Age, Biography and Wiki
Who is it? | Actress, Soundtrack |
Net worth
Charlotte Atkinson, a talented actress and soundtrack artist, is expected to have a net worth ranging between $100K and $1M by the year 2024. With her impressive performances in notable films like Truckers (2013), Neverland (2011), and The Tunnel (2013), Atkinson has established herself as a promising figure in the entertainment industry. Her unique ability to captivate audiences through her acting skills and contribute to the soundtrack of various projects has undoubtedly played a significant role in her steadily growing wealth. As she continues to showcase her talent and expand her portfolio, Charlotte Atkinson's net worth is poised to continue on an upward trajectory.
Famous Quotes:
It being made manifest, therefore, that Mrs. Barton is herself competent to educate her children either by herself or by any competent assistance under her own eye, it would require a state of urgent circumstances to induce the Court to deprive them (all of whom are under thirteen years of age) of that maternal care and tenderness, which none but a mother can bestow.
Biography/Timeline
From Aalders auction catalogue: Born in London in 1796, Atkinson was a remarkable figure, carrying her family's interest in art and science to act as governess for Hannibal Macarthur in 1826, meeting James Atkinson on ship (The Cumberland) to Sydney and marrying soon after, moving to his home at Oldbury, near Sutton Forest. Her husband died not long after giving birth of their fourth child, (Caroline)Louisa. She married their homestead's overseer, George Barton who proved to be a violent drunkard, and she fled with her four children in 1839, settling in Sydney in 1840 and continued to fight for the rights of her children to benefit from Atkinson's will, and to keep custody of her children. Her legal battles are chronicled by Historian Patricia Clarke in her book "Pioneer Writer" (1990).
In 1826 Charlotte Waring came to New South Wales to take up a position as governess to the family of Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur. She became engaged to James Atkinson, a highly respected agriculturalist and author, during the voyage to Australia. They married in 1827. The couple settled at Atkinson's property Oldbury in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales. They had four children, including the author and naturalist Caroline Louisa Waring Calvert (née Atkinson). The children appear, slightly disguised, as the four children of the book. Charlotte's father, Thomas Albert Waring, died in 1829. She is mentioned in his will as the wife of James Atkinson in NSW.
The book takes the form of dialogues between a mother and her children. The book covers a variety of topics, from geology and natural history to shipwrecks and the customs of the Australian Aborigines. Some parts are quite lurid, such as her description of the wreck of the Charles Eaton, a ship that went down in the Torres Strait in 1834. It was claimed that many children survived the shipwreck only to be eaten by cannibals. Life's dangers were a frequent theme of 19th-century Australian children's fiction.
Charlotte left Oldbury with her children bound for Budgong and later moved to Sydney. Her guardianship of her children was resoundingly confirmed as of 6 July 1841 in a decision by C.J. Dowling of the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
The apparent oddity of her signalling out very recent expeditions involving the Eskimos and Finland natives, follow from this experience of living in harmony with native inhabitants, and of her extended scientific family (Charles Darwin being the most prominent relative). While there are one or two English scenes directly bearing on her family background, the majority of images are of the minutae of a naturalist's life in colonial New South Wales. Indeed, she lived with her daughter Louisa at Kurrajong, and at Oldbury from 1860 until her death in 1867; enjoying the fruits of seeing Louisa's nature studies, journalism, and successful novels, and more than likely, participating in their production from the mid-1850s.
After winning legal custody of her children, Charlotte returned to Oldbury, where she died in 1867.
In 2005, the book is very rare and copies sell for high prices.
On 12 June 2011 her "workbook" sold at auction for $70,000 to a private bidder. A 30-page book of illustrations with pen, ink & watercolour drawings that was created as a gift to her daughter Jane Emily on her thirteenth birthday in 1843.