The Catharine Macaulay Project

Blog #1: My Two Week London Anniversary

Me and some of my roommates!

Hello All! This is my first blog post I’ve written (ever, and for this project). I thought I could write both a little about myself and the project, as well as an update on my first two weeks of living in London since I’ve moved here.

A little about me: My name is Hilary, and I graduated from Johns Hopkins this May with both my BA (History; Classics) and MA (History). There, I specialized in studying two main topics. The first is the Atlantic World, referring broadly to the interactions among peoples and empires bordering the Atlantic Ocean itself from ~16th-19th centuries. The second is something called “classical reception,” referring to the study of how and why the texts, ideas, images and material cultures of Ancient Greece and Rome have been received, refigured, or adapted in different historical and cultural contexts.

Taken together, I’m interested in how historical actors in the Atlantic World engaged with classical antiquity. In undergrad, I studied anything from how Indigenous Mexican persons engaged with Ancient Greek sybils (more or less oracles) amidst the colonization of what is now Mexico City (Tenochtitlan); to how women in colonial Maryland published Latin poems; or even translating portions of the Iliad. My MA thesis was a bit more specific. There, I studied how Phillis Wheatley, Mercy Otis Warren, and Catharine Macaulay—three eighteenth-century female writers of the Atlantic world—each employed a prose deeply rooted in the ideas and motifs of classical antiquity.

I loved writing that thesis so much, and the disciplines of classical reception and the Atlantic World more generally, that I applied for Johns Hopkins’ Meg Walsh Grant, which is awarded to one graduating senior to pursue an international, independent research project of their own design. I proposed I would continue research on Catharine Macaulay, a female British historian, while being based in London itself. While I had the opportunity to travel around America to access historical materials on all three women in my MA thesis, I felt that there was, and is, so much more work I can do by being based in England. To truly understand the British/American context in which Macaulay (as well as Warren and Wheatley) lived, I found it imperative I move abroad and travel across the UK to continue my work. 

This website serves as the main hub of all my activity on Macaulay. Here, I intend to post both blog post updates on what it has meant, and means to move abroad, how to approach historical research, and any day-to-day basics of the archive and libraries more generally. So too will I post longer scholarly updates where I will dive into the writing of Macaulay and attempt to break down her philosophy for a larger, non-academic audience. Ultimately, I hope this work both allows others outside of the field of history to engage with the discipline and how it still remains relevant to this day, as well as maintaining a real and honest updates on how I’ve gone about this project and the transition to moving abroad.

Now that I’ve won the Meg Walsh Award, and now am actually living in London, I just celebrated my two-week anniversary. Somehow, it’s felt like both only 2 days and also a long 2 months that I’ve been here. Here are some of my main takeaways: 

Those are my reflections for now, and this post is at no shortage for words. With that, I will continue with my reading list here at the British Library and prepare for some rowing tonight!