Henrietta Marie Colden


Henrietta Marie Bethune Colden, was a salon holder from Isle of Man.

Early life

Henrietta Marie Bethune was born in Scotland in 1745 and lived in the Isle of Man before her husband brought her to America.

Personal life

She married Richard Nicholls Colden in the Isle of Man while he was with his regiment there. Colden served for the 42nd Royal Highlanders and died in 1777. Richard was the eldest son of Elizabeth Colden and Alexander Colden, a politician, and a grandson of Cadwallader Colden, a colonial governor of the Province of New York. Together, they were the parents of two sons before his death:
After Colden's death, she returned to Scotland with her sons where they were educated at a school near Lancaster, England before returning to the United States after the Revolutionary War.
In 1798, Henrietta sold a farm at New Lots in Kings County, New York to Sir James Hall of Dunglass in Scotland.

Literary interests

Colden was known for her different literary interests. On March 14, 1783, she wrote a letter to Benjamin Franklin, complaining about the British Government after her husband had died from a fever in 1777. On July 16, 1792, she wrote a letter to Henry Knox, the first United States Secretary of War, to Kean respecting payment to the Ohio Company.