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Catherina Boevey

Catherina Boevey (1669–1726) (or Bovey, nee Riches) (pronounced "Boovey"[2]), was a philanthropist.

Depiction of Boevey in Westminster Abbey
"Flaxley the seat of Mrs Bovey", contemporary engraving by Johannes Kip published in Robert Atkyns' "The Ancient & Present State of Gloucestershire" (1712). The armorials above show within a widow's lozenge escutcheon Boevey impaling Riches, the latter appearing as: Argent, three annulets gules. The arms of Riches of Kent are generally given however as Argent, three annulets azure[1] and may have been here incorrectly tinted on the Kip print, published in monochrome

Origins edit

 
Armorials of Riches of Kent, per Heralds' Visitations to County of Kent (17th century): Argent, three annulets azure

Catherina was born in London in 1669, the daughter of John Riches (1628–1718)[3] by his second wife Anne Davall, whom he had married in 1668, daughter of Thomas Davall, merchant of Amsterdam, by Anna Potts (b.1621, d.pre 1700), the daughter of Thomas (a.k.a. Abraham) Potts. Anna Davall (née Potts) mentions in her will dated 24 December 1688[4] her daughter Anna and her husband John Riches. Catherina's uncle was Sir Thomas Davall, knight, born at Amsterdam in 1644, attended Merchant Taylors' School and was knighted at Kensington Palace 19 June 1713.[5] She had a brother John Riches (dvp.1676) and a sister Anne Riches (d.1689), whose monument exists at Flaxley. "Katharine the Daughter of John & Ann Riches" was baptised on 1 May 1670 at All Hallows Lombard Street, London.[6] Riches was a wealthy merchant originally of Amsterdam who settled in the parish of St Laurence Pountney in London.[7] He was member of the Grocers Company and a Common Councilman of Dowgate (1678–83, 1689) and a Deputy in 1685. He was a Churchwarden of St Laurence Pountney 1680-2. Politically he was assessed as a "good", i.e. reliable, Tory.[8] Her mother is sometimes stated erroneously to have been a daughter of Sir Bernard de Gomme (d.1685), of Holland, Charles II's Military Engineer.[9] De Gomme certainly bequeathed her sister Anna Riches (d.1689) (John Riches' daughter) £300 in his will and supported the denization of Anna Potts (1621-pre 1700), her grandmother, termed in his will "a native of Amsterdam".[10]

Appearance and character edit

Catharina was a great beauty. In The New Atalantis of 1709 by Delarivier Manley[11] she is called Portia, in comparison to the Roman lady who lived 95–45 BC commended for her virtue in a funeral oration by Cicero. She is further described there as "One of those lofty, black, and lasting beauties that strike with reverence and yet delight". Catherine's personal qualities were praised by her contemporaries, Sir Richard Steele included, and her wit and urbanity were noted by Ballard who referred to her as having "great genius and good judgement", derived from her reading.[12]

Marriage edit

In 1684 aged 15 she was married to 17-year-old William Boevey (1667–1692), who in the previous year 1683 had inherited Flaxley Abbey, Gloucestershire, from his first cousin Abraham II Clark (1622–1683)[13] who had died without surviving issue. William was the son of the merchant, lawyer and philosopher James Boevey (1622–1696) by his second wife Isabella de Visscher. Although he lived only to the age of 25, he was given to "excesses, both in debauch and ill-humour," bringing much suffering to his wife; she never complained, however, but supported it all "like a martyr, cheerful under her very sufferings".[14] The short marriage was childless and Catherina remained a widow for the rest of her long life.

Widowhood edit

In 1692, when Mrs. Boevey was only twenty-two, her husband died, leaving her mistress of his estate of Flaxley[15] and as she was also the sole heiress of her wealthy father,[16] she at once became the centre of a crowd of wooers; Mrs. Bovey would listen to none.

Friendship with Mary Pope edit

By about 1686, aged 17, she had formed a strong friendship with Mrs. Mary Pope, daughter of John Pope, a Bristol merchant.[17] Seeing ample scope for a life of active benefactions, Catherina associated Mrs. Pope with her in her philanthropic career. The modern era has ascribed a possible element of lesbianism into the close friendship between the two women.[18]

Philanthropic career edit

Catherina Boevey distributed to the poor, relieved prisoners, and taught the children of her neighbours. Her gifts, which included the purchase and donation of an estate to augment the income of Flaxley Church,[19] a legacy to Bermuda, and bequests to two schools at Westminster, are listed on her monument in Flaxley Church. Particulars of her habits, and of how she dispensed her charities, appear in H. G. Nicholls's Forest of Dean, pp. 185 et seq.

Publicly esteemed edit

In 1702 George Hickes, in the preface (p. xlvii) to Linguarum Septentrionalium Thesaurus, calls Mrs. Bovey "Angliæ nostræ Hypatia Christiana." In 1714, Steele prefixed an Epistle Dedicatory to her at the start of the second volume of the Ladies' Library. "Do not believe that I have many such as Portia to speak of," wrote the author of The New Atlantis (p. 212); and the repute of her happy ways and generous deeds had not died out in 1807, when Fosbroke in his "History of Gloucestershire"[20] described her as "a very learned, most exemplary, and excellent woman".

Death and burial edit

She died at Flaxley Hall on Saturday, 18 January 1726, and was buried "in a most private manner", according to her own directions (Gent. Mag. lxii. pt. ii. 703).

Monuments edit

Physical edit

Westminster Abbey edit

 
Monument to Katharina Bovey in Westminster Abbey

A now lost monument was erected to Mrs. Bovey in Westminster Abbey, by her friend Mrs. Pope, shortly after her death and survived certainly as late as 1750. Ballard who called it "a beautiful honorary marble monument", wrote to a friend asking him to copy the inscription for him, telling him it was on the north side.[21] It is transcribed in Ballard's Ladies and in John Wilford's Memorials. There is however no mention of the monument or of Mrs. Boevey either in Mackenzie Walcott's Memorials of Westminster, (1851), or in Arthur Penrhyn Stanley's Westminster Abbey, (1882, 5th edition). The text was transcribed by Ralph Bigland in his "Historical, Monumental, and Genealogical Collections relative to the County of Gloucester" (1786–1794):[22]

"To the Memory of Mrs. CATHARINA BOVEY, whose Person and Understanding would have become the highest Rank in Female Life, whose Vivacity would have recommended her in the best Conversation; but by Judgement, as well as Inclination, she chose such a Retirement as gave her great Opportunities in Reading and Reflection, which she made Use of to the wisest Purposes of Improvement in Knowledge and Religion. Upon other Subjects she Ventured far out of the common Way of thinking; but in Religious

Matters she made the Holy Scriptures, in which she was well skilled, the Rule and Guide of her Faith and Actions, esteeming it more fate to rely upon the plain Word of God, than to run into any Freedoms of Thought upon revealed Truths, the great Share of Time allowed to the Closet was not perceived in her Economy; for she had always a well ordered and well instructed Family, from the happy Influence, as well of her Temper and Conduct, as of her uniform and exemplary Christian Life. It pleased God to bless her with considerable Estate, which, with a liberal Hand, guided by Wisdom and Piety, she employed to his Glory, and the Good of her Neighbours. Her domestic expenses were managed with a Decency and Dignity suitable to her Fortune; but with a Frugality that made her Income abound to all proper Objects of Charity, to the Relief of the Necessitous, and Encouragement of the Industrious, and the Instruction of the Ignorant. She distributed not only with Cheerfulness, but with Joy, which, upon some occasions of raising and refreshing the Spirit of the Afflicted, she could not refrain from breaking forth into Tears, flowing from a Heart thoroughly affected with Compassion and Benevolence. Thus did many of her good Works, while she lived, go up as a Memorial before God; and some she left to follow her. She died 21 Jan. 1726, in the 57th Year of her Age at Flaxley, her seat in Gloucestershire, and was buried there, where her Name will be long remembered, and where several of her Benefactions at that Place, as well as others, are particularly recorded. This Monument was erected, with the utmost Respect to her Memory, and Justice to her Character, by her Executrix Mrs. MARY POPE, who lived with her near 40 Years in perfect Friendship, never once interrupted till her much lamented Death"

Appended below was the following memorial to Mary Pope:

"To the Memory of MARY POPE, Daughter of JOHN POPE, of Bristol, Merchant, the Friend of Mrs. BOVEY, and Partner of her Virtues, who, after a Life spent in exemplary Piety, and full of good Works, died 24 March, in the Year of our Lord 1746, aged 81 Years"

Flaxley Church edit

On a large plain tablet of white marble is inscribed the following text:[23]

In the vault near this Chapel is reposited the Body of Mrs CATHARINA BOVEY, Daughter of JOHN RICHES, Esq. of London, Merchant. She was married to WILLIAM BOVEY, Esq. Lord of this Mannor of Flaxley, at the Age of 15, was left a Widow, without Children, at the Age of 22, and continued so all the rest of her Life. She entertained her Friends and Neighbours with a most agreeable Hospitality; but always took Care to have a large Reserve for Charity, which she bestowed, not only on such Occasions as offered, but studied how to employ it so as to make it useful and advantageous. Her Disposition to do good was so well known in the District about her, that she easily became acquainted with the Circumstances of those that wanted; and, as she preserved many Families from Ruin, by seasonable Loans or Gifts, so she conveyed her Assistance to some of better Rank, in such a Manner as made it doubly acceptable. How far her Bounty extended was known to herself alone; but much of it appeared, to her Honour and God`s Glory, in frequent Distributions to the Poor, and especially to the Charity Schools Round about the Country, in relieving those in Prison, and delivering many out of it, in contributing to the Churches of the English Establishment abroad, as well as aiding several at home, in cloathing and feeding her indigent Neighbours, and teaching their Children, some of whom every Sunday, by Turns, she entertained at her House, and condescended to examine them herself; besides this continual, it might be said this daily, Course of Liberality during her Life. She bequeathed at her Death, towards founding a College in the Island of Bermudas £500; to the Grey Coat Hospital, in St. Margaret`s, Westminster, £500; to the Blue Coat Hospital in Westminster, £500; to the Charity School of Christ Church, Parish of Southwark, £400; to augment the Living of this Place, £1200; to put out poor Children Apprentices, the Interest of £400 for ever; of which Summe £160 had been left by Mr. CLARKE and Mr. BOVEY; to be distributed, as her Executrix should think fit, among those whom she had put out Apprentices in her Life-time £400; lastly, she designed the re-building of this Chapel, which pious Design of hers was speedily

executed by Mrs. MARY POPE"

Also in Flaxley Church is a monument to her sister Anne inscribed:[23]

"ANNE RICHES, Daughter of JOHN RICHES, Esq. and only sister to Mrs. BOVEY, of Flaxley, departed this Life 5 Oct. 1689, which she had passed

in a religious Observance of her Duty towards God and her Parents; in tender Affection to her Relations; in Charity and Kindness to all; endued with this early Habit of Vertue, Death, however suddain, did not surprise her unprepared"

Literary edit

Mrs Boevey is widely believed to be the model of Sir Richard Steele "The Peverse Widow" who was wooed by Sir Roger de Coverley, published in The Spectator in 1711.[24][25]

Buildings & landscapes edit

Boevy was a close friend of Maynard I Colchester, who lived near Flaxley, and her own canal garden may have influenced the Dutch-style of his Westbury Court Garden.[26] The layout of the gardens and improvements to Flaxley Abbey were continued by her after her husband's death. However, due to the modification of the land, the Dutch-style gardens at Flaxley Abbey were eventually removed. The chapel, dedicated to St. Mary the Virgin, was extended by Mary Pope funded by a bequest in her will. In 1856 the nearby church replaced Boevey's refurbishment of the chapel at the Abbey's gate.[27]

Sources edit

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Bovey, Catharina". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

  • Agnew, David C.A., Protestant Exiles from France in the Reign of Louis XIV, or, The Huguenot Refugees and their Descendants in Great Britain and Ireland, Vol.3, London, 1874, pp.78–9

References edit

  1. ^ An index to the arms in The Visitations of Kent..., 2 vols., W. Bruce Bannerman (ed.), (Harleian Society, vols. 74 & 75, 1923–1924) by John Blythe Dobson
  2. ^ Debrett's Peerage, 1968, Crawley-Boevey baronets, p.89
  3. ^ DNB 1900, citing Wilford, Memorials of Eminent Persons, p. 746, Epitaph
  4. ^ TheGenealogist.co.uk, quoted in Foulds Family Tree RootsWeb
  5. ^ A Register of the Scholars Admitted into Merchant Taylor's School from AD 1562 to 1874
  6. ^ ancestry.com
  7. ^ Agnew, p.79
  8. ^ RICHES, John Co Co Dowgate, 1678–83, 1689, Dep, 1685 Lawrence Pountney Lane, 1677, St Lawrence Pountney, 1668, ChW, 1680-2 (1) GR (2) Living, 1706 (3) mar 1668, Anne Davall (4) Merchant (5) Tory ('good", 1682) (6) (1) Directory, 1677, Boyd 40142, H B Wilson, A History of the Parish of St Lawrence Pountney (1831), p 114 (2) H B Wilson, op cit, p 139 (3) H B Wilson, op cit, p 141 (4) Boyd 40142 (5) Directory, 1677, SP/29/418/199 (6) SP/29/418/199. From: Woodhead J.R., The Rulers of London 1660–1689: A biographical record of the Aldermen and Common Councilment of the City of London, 1966, pp. 134–143
  9. ^ DNB (Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. ix. 221-2)
  10. ^ Saunders, A.D. Fortres Builder: Bernard de Gomme, Charles II's Military Enguineer, 2004
  11. ^ New Atlantis iii. 208 et seq.
  12. ^ Williams, Carolyn D.; Escott, Angela; Duckling, Louise (2010). "A Woman of Extraordinary Merit: Catherine Bovey of Flaxley Abbey, Gloucestershire. by Jessica Munns and Penny Richards". Woman to Woman: Female Negotiations During the Long Eighteenth Century. University of Delaware Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-87413-088-1.
  13. ^ Dates per his monument at Flaxley Church
  14. ^ The New Atlantis of 1736 (iii. 208 et seq.)
  15. ^ DNB (Magna Britannia, 1720, ii. 834)
  16. ^ DNB (Ballard, British Ladies, p. 439)
  17. ^ Mary Pope's father named on Catherina's monument in Westminster Abbey
  18. ^ Traub, Valerie (2002). "Setting the stage behind the seen". The renaissance of lesbianism in early modern England. Volume 42 of Cambridge studies in Renaissance literature and culture. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 72 et seq. ISBN 0-521-44885-9.
  19. ^ Rudge, Thomas (1803). The History of the County of Gloucester: compressed and brought down to the year 1803. Vol. 2. Harris. p. 97.
  20. ^ Gloucestershire, p. 179
  21. ^ Nichols, Lit. Illustr. iv. 223
  22. ^ Transcribed by Bigland, History of Gloucestershire
  23. ^ a b Transcribed by Bigland, History of Gloucestershire
  24. ^ DNB (Gent. Mag. lxii. pt. ii. 703)
  25. ^ Humphreys, Jennett (1886). "Bovey, Catharina" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 06. London: Smith, Elder & Co. [Wilford's Memorials of Eminent Persons, pp. 745, 746; Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. ix. 221-2; Nicholls's Forest of Dean, pp. 185 et seq.; The New Atlantis, ed. 1736, iii. 208 et seq.; Fosbroke's Gloucestershire, 1807, ii. 177 et seq.; Ballard's British Ladies, 437 et seq.; Steele's Ladies' Library, Preface, 1714; Gent. Mag. 1792, lxii. pt. ii. 703.]
  26. ^ "Westbury Court Garden (Gloucestershire)". OPEN GARDENS UK & Ireland. Gardens-Guide.com. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  27. ^ 'Flaxley', A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 5: Bledisloe Hundred, St. Briavels Hundred, The Forest of Dean (1996), pp. 138–150. Date accessed: 16 October 2010.

catherina, boevey, 1669, 1726, bovey, riches, pronounced, boovey, philanthropist, depiction, boevey, westminster, abbey, flaxley, seat, bovey, contemporary, engraving, johannes, published, robert, atkyns, ancient, present, state, gloucestershire, 1712, armoria. Catherina Boevey 1669 1726 or Bovey nee Riches pronounced Boovey 2 was a philanthropist Depiction of Boevey in Westminster Abbey Flaxley the seat of Mrs Bovey contemporary engraving by Johannes Kip published in Robert Atkyns The Ancient amp Present State of Gloucestershire 1712 The armorials above show within a widow s lozenge escutcheon Boevey impaling Riches the latter appearing as Argent three annulets gules The arms of Riches of Kent are generally given however as Argent three annulets azure 1 and may have been here incorrectly tinted on the Kip print published in monochrome Contents 1 Origins 2 Appearance and character 3 Marriage 4 Widowhood 5 Friendship with Mary Pope 6 Philanthropic career 7 Publicly esteemed 8 Death and burial 9 Monuments 9 1 Physical 9 1 1 Westminster Abbey 9 1 2 Flaxley Church 9 2 Literary 10 Buildings amp landscapes 11 Sources 12 ReferencesOrigins edit nbsp Armorials of Riches of Kent per Heralds Visitations to County of Kent 17th century Argent three annulets azureCatherina was born in London in 1669 the daughter of John Riches 1628 1718 3 by his second wife Anne Davall whom he had married in 1668 daughter of Thomas Davall merchant of Amsterdam by Anna Potts b 1621 d pre 1700 the daughter of Thomas a k a Abraham Potts Anna Davall nee Potts mentions in her will dated 24 December 1688 4 her daughter Anna and her husband John Riches Catherina s uncle was Sir Thomas Davall knight born at Amsterdam in 1644 attended Merchant Taylors School and was knighted at Kensington Palace 19 June 1713 5 She had a brother John Riches dvp 1676 and a sister Anne Riches d 1689 whose monument exists at Flaxley Katharine the Daughter of John amp Ann Riches was baptised on 1 May 1670 at All Hallows Lombard Street London 6 Riches was a wealthy merchant originally of Amsterdam who settled in the parish of St Laurence Pountney in London 7 He was member of the Grocers Company and a Common Councilman of Dowgate 1678 83 1689 and a Deputy in 1685 He was a Churchwarden of St Laurence Pountney 1680 2 Politically he was assessed as a good i e reliable Tory 8 Her mother is sometimes stated erroneously to have been a daughter of Sir Bernard de Gomme d 1685 of Holland Charles II s Military Engineer 9 De Gomme certainly bequeathed her sister Anna Riches d 1689 John Riches daughter 300 in his will and supported the denization of Anna Potts 1621 pre 1700 her grandmother termed in his will a native of Amsterdam 10 Appearance and character editCatharina was a great beauty In The New Atalantis of 1709 by Delarivier Manley 11 she is called Portia in comparison to the Roman lady who lived 95 45 BC commended for her virtue in a funeral oration by Cicero She is further described there as One of those lofty black and lasting beauties that strike with reverence and yet delight Catherine s personal qualities were praised by her contemporaries Sir Richard Steele included and her wit and urbanity were noted by Ballard who referred to her as having great genius and good judgement derived from her reading 12 Marriage editIn 1684 aged 15 she was married to 17 year old William Boevey 1667 1692 who in the previous year 1683 had inherited Flaxley Abbey Gloucestershire from his first cousin Abraham II Clark 1622 1683 13 who had died without surviving issue William was the son of the merchant lawyer and philosopher James Boevey 1622 1696 by his second wife Isabella de Visscher Although he lived only to the age of 25 he was given to excesses both in debauch and ill humour bringing much suffering to his wife she never complained however but supported it all like a martyr cheerful under her very sufferings 14 The short marriage was childless and Catherina remained a widow for the rest of her long life Widowhood editIn 1692 when Mrs Boevey was only twenty two her husband died leaving her mistress of his estate of Flaxley 15 and as she was also the sole heiress of her wealthy father 16 she at once became the centre of a crowd of wooers Mrs Bovey would listen to none Friendship with Mary Pope editBy about 1686 aged 17 she had formed a strong friendship with Mrs Mary Pope daughter of John Pope a Bristol merchant 17 Seeing ample scope for a life of active benefactions Catherina associated Mrs Pope with her in her philanthropic career The modern era has ascribed a possible element of lesbianism into the close friendship between the two women 18 Philanthropic career editCatherina Boevey distributed to the poor relieved prisoners and taught the children of her neighbours Her gifts which included the purchase and donation of an estate to augment the income of Flaxley Church 19 a legacy to Bermuda and bequests to two schools at Westminster are listed on her monument in Flaxley Church Particulars of her habits and of how she dispensed her charities appear in H G Nicholls s Forest of Dean pp 185 et seq Publicly esteemed editIn 1702 George Hickes in the preface p xlvii to Linguarum Septentrionalium Thesaurus calls Mrs Bovey Angliae nostrae Hypatia Christiana In 1714 Steele prefixed an Epistle Dedicatory to her at the start of the second volume of the Ladies Library Do not believe that I have many such as Portia to speak of wrote the author of The New Atlantis p 212 and the repute of her happy ways and generous deeds had not died out in 1807 when Fosbroke in his History of Gloucestershire 20 described her as a very learned most exemplary and excellent woman Death and burial editShe died at Flaxley Hall on Saturday 18 January 1726 and was buried in a most private manner according to her own directions Gent Mag lxii pt ii 703 Monuments editPhysical edit Westminster Abbey edit nbsp Monument to Katharina Bovey in Westminster AbbeyA now lost monument was erected to Mrs Bovey in Westminster Abbey by her friend Mrs Pope shortly after her death and survived certainly as late as 1750 Ballard who called it a beautiful honorary marble monument wrote to a friend asking him to copy the inscription for him telling him it was on the north side 21 It is transcribed in Ballard s Ladies and in John Wilford s Memorials There is however no mention of the monument or of Mrs Boevey either in Mackenzie Walcott s Memorials of Westminster 1851 or in Arthur Penrhyn Stanley s Westminster Abbey 1882 5th edition The text was transcribed by Ralph Bigland in his Historical Monumental and Genealogical Collections relative to the County of Gloucester 1786 1794 22 To the Memory of Mrs CATHARINA BOVEY whose Person and Understanding would have become the highest Rank in Female Life whose Vivacity would have recommended her in the best Conversation but by Judgement as well as Inclination she chose such a Retirement as gave her great Opportunities in Reading and Reflection which she made Use of to the wisest Purposes of Improvement in Knowledge and Religion Upon other Subjects she Ventured far out of the common Way of thinking but in ReligiousMatters she made the Holy Scriptures in which she was well skilled the Rule and Guide of her Faith and Actions esteeming it more fate to rely upon the plain Word of God than to run into any Freedoms of Thought upon revealed Truths the great Share of Time allowed to the Closet was not perceived in her Economy for she had always a well ordered and well instructed Family from the happy Influence as well of her Temper and Conduct as of her uniform and exemplary Christian Life It pleased God to bless her with considerable Estate which with a liberal Hand guided by Wisdom and Piety she employed to his Glory and the Good of her Neighbours Her domestic expenses were managed with a Decency and Dignity suitable to her Fortune but with a Frugality that made her Income abound to all proper Objects of Charity to the Relief of the Necessitous and Encouragement of the Industrious and the Instruction of the Ignorant She distributed not only with Cheerfulness but with Joy which upon some occasions of raising and refreshing the Spirit of the Afflicted she could not refrain from breaking forth into Tears flowing from a Heart thoroughly affected with Compassion and Benevolence Thus did many of her good Works while she lived go up as a Memorial before God and some she left to follow her She died 21 Jan 1726 in the 57th Year of her Age at Flaxley her seat in Gloucestershire and was buried there where her Name will be long remembered and where several of her Benefactions at that Place as well as others are particularly recorded This Monument was erected with the utmost Respect to her Memory and Justice to her Character by her Executrix Mrs MARY POPE who lived with her near 40 Years in perfect Friendship never once interrupted till her much lamented Death Appended below was the following memorial to Mary Pope To the Memory of MARY POPE Daughter of JOHN POPE of Bristol Merchant the Friend of Mrs BOVEY and Partner of her Virtues who after a Life spent in exemplary Piety and full of good Works died 24 March in the Year of our Lord 1746 aged 81 Years Flaxley Church edit On a large plain tablet of white marble is inscribed the following text 23 In the vault near this Chapel is reposited the Body of Mrs CATHARINA BOVEY Daughter of JOHN RICHES Esq of London Merchant She was married to WILLIAM BOVEY Esq Lord of this Mannor of Flaxley at the Age of 15 was left a Widow without Children at the Age of 22 and continued so all the rest of her Life She entertained her Friends and Neighbours with a most agreeable Hospitality but always took Care to have a large Reserve for Charity which she bestowed not only on such Occasions as offered but studied how to employ it so as to make it useful and advantageous Her Disposition to do good was so well known in the District about her that she easily became acquainted with the Circumstances of those that wanted and as she preserved many Families from Ruin by seasonable Loans or Gifts so she conveyed her Assistance to some of better Rank in such a Manner as made it doubly acceptable How far her Bounty extended was known to herself alone but much of it appeared to her Honour and God s Glory in frequent Distributions to the Poor and especially to the Charity Schools Round about the Country in relieving those in Prison and delivering many out of it in contributing to the Churches of the English Establishment abroad as well as aiding several at home in cloathing and feeding her indigent Neighbours and teaching their Children some of whom every Sunday by Turns she entertained at her House and condescended to examine them herself besides this continual it might be said this daily Course of Liberality during her Life She bequeathed at her Death towards founding a College in the Island of Bermudas 500 to the Grey Coat Hospital in St Margaret s Westminster 500 to the Blue Coat Hospital in Westminster 500 to the Charity School of Christ Church Parish of Southwark 400 to augment the Living of this Place 1200 to put out poor Children Apprentices the Interest of 400 for ever of which Summe 160 had been left by Mr CLARKE and Mr BOVEY to be distributed as her Executrix should think fit among those whom she had put out Apprentices in her Life time 400 lastly she designed the re building of this Chapel which pious Design of hers was speedilyexecuted by Mrs MARY POPE Also in Flaxley Church is a monument to her sister Anne inscribed 23 ANNE RICHES Daughter of JOHN RICHES Esq and only sister to Mrs BOVEY of Flaxley departed this Life 5 Oct 1689 which she had passedin a religious Observance of her Duty towards God and her Parents in tender Affection to her Relations in Charity and Kindness to all endued with this early Habit of Vertue Death however suddain did not surprise her unprepared Literary edit Mrs Boevey is widely believed to be the model of Sir Richard Steele The Peverse Widow who was wooed by Sir Roger de Coverley published in The Spectator in 1711 24 25 Buildings amp landscapes editBoevy was a close friend of Maynard I Colchester who lived near Flaxley and her own canal garden may have influenced the Dutch style of his Westbury Court Garden 26 The layout of the gardens and improvements to Flaxley Abbey were continued by her after her husband s death However due to the modification of the land the Dutch style gardens at Flaxley Abbey were eventually removed The chapel dedicated to St Mary the Virgin was extended by Mary Pope funded by a bequest in her will In 1856 the nearby church replaced Boevey s refurbishment of the chapel at the Abbey s gate 27 Sources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Bovey Catharina Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Agnew David C A Protestant Exiles from France in the Reign of Louis XIV or The Huguenot Refugees and their Descendants in Great Britain and Ireland Vol 3 London 1874 pp 78 9References edit An index to the arms in The Visitations of Kent 2 vols W Bruce Bannerman ed Harleian Society vols 74 amp 75 1923 1924 by John Blythe Dobson Debrett s Peerage 1968 Crawley Boevey baronets p 89 DNB 1900 citing Wilford Memorials of Eminent Persons p 746 Epitaph TheGenealogist co uk quoted in Foulds Family Tree RootsWeb A Register of the Scholars Admitted into Merchant Taylor s School from AD 1562 to 1874 ancestry com Agnew p 79 RICHES John Co Co Dowgate 1678 83 1689 Dep 1685 Lawrence Pountney Lane 1677 St Lawrence Pountney 1668 ChW 1680 2 1 GR 2 Living 1706 3 mar 1668 Anne Davall 4 Merchant 5 Tory good 1682 6 1 Directory 1677 Boyd 40142 H B Wilson A History of the Parish of St Lawrence Pountney 1831 p 114 2 H B Wilson op cit p 139 3 H B Wilson op cit p 141 4 Boyd 40142 5 Directory 1677 SP 29 418 199 6 SP 29 418 199 From Woodhead J R The Rulers of London 1660 1689 A biographical record of the Aldermen and Common Councilment of the City of London 1966 pp 134 143 DNB Notes and Queries 2nd ser ix 221 2 Saunders A D Fortres Builder Bernard de Gomme Charles II s Military Enguineer 2004 New Atlantis iii 208 et seq Williams Carolyn D Escott Angela Duckling Louise 2010 A Woman of Extraordinary Merit Catherine Bovey of Flaxley Abbey Gloucestershire by Jessica Munns and Penny Richards Woman to Woman Female Negotiations During the Long Eighteenth Century University of Delaware Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 87413 088 1 Dates per his monument at Flaxley Church The New Atlantis of 1736 iii 208 et seq DNB Magna Britannia 1720 ii 834 DNB Ballard British Ladies p 439 Mary Pope s father named on Catherina s monument in Westminster Abbey Traub Valerie 2002 Setting the stage behind the seen The renaissance of lesbianism in early modern England Volume 42 of Cambridge studies in Renaissance literature and culture Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 72 et seq ISBN 0 521 44885 9 Rudge Thomas 1803 The History of the County of Gloucester compressed and brought down to the year 1803 Vol 2 Harris p 97 Gloucestershire p 179 Nichols Lit Illustr iv 223 Transcribed by Bigland History of Gloucestershire a b Transcribed by Bigland History of Gloucestershire DNB Gent Mag lxii pt ii 703 Humphreys Jennett 1886 Bovey Catharina In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 06 London Smith Elder amp Co Wilford s Memorials of Eminent Persons pp 745 746 Notes and Queries 2nd ser ix 221 2 Nicholls s Forest of Dean pp 185 et seq The New Atlantis ed 1736 iii 208 et seq Fosbroke s Gloucestershire 1807 ii 177 et seq Ballard s British Ladies 437 et seq Steele s Ladies Library Preface 1714 Gent Mag 1792 lxii pt ii 703 Westbury Court Garden Gloucestershire OPEN GARDENS UK amp Ireland Gardens Guide com Retrieved 16 October 2010 Flaxley A History of the County of Gloucester Volume 5 Bledisloe Hundred St Briavels Hundred The Forest of Dean 1996 pp 138 150 Date accessed 16 October 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catherina Boevey amp oldid 1208756158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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