Sarah Wentworth (née Cox; 1 January 1805–14 July 1880) was an Australian apprentice and litigant, who brought the first breach of promise suit in Australia. During such, she was represented by barrister and statesman William Wentworth, her future husband.

Sarah Wentworth
Born
Sarah Cox

1 January 1805
Sydney, Australia
Died14 July 1880(1880-07-14) (aged 74–75)
Eastbourne, England
Resting placeOcklynge Cemetery, Eastbourne
Spouse
(m. 1829; died 1872)
Children10

Life

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Sarah's parents, Francis Cox and Frances Morton, the former a blacksmith, had been convicts. They had completed their sentences by the time of her birth. They had never married as the former had a family in England. They lived in Sydney Cove.[1]

By the time of Payne's marriage proposal, Sarah was living at the home of a Mrs. Foster, a milliner for whom she worked as an apprentice. She later worked at a butcher's shop set up by her partner William Wentworth.[2]

Breach of promise suit

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In 1825, Sarah brought a breach of promise lawsuit against Captain John Payne, who had withdrawn his marriage proposal. Hers was the first breach of promise case to be tried in Australia. She was represented by Wentworth, newly a barrister. Payne, who vowed to Sarah "that his eyes might drop out of his head if he did not fulfil his promise of marriage," cheated on her with a wealthier widow by the name of Mrs. Leverton, following which Cox sent him a volley of invective-filled letters. Payne was found guilty and ordered to pay £100 in damages.[3][1][4]

Relationship with William Wentworth

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Vaucluse House, which Wentworth lived in and oversaw[1][2]

Sarah and Wentworth became romantically involved whilst he was representing her. That year, Wentworth began leasing the 295-acre Petersham Estate and from mid 1825 the two lived there together. In 1825, Sarah and Wentworth named their first daughter Thomasine in honour of Sir Thomas Brisbane, former Governor of New South Wales (Thomasine was born only 6 months after her court case against Payne). Sarah and Wentworth moved into Vaucluse House a few years later, where Sarah lived a comfortable but secluded life.[2][1]

On 26 October 1829 at St Philip's Church, Sydney, Sarah married Wentworth.[1] Three days prior to their marriage, a love poem to Sarah authored by Wentworth appeared in his own paper, The Australian:

For I must love thee, love thee on,
'Till life's remotest latest minute;
And when the light of life is gone,—
Thou'll find its lamp—had thee within it.[5][2]

William Wentworth would in 1830 father a child out of wedlock with Jamima Eagar, the estranged wife of Edward Eagar.[2]

Carol Liston, biographer of Sarah Wentworth, noted that her commissioning of various domestic duties was fundamental to the success of her husband and children.[1] As her husband grew old, she took on much of the administration of his business interests.[6]:98-99

Finances

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Sarah Wentworth received a small income from the Sydney properties formerly owned by her father, who died in 1831.[6]:98 William Wentworth set up a trust fund for her which accrued funds from land sales or mortgages he entered into from 1845, payable should he die or go bankrupt. Sarah Wentworth secured £24,416 before surrendering her right to a dower from future sales in February 1853, prior to departing for England; her signature was required to release the dower funds on each sale, and her husband was in the midst of settling financial affairs.[6]:37-38

Societal treatment

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Sarah Wentworth was long ill-treated owing to her convict heritage and the circumstances of her involvement with William.[1] Her invitation, alongside those of two other women, to the annual Queen's Birthday Ball in 1847 became the subject of controversy, and she was _targeted by a vicious campaign opposing their invitation to Government House. The controversy flared over May and June, before the women indicated to Lady Mary FitzRoy, wife of the governor, that they would not attend functions at Government House and apologised for what had occurred.[6]:47-52

After moving from Sydney in 1853, Sarah wrote of London that it was a “place where women are treated better than any other place … for they are loved and cared for here”.[6]:62

She later came to be accepted by high society. She became acquainted with the Sir John Young and Lady Young whilst Sir Young was Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands on Corfu whilst the Wentworths were in Europe. Upon returning to Sydney, she was regularly invited to Government House. She wrote that "all the nice families ... call on us." A ball was held for the Wentworth family at Roslyn Hall in modern-day Kings Cross in September 1862 featuring the Vice-Regal couple and other distinguished guests, by which point only Sarah Wentworth's son-in-law Thomas Fisher looked down upon the family.[2]

Wentworth Mausoleum

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Sign at the Wentworth Mausoleum acknowledging Sarah Wentworth's role in supervising its design
 
Brass plaque in Memory of Sarah Wentworth on the inside wall of the Wentworth Mausoleum

Sarah was instrumental in the design of the heritage-listed Wentworth Mausoleum. The vault, according to newspaper descriptions, was constructed as Sarah had desired, and she commissioned the chapel built above it.[7]

As early as 1831, following the death of Sarah's father, Francis Cox, William Wentworth intended to have land consecrated and to build a family vault at Vaucluse. This did not eventuate in his lifetime but Wentworth had informed his family that he wished to be buried near a rocky outcrop on the hill above Parsley Bay. The site was visible from the front verandah of the house and overlooked both the harbour and the estate.[7]

After Wentworth's death at the family's rented estate, Merley House, Wimborne, Dorset, England in March 1872, Sarah Wentworth sent her son-in-law Thomas Fisher a sketch of the location and instructions that a vault was to be hewn out of a large single rock on the slope but "left in its natural state outside". Sarah informed Fisher that she would travel to Brussels to order marble for the vault and would also bring "some Iron gates and railing to enclose it". The vault was to be large - Eliza wrote: 'it was Papa's wish to have my grandfather, my Uncle & Willie & Bell & poor Nellie & we should all like to be there when our time comes.[7]

Sarah accepted the New South Wales Government's proposal to accord her husband the honours of a public funeral. The funeral service for Wentworth was held at St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney, on 6 May 1873. The only women admitted to the congregation of 2,000 were female members of Wentworth's family.[7]

Sarah commissioned the architects Mansfield Brothers to design a chapel to be constructed over the vault. The chapel's Gothic Revival design seemingly was intended to complement the Vaucluse estate's other Gothic style buildings. By November 1873 the chapel was still incomplete: "Men are working, but as Miss W said they are drunk and away oftener than at work". The stone and iron palisade fence was erected by early March 1874.[7]

The brass plaque commemorating Sarah Eleanor may have been responsible for the long-held belief that her mother, Sarah, was buried in the mausoleum. Despite her desire for the family to "all rest together in our native place", Sarah was buried in July 1880 in Ocklynge Cemetery at Eastbourne, Sussex. On 15 December 2015, a brass plaque to the Memory of Sarah Wentworth was placed in the Mausoleum.[7]

Family

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Andrew Tink, biographer of her husband, notes that Wentworth relied on "persuasion rather than force" in getting her children to act.[2] The Wentworths had seven daughters and three sons:[6]:24-25

Legacy

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Writing about her lawsuit, Alecia Simmons in The Sydney Morning Herald in 2008 described then-Sarah Cox as "a fiercely independent 18-year-old".[4] She was nineteen at the time.[1]

A biography was written about Sarah Wentworth by Carol Listen in 1988. Referencing this, Grace Carroll writes:

Although William Charles Wentworth continues to be heralded as a significant figure in Australian history, Sarah's story has not been forgotten. Liston's 1988 biography, Sarah Wentworth: Mistress of Vaucluse, made a significant contribution to revealing Sarah's prominent position in her family and home, suggesting that she may well have been the strong and refined woman represented in Simonetti's bust. As a result, visitors to Vaucluse House today learn of the woman who played a vital role in establishing the House and the Wentworth family legacy. Her story brings to life the lot of a colonial woman whose experiences were both extraordinary, yet representative of that of many 'currency lasses.'[1]

A brass plaque commemorating her was installed in the Wentworth Mausoleum in 2015.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Carroll, Grace (8 December 2015). "The Wentworths – Hidden in Plain Sight". Portrait magazine. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Tink, Andrew (2009). William Charles Wentworth : Australia's greatest native son. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74175-192-5.
  3. ^ "SUPREME COURT, TUESDAY, MAY 17,1825". Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser. 19 May 1825. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
  4. ^ a b Simmonds, Alecia (21 June 2008). "For same-sex couples, the law must embrace love". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
  5. ^ Wentworth, William Charles (23 September 1829). "TO SARAH". The Australian. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Liston, Carol (1988). Sarah Wentworth: Mistress of Vaucluse. Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales. ISBN 0949753343.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Wentworth Mausoleum and site". New South Wales State Heritage Register. Department of Planning & Environment. H00622. Retrieved 2 June 2018.   Text is licensed by State of New South Wales (Department of Planning and Environment) under CC BY 4.0 licence.
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