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Born in London as a member of a notable acting family, Fanny was
able to prevent the familys financial ruin by studying acting
for three weeks and making a sensational debut as Juliet in Romeo
and Juliet. In 1832 she toured the United States and Canada,
where she was praised as the first great actress on the North
American stage.
After being courted by Pierce Butler, a Philadelphia gentleman
from a slave-owning family with a Georgia plantation, she married
him. The union bolstered her familys financial prospects,
but conflicts were soon evident. Fanny Kemble had been influenced
by Unitarian minister William Ellery Channing to seek the abolition
of slavery. When she insisted on visiting the Georgia rice and
cotton plantation, she was so horrified by what she saw that she
wrote a journal of her experience, which her husband demanded
that she not publish it because it was an act in disobedience
to his will.
Distraught and seeking to recuperate, she left her husband and
their two children and traveled to the Continent. He began divorce
proceedings. She began public dramatic readings with great success.
When she agreed not to testify about his unfaithfulness, she was
granted two summer months each year with the children and $1,500
per year in alimony.
Pierce Butler squandered his inheritance through gambling and
stock speculation. In 1861 he was arrested for treason and then
released. His former slaves became his share-croppers. After contracting
malaria, he died in 1867.
Fanny Kemble died in London in 1893 after continuing her career
of dramatic readings and publishing many writings, including her
Journal of a Residence on a Georgia Plantation.
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