Author talk:Agnes Muriel Clay

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Sources[edit]

Birth[edit]

  • FreeBMD

Name: Agnes Muriel Clay
Registration Year: 1878 June Q.
Registration district: Pancras
Inferred County: London
Volume: 1b
Page: 48

Marriage[edit]

  • Source Citation: London Metropolitan Archives, Saint Pancras Parish Church, Register of marriages, P90/PAN1, Item 164.

Name: Agnes Muriel Clay
Spouse: Edward Hugh Norris Wilde
Record Type: Marriage
Event Date: 26 Jul 1910
Parish: Parish Chapel, St Pancras
Borough: Camden
Father Name: William Henry Clay
Spouse Father: Ernest James Wilde

Census[edit]

  • 1911 England. Source Citation: Class: RG14; Piece: 10036; Schedule Number: 183.

Name: Agnes Muriel Wilde
Age in 1911: 32
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1879
Relation to Head: Daughter-in-law
Gender: Female
Birth Place: St Pancras, Middlesex
Civil Parish: Ingatestone and Fryerning
County/Island: Essex
Country: England
Street address: Furse Hall, Fryerning, Ingatestone, Essex
Marital Status: Married
Years Married: 1
Estimated Marriage Year: 1910
Registration district: Chelmsford
Registration District Number: 194
Sub-registration district: Ingatestone
ED, institution, or vessel: 5
Household schedule number: 183
Piece: 10036
Household Members:
Name Age
Ernest James Wilde 62
Edith Emma Wilde 56
Edward Hugh Norris Wilde 31
Agnes Muriel Wilde 32
Florence Poulton 30
Esther Paternoster 27
Ellen Miller 23

Death[edit]

  • FreeBMD

Deaths Mar 1962
WILDE Agnes M 84 Alton 6b 72

Obituary[edit]

Mrs. Muriel Wilde. Dr. L. S. Sutherland writes:— Mrs. Wilde (née Agnes Muriel Clay), who died in Alton Hospital on March 1 in her eighty-fourth year, was among the earliest Oxford women to obtain a first class in Literae Humaniores. She came up to Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, as a scholar in 1896, and from 1901 she was the Hall's first tutor in classics until her marriage to Mr. H. N. Wilde in 1910. Her affectionate concern for the Hall was lifelong. She was a member of its council for many years and latterly an honorary member of its senior common room. She had a particular interest in its library which she enriched munificently both by annual subsidies and by large gifts from the fine collections that she and her husband had made. Another abiding interest was the Oxford Mission to Calcutta, which she served as honorary secretary and assistant treasurer for 17 years. An ardent traveller and keen walker (with her husband) in her younger days, she was latterly crippled with arthritis, an affliction she bore with a dignity and patience which were completely characteristic.