Copyright

Leslie Howsam

Published On

2024-03-08

Page Range

pp. 119–128

Language

  • English

Print Length

10 pages

7. Last years

Eliza Orme lived for two decades after she retired from public life about 1903. This chapter gathers the scanty evidence for what happened during that time, including the breakup of her household and her move to an institutional setting. Direct evidence of this period is scanty, and the narrative depends on her last letter to Samuel Alexander, supplemented by census records and a death certificate. A section on ‘Contemporaneities’ collects information about what her contemporaries were doing during this period of obscurity, and how the causes with which she was associated fared as time passed. ‘Retirement’ speculates on Orme’s ultimate motivations, in the context of her ‘unthinkable’ ambitions and changing social norms.

Contributors

Leslie Howsam

(author)
Emerita Distinguished University Professor at University of Windsor
Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Digital Humanities at Toronto Metropolitan University

Leslie Howsam is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and Emerita Distinguished University Professor at the University of Windsor (as well as Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Digital Humanities at Toronto Metropolitan University). Her most recent book is the Cambridge Companion to the History of the Book (2015); her best-known book is Old Books & New Histories: An Orientation to Studies in Book and Print Culture (2006). For further information please see https://lesliehowsam.ca