrip her, orders the stays to be cut an inch or two lower; and kindly displays the whole lovely circumference"
For a long time, she was the mistress of John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, who was so deeply enamoured of her as to hang a large nude portrait of Murray in his apartment, proudly showing it to guests.[18] Murray often appeared as a "nun" — a female guest — at the orgies of the Hellfire Club, a secret society with satanic trappings which Sandwich regularly attended,[19] and it is also likely that she was a member of the "harem" at the Divan Club, an orientalist group founded by Sandwich that was exclusive to noblemen who had visited the Ottoman Empire.[20]
Eventually she married Sir Richard Atkins, 6th Baronet. A famous anecdote about Murray tells that one night, she complained to him that she lacked money. He gave her a £20 note,[note 2] to which she declared "damn your twenty pound, what does it signify?", promptly placing the note between two pieces of bread and eating it.[3][21] The same story was later told of Kitty Fisher — possibly due to Casanova confusing Atkins's mistresses[22] — and Sophia Baddeley.[23] Her marital life appears to have been temperamental, and neither remained entirely monogamous. Atkins died suddenly in 1756 when Murray was just 27, leaving her heavily indebted.[12]
An Essay on Woman and later life
Unable to pay her debts, Murray was sent to a
In 1763, a
Sections of the poem were read out in the House of Lords, which found it blasphemous and obscene. Already accused of seditious libel for criticising the king in The North Briton, Wilkes fled the country and was expelled in absentia from the House and branded an outlaw. Although Murray was not the target of the poem — one biography of Wilkes described her presence in the poem as "little more than a matter of literary convention"[30] — the event caused considerable distress to Murray, and strained her marriage with Ross. It was public knowledge that Sandwich had been Fanny Murray's lover, and the hypocrisy of his actions were not lost on the public. Records from the era suggest that the very next night, Sandwich went to see The Beggar's Opera, which featured a similar act of betrayal by the character "Jemmy Twitcher". Quickly, the name Twitcher became associated with him.[29]
Despite the turmoil of her later years, Murray's marriage to Ross appears to have been a happy, monogamous one. When an anonymous poem besmirching Ross as an actor appeared, Murray offered twenty
Notes
- ^ Some sources give her date of death as 1770. Nevertheless, notices of her death only appear in gazettes from 1778.
- ^ Roughly equivalent Archived 2016-03-16 at the Wayback Machine to £2,000 in 2011 using the RPI.
- ^ In some versions, this line is "Awake, my Sandwich" instead.
References
- ^ a b The Annual Register, or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature, for the Year 1778. J. Dodsley. 1800 [1779].
- ^ "Marriages, births and deaths". The Scots Magazine. 40: 221. 1778.
- ^ ISBN 978-1448129539.
- ^ "Blaming and Shaming in Whores' Memoirs". History Today. 59 (8). 2009.
- ISBN 978-0521852371.
- ISBN 978-1861973023.
- ^ James Greenwood (1869). The Seven Curses of London.
- ISBN 978-1770482012.
- ISBN 978-0226812908.
- ISBN 978-0801444043.
- ISBN 978-0801444043.
- ^ a b c Horace Bleackley (1909). Ladies Fair and Frail; sketches of the demi-monde during the eighteenth century. London : J. Lane; New York, J. Lane company.
- ISBN 978-1406824445.
- ^ Lujo Bassermann (1967). The oldest profession: a history of prostitution. p. 148.
- ^ "Essay addressed to ladies on the present mode of dress". The Lady's Magazine or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex. 16: 190–191. 1785.
- ISBN 978-0199892419.
- ^ G (30 July 1757). "Leader". The Centinel. 1 (36): 169.
- ^ Philip, Earl of Hardwicke (1792). "Letter from Earl of Hardwicke to his son Viscount Royston". The Lawyer's and Magistrate's Magazine. 2: 334.
- ISBN 978-0300116670.
- ISBN 978-0754656265.
- ^ Horace Walpole (1818). Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to George Montagu, Esq. from the Year 1736 to the Year 1770. p. 36. (The original correspondence is dated 1748)
- ISBN 978-0801856662.
- ISBN 978-0820332185.
- ^ "Anecdotes of David Ross Esq". The Edinburgh Magazine, or Literary Miscellany. 12: 151. 1790.
- ISBN 978-1611484786.
- ISBN 978-0812237580.
- ISBN 978-0892369249.
- ^ D (July 1857). "Wilkes and the "Essay on Woman"". Notes and Queries: 1–2, 41–43.
- ^ ISBN 978-0199532001.
- ISBN 978-0754656265.
- ^ Charles Lee Lewes (1805). Memoirs of Charles Lee Lewis. Vol. 4. pp. 195–196.
- ^ "Biography: Life of David Ross Esqr". The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor. 2: 413–417. 1810.
External links
- Pride and Prostitution - SBS On Demand (Blue Ant Media)