Charlotte Parkes ((exclusive))
Charlotte Parkes died in 1919, having witnessed the transition from the rigid Victorian era to the tumult of the First World War. While she held no public office and authored no published books during her lifetime, her legacy is preserved in the archive of her life writing. She stands as a representative figure of the Victorian "gentlewoman"—restricted by convention, yet influential through her management of social capital and her preservation of history through the diary. Her life reminds modern scholars that the history of an era is often best understood not just through its Treaties and Acts, but through the meticulous records of those who lived it.
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The Victorian era produced a wealth of life writing, yet the voices of women within the upper echelons of society are often filtered through the biographies of their male relatives. Charlotte Parkes represents a distinct voice in this canon. Born into a family with strong legal and clerical ties, and later married to George Robert Canning Harris, 4th Baron Harris, Parkes occupied a unique position at the intersection of the British establishment and the shifting social mores of the late 19th century. This paper examines her background, her role in colonial and domestic society, and the significance of her personal writings as historical artifacts. charlotte parkes
: A key theme in her research is the safety of these training environments. She has explored the tension between group bonding and the ability to challenge differences, which is essential for developing the self-awareness required for professional practice. Other Historical and Cultural Contexts Charlotte Parkes died in 1919, having witnessed the
