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was the second daughter of John Griffin. a liveryman and later a governor of
the Goldsmith's Company, and his wife Jane Guillemard. There was Huguenot blood
on both sides of her family. She was born in 1792, was well educated, and her
father being well-to-do had her education completed by much travel on the
continent. Her portrait painted when she was 24 by Miss Romilly at Geneva shows
her to have been a pretty girl with charm and vivacity. She had been a friend of
(Sir) John Franklin's first wife who died early in 1825, and in 1828 became
engaged to him. They were married on 5 November and in 1829 he was knighted.
During the next three years she was much parted from her husband who was on
service in the Mediterranean. In 1836 he was appointed lieutenant-governor of
Tasmania where they arrived on 6 January 1837.
Lady Franklin at once began to take an interest in the colony and did a good
deal of exploring along the southern and western coast. In April 1839 she
visited the new settlement at Melbourne, where she received an address signed by
65 of the leading citizens which referred to her "character for kindness,
benevolence and charity". With her husband she encouraged the founding of
secondary schools for both boys and girls. In 1841 she visited South Australia
and persuaded the governor, Colonel
Gawler (q.v.), to set aside some ground overlooking Spencer Gulf for a
monument to Flinders
(q.v.). This was set up later in the year. She had much correspondence with
Elizabeth Fry about the female convicts, and did what she could to ameliorate
their lot. She was accused of using undue influence with her husband in his
official acts but there is no evidence of this. No doubt he was glad to have her
help in solving his problems, and probably they collaborated in the founding of
the scientific society which afterwards developed into the Royal Society of
Tasmania. When Franklin was recalled at the end of 1843 they went first to
Melbourne and then to England by way of New Zealand. Franklin started on his
last voyage in May 1845, and when it was realized that he must have come to
disaster Lady Franklin devoted herself for many years to trying to ascertain his
fate. By 1860 all had been done that could be done, and for the remainder of her
life Lady Franklin divided her time between living in England and travelling in
all quarters of the world. She died in London on 18 July 1875.
Lady Franklin was a woman of unusual character and personality. One of the
earliest women in Tasmania who had had the full benefit of education and
cultural surroundings, she was both an example and a force, and set a new
standard in ways of living to the more prosperous settlers who were now past the
stage of merely struggling for a living. Her determined efforts, in connexion
with which she spent a great deal of her own money to discover the fate of her
husband, incidentally added much to the world's knowledge of the arctic regions.
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