Susan: Convict's daughter, soldier's wife, nobody's fool

by Stella Budrikis

Folder, 2017

Status

Available

Call number

PF MAS

Local notes

Susan was born in 1848 in Adelaide, South Australia, to Irish parents. She survived childhood destitution, the hardships of being an “off the strength” army wife and giving birth to fourteen children, all with a feisty spirit that refused to accept insults from anyone.

In telling Susan’s story, the author captures something of what life was like for those close to the bottom of the social ladder in the Victorian era, both in Australia and in Britain. The book is similar in genre to The Tin Ticket by Deborah Swiss

Publication

Independently published (2017), 168 pages

Description

Susan Mason, the child of an Irish convict, was uneducated but streetwise and canny. From colonial Adelaide to the barracks towns of the British Isles, she fought her way, sometimes literally, through life. One man called her a little whore. Her husband once accused her of being a drunkard. Life often dealt her a poor hand. Yet she managed to survive the poverty of her childhood, the indignities of being an army wife and the joys and tragedies of being a mother with her fighting spirit intact. In following her story and that of her family, the author reveals not only the complexity of Susan’s character, but also what life was like for women on the edges of society in the Victorian era.

Barcode

1652
Page: 0.0528 seconds