What is the Bloomsbury Project?
The -funded UCL Bloomsbury Project was established to investigate 19th-century Bloomsbury’s development from swampy rubbish-dump to centre of intellectual life
Led by Professor Rosemary Ashton, with Dr Deborah Colville as Researcher, the Project has traced the origins, Bloomsbury locations, and reforming significance of hundreds of progressive and innovative institutions
Many of the extensive archival resources relating to these institutions have also been identified and examined by the Project, and Bloomsbury’s developing streets and squares have been mapped and described
This website is a gateway to the information gathered and edited by Project members during the Project’s lifetime, 1 October 2007–30 April 2011, with the co-operation of Bloomsbury’s institutions, societies, and local residents
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Bloomsbury and the Bloomsbury Project
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Sarah Maclardie Amos, née Bunting (1840/1841–1908)
a summary of her Bloomsbury connections
In 1870 she married Sheldon Amos, Professor of Jurisprudence at UCL
They both supported Josephine Butler 1870 in the agitation against Contagious Diseases Act, and continued to support campaigns against the regulation of prostitution and in support of women’s suffrage
From their marriage in 1870 until the birth of their first child, Maurice, in 1872, they chose to live in a poor area near Red Lion Square, so as to live among the poor, although once they had children they moved to New Barnet
In 1880 the family settled first in Australia and then, finding this unsatisfactory, in Egypt in an attempt to ease Amos’s chronic asthma; in 1878 he had approached John Chapman, formerly of 142 Strand, about his patented ice bags (Sheldon Amos to John Chapman, 1 and 18 October 1878, MS MISC 3A–3B, UCL Special Collections)
After Amos’s death in Egypt in 1886, Sarah and the two children toured Europe and then in late 1887 returned to England and took a house in Upper Woburn Place
For more general biographical information about Sarah Maclardie Amos, see her entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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