MacDonald sisters


The Macdonald sisters were four Scottish women born during the 19th century, notable for their marriages to well-known men. Alice, Georgiana, Agnes and Louisa were the daughters of Reverend George Browne Macdonald, a Wesleyan Methodist minister, and Hannah Jones.

Biographies

There were 11 children in the MacDonald family: seven daughters and four sons. Mary was the firstborn; followed by Henry, nicknamed Harry, who introduced his younger sisters Georgiana and Agnes to his artistic friends, known as the Birmingham Set ; then Alice; Caroline ; Georgiana; Frederic William ; Agnes; Louisa; Walter ; Edith, who never married and lived at home until her mother's death; and Herbert.

Alice

was born on 4 April in Sheffield. She married John Lockwood Kipling whom she had met at Rudyard Lake in Staffordshire. They married in March 1865, after he was made Architectural Sculptor and Professor of Modelling at the School of Art and Industry in Bombay during the preceding January. Alice became the mother of Rudyard Kipling on 30 December 1865. Lord Dufferin once said, "Dullness and Mrs Kipling cannot exist in the same room."

Georgiana

's father was relocated by the Methodist Conference to a Birmingham circuit and it was here that Georgie was born on 28 July 1840. Agnes and her sister Georgiana received attention from prospective suitors who were in the Birmingham Set. She married the pre-Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones, a member of the Set, during 1859. They had three children, Philip, Christopher and Margaret - although Christopher died in infancy. She became in time the mother-in-law of John William Mackail and grandmother of Denis Mackail and Angela Thirkell.

Agnes

Agnes was a talented pianist and thought to be the best looking of the sisters. She and her sister Georgiana received attention from prospective suitors who were friends of her brother and members of the Birmingham Set. She eventually married the future president of the Royal Academy Edward Poynter during 1866 in a double wedding with her quieter sister Louisa. Poynter appeared to be a manic depressive and he would paint continuously until finally collapsing when a work was finished. He was unemotional and it was Agnes who supplied the affection in their household. Her husband later produced paintings of two of her sisters. She, Jane Morris and her sisters Louisa and Georgiana are thought to be the inspiration for figures of Burne-Jones' 1864 painting Green Summer. Agnes is thought to have died during 1906 from cancer despite an operation in 1903.

Louisa

Louisa married the industrialist Alfred Baldwin during 1866 in a double wedding with her sister Agnes and Agnes' fiance Edward Poynter. Alfred and Louisa were the parents of a son who became UK prime minister Stanley Baldwin. After his birth Louisa seemed unhappy with her life in Worcestershire where her husband was an ironmaster. She had at least one miscarriage and spent time in a bath chair and days alone in darkness. Later commentators have noted that she would recover when on holiday and have proposed that her illness was due to hypochondria. She was in time the grandmother to Oliver and Arthur Baldwin, respectively the second and third Earls Baldwin of Bewdley. Louisa wrote novels, short stories, and poetry, sometimes credited as "Mrs Alfred Baldwin."