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William Martin Leggett

William Martin Leggett (15 December 1808 – 25 April 1878[1]), also known as William Montague Clarence Campbell, was a Canadian and Australian poet and journalist, author of The Forest Wreath.

Early life Edit

Born on 15 December 1808, probably in the Bowery district of the city of New York,[2] William Martin Leggett grew up amid the forests and farms of Sussex Vale on the Kennebecasis River, New Brunswick, British North America. His parents – Joseph Regan Leggett and Mary, née Martin – both teachers, took charge of the so-called Indian Academy there, later establishing a school at their home Lansdale Cottage.[3] Both had their verse published in provincial newspapers, and William's maternal aunt Rachel Martin was also a teacher and poet.

William was educated by his parents. His own verse began appearing as early as 1827 and when his anthology The Forest Wreath was published in 1833 he was hailed as a prodigy.[4] He followed his parents into teaching but in 1835 turned from his Anglican upbringing to become a missionary in the Wesleyan Church, serving at posts in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and the island of Montserrat, West Indies, where he witnessed the devastating earthquake of 8 February 1843.[5] In 1839 at Bathurst, New Brunswick, William married Mary Ann Stevens, the daughter of devout Wesleyans. They had three children, only one of whom survived infancy.[6] William's second volume of verse, Sacred Poetry By a Wesleyan Minister, appeared in 1840.[7] In 1845 he left for England to pursue a career in letters, at which point he disappears from Canadian records.

Career in Australia Edit

In England he adopted a new identity, joining the British Army under the name William Alonzo Campbell, and in 1848 was shipped to Sydney, New South Wales, as part of a convict guard.[8] During the voyage he dedicated an ode to a fellow passenger, the pioneer photographer George Cherry, signing himself "a Knight Templar, XIth Foot (late the Bard of New Brunswick)".[9] William's life in New South Wales was peripatetic and varied: teacher at remote country schools, journalist, gold-digger, manager of a sheep and cattle run on the remote Castlereagh River, soup kitchen attendant in the slums of Sydney, police spy and settler.[10]

On 13 January 1851, at the Scotch Church in Bowenfels, New South Wales, William married again, this time to Charlotte Crawford, schoolteacher and governess, who had arrived in Sydney in 1849 as matron to a shipload of Irish Famine orphan girls. In the absence of any New Brunswick divorce record, it seems likely that this marriage was bigamous.

The family lived in genteel poverty, battling for food and shelter. At Bathurst, New South Wales, William wrote verse epics and reminiscences of New Brunswick for the Free Press newspaper as "William M. Leggett, M.A." and in Sydney he wrote newspaper verse as "A Knight Templar XIth Foot". By the early 1850s he had styled himself William Montague Clarence Campbell and by that name (or variants) he was known for the rest of his days, but for literary purposes he favoured pseudonyms. In Henry Parkes' Sydney-based Empire newspaper he advocated constitutional reform and Australian independence as "Alonzo". He wrote whimsical scraps for the Times of Singleton, New South Wales, as the "Man of the Caves, O.N.P." ("One of Nature's Peers") from his hermitage in the nearby Wombo (or Wambo) Mountains, and acted as the paper's Muswellbrook correspondent. Back in Sydney in 1864 he established the Woollahra Academy – grand in name only – and as "The Woollahra Hermit" wrote verse and essays for the Illustrated Sydney News. There too he advertised a threepenny weekly, the Woollahra Hermit's Own, and embarked on his never-published epic poem "Individuality; or, a Historical Sketch of the Mind of an Honest Man, struggling to surmount Religious, Political and Literary Obstacles".[11]

In the anti-Irish hysteria following Henry James O'Farrell's attempt on the life of royal visitor Prince Alfred at Clontarf, Sydney, in 1868, William was recruited by the Parkes government to spy on supposed Fenians in the streets and pubs of Glebe,[12] after which he contributed verse and stories to the virulently anti-Catholic Australian Protestant Banner as Campbell, "W.M.C.C." and "Clarence" of the "Theological Observatory".

Towards the end of 1868 William was given charge of the government school at Eurobodalla, on the south coast of New South Wales, arriving there a few months after the death of poet Charles Harpur. He penned nature verse like "A Night-Visit to the Oaks at Eurobodalla", and an ode over Harpur's grave on the hill at Euroma. He sent graphic accounts to the Sydney papers describing the floods on the Tuross River, relating how he and his son had fought through the waters to the assistance of Harpur's widow Mary.

Then in 1870, at Runnymede (now called Runnyford) on the banks of the Buckenbowra River inland from Batemans Bay, William set up a provisional school[13] and, with the aid of sons Rodolph (born 1854) and Alpheus (born 1858), hacked a farm out of the tall timber up the river. He called the place Lordsland. He continued to send verse to newspapers, corresponded with pioneer geologist William Branwhite Clarke, and sent cranky letters to The Australian Freemason on what he took to be the godless science of Thomas Huxley.

Royal claims Edit

William died at Lordsland on 25 April 1878, aged 70, and is probably buried on his property. His death certificate records his father as George IV, King of England and his mother as Lady Mary Campbell.[14] William's claim to royal blood was not new. In 1868 he had tried to persuade Parkes that he was the son of the Duke of Clarence (the future William IV), adopted under royal instruction by Sir Archibald Campbell, Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick.[15] Other, less spectacular claims – an M.A. from the University of Cambridge, membership of the Dragoon Guards, secretaryship to the Governor General of Canada, a stipendiary magistracy in the West Indies – are not borne out; and the claim in some Canadian sources that he took holy orders in the Anglican Church before he left New Brunswick is contradicted in his own later correspondence.[16]

William's literary career in Australia would never realise the promise of The Forest Wreath, but his newspaper verse – well crafted, sometimes droll, sometimes darkly visionary – and his lively, opinionated prose mark him as a writer of talent, and one who belongs as much to Australian literature as to that of Canada.

Poetry Edit

  • The Forest Wreath, St. John, N.B.: Durant and Sancton, 1833, via Internet Archive.
  • Sacred Poetry. By a Wesleyan Minister, Fredericton, N.B.: Printed at the Sentinel Office, 1840.

Selected individual works Edit

  • The Harp of New Brunswick
  • Memory
  • Fragment
  • The Minstrel to His Shadow
  • To the Lady of Lansdale
  • Fragment
  • Freemasonry (by The Rev. Brother W. M. Leggett, M.A.)
  • Ode to Free Masonry (by A Knight Templar, XIth Foot)
  • British America v. Australia (by Alonzo)
  • Lines Suggested by the Advice of a Friend to "Take Things Easy" (by Alonzo)
  • Stanzas. From an Unpublished Work, by W. M. Leggett, M.A.
  • Reminiscences of a Traveller by William M. Leggett, M. A. - British America. No. III
  • Melody. Inscribed to the Lady of Lansdale. By William M. Leggett, M. A.
  • Scenes in the Ancient Terra Incognita, Since Converted into the Province of New Brunswick, British America: or Sketches of Indian Life. By William M. Leggett, M. A.
  • A Miner's Dirge, by W. A. M. C. Campbell
  • The Soul of Education. An Essay. From the Prose Pen of the Woollahra Hermit
  • Mammon. By the Woollahra Hermit
  • What Am I? By the Woollahra Hermit
  • Individuality; or, a Historical Sketch of the Mind of an Honest Man, struggling to surmount Religious, Political and Literary Obstacles – Literary Prospectus
  • Another and More Destructive Flood at Eurobodalla (by W. M. C. C.)

References Edit

  1. ^ Date of birth from statement by W. M. Leggett, 2 June 1835, PANB, MC990, F9729, Wesleyan Methodist Church Foreign Missions; Canadian sources give varying dates: Aiton, "about 1812;" MacFarlane, "about 1813;" LaVorgna (2009), 1813 etc. Date of death for William Montague Clarence Campbell from NSW BDM Deaths, 04912/1878.
  2. ^ For addresses and occupations of William's parents see Longworth's American Almanac, New York Register, and City Directory for each year 1802 to 1817 except 1805; the family is also recorded at addresses in the Bowery in the U.S. Census of 1810 and Aliens Return of 1812.
  3. ^ For a description of the Leggetts' Lansdale Cottage school in 1844 see LaVorgna (2016), 171.
  4. ^ The Forest Wreath, St. John, N.B.: Durant and Sancton, 1833.
  5. ^ William's missionary correspondence in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, 1836–45, is at PANB MC990, Wesleyan Church Foreign Missions. His correspondence with London from Montserrat and Bermuda, 1843–44, is at SOAS MMS/West Indies Correspondence/FBN 21 and FBN 27.
  6. ^ Mary Cameronia (born 1840); Eliza Fox (born 1842) and Charles Edward (born 1845) both died in infancy.
  7. ^ Sacred Poetry. By a Wesleyan Minister, Fredericton, N.B.: Printed at the Sentinel Office, 1840. The flyleaf of the copy held by Dalhousie University, Halifax, N.S., has a handwritten dedication from the author signed "W.M.L."
  8. ^ British Army Regimental Muster Rolls and Pay Lists (WO12), PRO Reel 3704 (Vol. 2876), Reel 3705 (Vols. 2877 and 2879) and Reel 3706, via Australian Joint Copying Project, National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ Candice Bruce, "George Cherry", in The Dictionary of Australian Artists: Painters, Sketchers, Photographers and Engravers to 1870, ed. Joan Kerr, Melbourne: OUP, 1992, 146–7; also online at Design & Art Australia Online. The original poem is held among Cherry family papers, Sydney.
  10. ^ See Vening for further details.
  11. ^ A "Literary Prospectus" is online via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ Correspondence, NSWSA: NRS 906, 4/768, Special bundles [Colonial Secretary].
  13. ^ Correspondence, NSWSA: NRS 2621, 1/775 and 1/812 (Eurobodalla) and NRS 2621, 1/853, 1/883, 1/917, 1/951 and 1/976 (Runnymede).
  14. ^ NSW BDM Deaths, 1878/04912. The NSW BDM History of the Registry page highlights William's claim.
  15. ^ Parkes Papers, 1833–96, SLNSW, CYA 878 and 888; and NSWSA: NRS 906, 4/768/1. See also Woodhams and Darcy.
  16. ^ Letter to Bishop of Sydney, 6 November 1866, Sydney Diocesan Archives [1993/052/008] Bishop of Sydney–Correspondence 1862–1867.

Sources Edit

  • "W. M. Leggett: (author/organisation)". AustLit: Discover Australian Stories. University of Queensland.   Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license and the GNU Free Documentation License.
  • Provincial Archives of New Brunswick (PANB).
  • University of London School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS).
  • NSW Registry of Births Deaths & Marriages – Deaths (NSW BDM Deaths).
  • New South Wales State Archives (NSWSA).
  • State Library of New South Wales (SLNSW).
  • The Daily Sun, Saint John, N.B., 11 April 1885; and 23 April 1894, via Daniel F. Johnson's New Brunswick Newspaper Vital Statistics, PANB.
  • MacFarlane, W. G., New Brunswick Bibliography. The Books and Writers of the Province, Saint John, N.B.: Sun Printing Company, 1895, 51–2, via Internet Archive.
  • Aiton, Grace, "Strange William Martin Leggett, New Brunswick's Gloomiest Bard", The Maritime Advocate and Busy East, 46:6, February 1956, 13–18.
  • LaVorgna, Koral (2009), "William M. Leggett" at New Brunswick Literary Encyclopedia.
  • LaVorgna, Koral (2016), "Lessons in Mid-Nineteenth Century New Brunswick Teacher Careerism", PhD Dissertation, University of New Brunswick, via UNB Libraries Scholar Research Repository.
  • Vening, Chris, "William Martin Leggett: The 'Bard of New Brunswick' in Australia", Script & Print: Bulletin of the Bibliographic Society of Australia and New Zealand, 40:4, 2016, 199–221, via Informit; includes select bibliography.
  • Woodhams, Denis, and Michael D'Arcy, "Buckenboura's Royal Blood–William Montague Clarence Campbell", Journal of the Moruya and District Historical Society, June 1999, 8-9; September 1999, 8-9; December 1999, 8-9; and March 2000, 8-9.

Further reading Edit

  • Watson Smith, T., History of the Methodist Church within...Eastern British America, Vol. II, Halifax, N.S.: S. F. Huestis, n.d., via Internet Archive.
  • Tremblay, Tony, et al, "William M. Leggett" at New Brunswick Literature Curriculum in English, n.d.

william, martin, leggett, american, poet, writer, journalist, william, leggett, william, leggett, writer, december, 1808, april, 1878, also, known, william, montague, clarence, campbell, canadian, australian, poet, journalist, author, forest, wreath, contents,. For the American poet writer and journalist William Leggett see William Leggett writer William Martin Leggett 15 December 1808 25 April 1878 1 also known as William Montague Clarence Campbell was a Canadian and Australian poet and journalist author of The Forest Wreath Contents 1 Early life 2 Career in Australia 3 Royal claims 4 Poetry 5 Selected individual works 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further readingEarly life EditBorn on 15 December 1808 probably in the Bowery district of the city of New York 2 William Martin Leggett grew up amid the forests and farms of Sussex Vale on the Kennebecasis River New Brunswick British North America His parents Joseph Regan Leggett and Mary nee Martin both teachers took charge of the so called Indian Academy there later establishing a school at their home Lansdale Cottage 3 Both had their verse published in provincial newspapers and William s maternal aunt Rachel Martin was also a teacher and poet William was educated by his parents His own verse began appearing as early as 1827 and when his anthology The Forest Wreath was published in 1833 he was hailed as a prodigy 4 He followed his parents into teaching but in 1835 turned from his Anglican upbringing to become a missionary in the Wesleyan Church serving at posts in Nova Scotia New Brunswick and the island of Montserrat West Indies where he witnessed the devastating earthquake of 8 February 1843 5 In 1839 at Bathurst New Brunswick William married Mary Ann Stevens the daughter of devout Wesleyans They had three children only one of whom survived infancy 6 William s second volume of verse Sacred Poetry By a Wesleyan Minister appeared in 1840 7 In 1845 he left for England to pursue a career in letters at which point he disappears from Canadian records Career in Australia EditIn England he adopted a new identity joining the British Army under the name William Alonzo Campbell and in 1848 was shipped to Sydney New South Wales as part of a convict guard 8 During the voyage he dedicated an ode to a fellow passenger the pioneer photographer George Cherry signing himself a Knight Templar XIth Foot late the Bard of New Brunswick 9 William s life in New South Wales was peripatetic and varied teacher at remote country schools journalist gold digger manager of a sheep and cattle run on the remote Castlereagh River soup kitchen attendant in the slums of Sydney police spy and settler 10 On 13 January 1851 at the Scotch Church in Bowenfels New South Wales William married again this time to Charlotte Crawford schoolteacher and governess who had arrived in Sydney in 1849 as matron to a shipload of Irish Famine orphan girls In the absence of any New Brunswick divorce record it seems likely that this marriage was bigamous The family lived in genteel poverty battling for food and shelter At Bathurst New South Wales William wrote verse epics and reminiscences of New Brunswick for the Free Press newspaper as William M Leggett M A and in Sydney he wrote newspaper verse as A Knight Templar XIth Foot By the early 1850s he had styled himself William Montague Clarence Campbell and by that name or variants he was known for the rest of his days but for literary purposes he favoured pseudonyms In Henry Parkes Sydney based Empire newspaper he advocated constitutional reform and Australian independence as Alonzo He wrote whimsical scraps for the Times of Singleton New South Wales as the Man of the Caves O N P One of Nature s Peers from his hermitage in the nearby Wombo or Wambo Mountains and acted as the paper s Muswellbrook correspondent Back in Sydney in 1864 he established the Woollahra Academy grand in name only and as The Woollahra Hermit wrote verse and essays for the Illustrated Sydney News There too he advertised a threepenny weekly the Woollahra Hermit s Own and embarked on his never published epic poem Individuality or a Historical Sketch of the Mind of an Honest Man struggling to surmount Religious Political and Literary Obstacles 11 In the anti Irish hysteria following Henry James O Farrell s attempt on the life of royal visitor Prince Alfred at Clontarf Sydney in 1868 William was recruited by the Parkes government to spy on supposed Fenians in the streets and pubs of Glebe 12 after which he contributed verse and stories to the virulently anti Catholic Australian Protestant Banner as Campbell W M C C and Clarence of the Theological Observatory Towards the end of 1868 William was given charge of the government school at Eurobodalla on the south coast of New South Wales arriving there a few months after the death of poet Charles Harpur He penned nature verse like A Night Visit to the Oaks at Eurobodalla and an ode over Harpur s grave on the hill at Euroma He sent graphic accounts to the Sydney papers describing the floods on the Tuross River relating how he and his son had fought through the waters to the assistance of Harpur s widow Mary Then in 1870 at Runnymede now called Runnyford on the banks of the Buckenbowra River inland from Batemans Bay William set up a provisional school 13 and with the aid of sons Rodolph born 1854 and Alpheus born 1858 hacked a farm out of the tall timber up the river He called the place Lordsland He continued to send verse to newspapers corresponded with pioneer geologist William Branwhite Clarke and sent cranky letters to The Australian Freemason on what he took to be the godless science of Thomas Huxley Royal claims EditWilliam died at Lordsland on 25 April 1878 aged 70 and is probably buried on his property His death certificate records his father as George IV King of England and his mother as Lady Mary Campbell 14 William s claim to royal blood was not new In 1868 he had tried to persuade Parkes that he was the son of the Duke of Clarence the future William IV adopted under royal instruction by Sir Archibald Campbell Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick 15 Other less spectacular claims an M A from the University of Cambridge membership of the Dragoon Guards secretaryship to the Governor General of Canada a stipendiary magistracy in the West Indies are not borne out and the claim in some Canadian sources that he took holy orders in the Anglican Church before he left New Brunswick is contradicted in his own later correspondence 16 William s literary career in Australia would never realise the promise of The Forest Wreath but his newspaper verse well crafted sometimes droll sometimes darkly visionary and his lively opinionated prose mark him as a writer of talent and one who belongs as much to Australian literature as to that of Canada Poetry EditThe Forest Wreath St John N B Durant and Sancton 1833 via Internet Archive Sacred Poetry By a Wesleyan Minister Fredericton N B Printed at the Sentinel Office 1840 Selected individual works EditThe Harp of New Brunswick Memory Fragment The Minstrel to His Shadow To the Lady of Lansdale Fragment Freemasonry by The Rev Brother W M Leggett M A Ode to Free Masonry by A Knight Templar XIth Foot British America v Australia by Alonzo Lines Suggested by the Advice of a Friend to Take Things Easy by Alonzo Stanzas From an Unpublished Work by W M Leggett M A Reminiscences of a Traveller by William M Leggett M A British America No III Melody Inscribed to the Lady of Lansdale By William M Leggett M A Scenes in the Ancient Terra Incognita Since Converted into the Province of New Brunswick British America or Sketches of Indian Life By William M Leggett M A A Miner s Dirge by W A M C Campbell The Soul of Education An Essay From the Prose Pen of the Woollahra Hermit Mammon By the Woollahra Hermit What Am I By the Woollahra Hermit Individuality or a Historical Sketch of the Mind of an Honest Man struggling to surmount Religious Political and Literary Obstacles Literary Prospectus Another and More Destructive Flood at Eurobodalla by W M C C References Edit Date of birth from statement by W M Leggett 2 June 1835 PANB MC990 F9729 Wesleyan Methodist Church Foreign Missions Canadian sources give varying dates Aiton about 1812 MacFarlane about 1813 LaVorgna 2009 1813 etc Date of death for William Montague Clarence Campbell from NSW BDM Deaths 04912 1878 For addresses and occupations of William s parents see Longworth s American Almanac New York Register and City Directory for each year 1802 to 1817 except 1805 the family is also recorded at addresses in the Bowery in the U S Census of 1810 and Aliens Return of 1812 For a description of the Leggetts Lansdale Cottage school in 1844 see LaVorgna 2016 171 The Forest Wreath St John N B Durant and Sancton 1833 William s missionary correspondence in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia 1836 45 is at PANB MC990 Wesleyan Church Foreign Missions His correspondence with London from Montserrat and Bermuda 1843 44 is at SOAS MMS West Indies Correspondence FBN 21 and FBN 27 Mary Cameronia born 1840 Eliza Fox born 1842 and Charles Edward born 1845 both died in infancy Sacred Poetry By a Wesleyan Minister Fredericton N B Printed at the Sentinel Office 1840 The flyleaf of the copy held by Dalhousie University Halifax N S has a handwritten dedication from the author signed W M L British Army Regimental Muster Rolls and Pay Lists WO12 PRO Reel 3704 Vol 2876 Reel 3705 Vols 2877 and 2879 and Reel 3706 via Australian Joint Copying Project National Library of Australia Candice Bruce George Cherry in The Dictionary of Australian Artists Painters Sketchers Photographers and Engravers to 1870 ed Joan Kerr Melbourne OUP 1992 146 7 also online at Design amp Art Australia Online The original poem is held among Cherry family papers Sydney See Vening for further details A Literary Prospectus is online via National Library of Australia Correspondence NSWSA NRS 906 4 768 Special bundles Colonial Secretary Correspondence NSWSA NRS 2621 1 775 and 1 812 Eurobodalla and NRS 2621 1 853 1 883 1 917 1 951 and 1 976 Runnymede NSW BDM Deaths 1878 04912 The NSW BDM History of the Registry page highlights William s claim Parkes Papers 1833 96 SLNSW CYA 878 and 888 and NSWSA NRS 906 4 768 1 See also Woodhams and Darcy Letter to Bishop of Sydney 6 November 1866 Sydney Diocesan Archives 1993 052 008 Bishop of Sydney Correspondence 1862 1867 Sources Edit W M Leggett author organisation AustLit Discover Australian Stories University of Queensland Material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported license and the GNU Free Documentation License Provincial Archives of New Brunswick PANB University of London School of Oriental and African Studies SOAS NSW Registry of Births Deaths amp Marriages Deaths NSW BDM Deaths New South Wales State Archives NSWSA State Library of New South Wales SLNSW The Daily Sun Saint John N B 11 April 1885 and 23 April 1894 via Daniel F Johnson s New Brunswick Newspaper Vital Statistics PANB MacFarlane W G New Brunswick Bibliography The Books and Writers of the Province Saint John N B Sun Printing Company 1895 51 2 via Internet Archive Aiton Grace Strange William Martin Leggett New Brunswick s Gloomiest Bard The Maritime Advocate and Busy East 46 6 February 1956 13 18 LaVorgna Koral 2009 William M Leggett at New Brunswick Literary Encyclopedia LaVorgna Koral 2016 Lessons in Mid Nineteenth Century New Brunswick Teacher Careerism PhD Dissertation University of New Brunswick via UNB Libraries Scholar Research Repository Vening Chris William Martin Leggett The Bard of New Brunswick in Australia Script amp Print Bulletin of the Bibliographic Society of Australia and New Zealand 40 4 2016 199 221 via Informit includes select bibliography Woodhams Denis and Michael D Arcy Buckenboura s Royal Blood William Montague Clarence Campbell Journal of the Moruya and District Historical Society June 1999 8 9 September 1999 8 9 December 1999 8 9 and March 2000 8 9 Further reading EditWatson Smith T History of the Methodist Church within Eastern British America Vol II Halifax N S S F Huestis n d via Internet Archive Tremblay Tony et al William M Leggett at New Brunswick Literature Curriculum in English n d Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Martin Leggett amp oldid 1158495618, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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