Jane Macartney

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jane_Macartney an entity of type: Thing

Jane Macartney (born Jane Hardman; 19 January 1803 – 10 January 1885) was an Australian philanthropist, religious worker and teacher in Melbourne and surrounding regions in the 1800s. An Irish member of the Church of England, in 1833 she married Hussey Macartney, later to become the dean of St James' Cathedral in Melbourne. Her position as wife of the dean enabled her to help establish the Orphan Asylum, the Carlton Refuge, the Melbourne Home and the Lying-In Hospital, along with Frances Perry, the wife of Bishop Charles Perry. Her work in Melbourne was a continuation of her earlier charitable works in Ireland and regional Victoria, where she set up and taught in girls' Sunday Schools and visited poor families, especially assisting young mothers. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jane Macartney
rdf:langString Jane Macartney
rdf:langString Jane Macartney
rdf:langString The Deanery, East Melbourne, Australia
xsd:date 1885-01-10
rdf:langString Castle Bellingham, Ireland
xsd:date 1803-01-19
xsd:integer 67176111
xsd:integer 1094689267
xsd:date 1803-01-19
rdf:langString Jane Hardman
xsd:date 1885-01-10
rdf:langString Establishing and managing charitable institutions, visiting and assisting less privileged families, teaching in Sunday Schools
rdf:langString Irish Australian
rdf:langString Philanthropist, wife of the Dean
rdf:langString Jane Macartney (born Jane Hardman; 19 January 1803 – 10 January 1885) was an Australian philanthropist, religious worker and teacher in Melbourne and surrounding regions in the 1800s. An Irish member of the Church of England, in 1833 she married Hussey Macartney, later to become the dean of St James' Cathedral in Melbourne. Her position as wife of the dean enabled her to help establish the Orphan Asylum, the Carlton Refuge, the Melbourne Home and the Lying-In Hospital, along with Frances Perry, the wife of Bishop Charles Perry. Her work in Melbourne was a continuation of her earlier charitable works in Ireland and regional Victoria, where she set up and taught in girls' Sunday Schools and visited poor families, especially assisting young mothers.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 21011
rdf:langString Jane Hardman
xsd:gYear 1803
xsd:gYear 1885

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