The Catharine Macaulay Project

Timeline

This timeline offers a chronological overview of Catharine Macaulay’s remarkable life, tracing her personal milestones, major publications, and key moments abroad. By mapping out her journey, from her major publications to her time in America and beyond, the timeline provides context to her evolving ideas and enduring impact.

1731

Macaulay is born

Catharine Sawbridge is born in Wye, Kent, England.

1756-63

Alexander von Kotzebue, Battle of Kunersdorf on 1 August 1759 (1848), Hermitage Museum (via Wikimedia Commons)

Seven Years War

The Seven Years’ War was a global conflict involving most major European powers, with Britain and Prussia fighting against France, Austria, and their allies. Put quite generally, it was driven by rivalries over territory in Europe (especially Silesia) and colonial competition between Britain and France in North America and India.

1760

St James’s Palace c.1740, attributed to the school of Samuel Scott. This scene shows a palace beginning to look as we know it today. Image: Royal Collection Trust/© His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Marriage to Mr. Macaulay

Marries George Macaulay, a Scottish physician. The couple lives in St James’s Place, London.

1763

Publication of First Volume of History

“The History of England from the Accession of James I to that of the Brunswick Line” is published.

1765

Reverend Dr. Thomas Wilson and Catharine Sophia Macaulay, 1776

Childbirth, Second Volume of History, Stamp Act

Second volume of Macaulay’s History published; Macaulay’s
daughter Sophia was born; the Stamp Act was passed and
later repealed.

1766

Dr George Macaulay Dies

George Macaulay dies in 1766, leaving Macaulay a widow.

1767

Frontispiece: Elementorum Philosophiae Sectio Tertia De Cive, Paris: 1642, by Thomas Hobbes. *EC65 H6525 642e, Houghton Library, Harvard University

Loose Remarks; Third Volume of History

Macaulay’s first pamphlet, Loose Remarks on Certain Positions
to be Found in Mr. Hobbes’s ‘Philosophical Rudiments of
Government and Society
, with a Short Sketch of a
Democratical Form of Government, in a Letter to Signor Paoli
,
published, along with the third volume of the History.

1768

Fourth Volume of History

Fourth volume of Macaulay’s History published; John
Sawbridge elected a Member of Parliament. Wilkes elected
member for Middlesex, but expelled by Parliament.

1770

Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents

Observations on a Pamphlet, entitled, Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents published.

1771

Fifth Volume of History

Fifth volume of Macaulay’s History published.

1774

Queen Square, Bath (1864), engraving from G. N. Wright’s Historic Guide to Bath, depicting the Georgian square designed by John Wood the Elder

Publication of Modest Plea; Move to Bath

A Modest Plea for the Property of Copy Right published;
Catharine Macaulay moves to Bath to live with Thomas
Wilson.

1775

Publication of Address

An Address to the People of England, Scotland and Ireland on
the Present Important Crisis of Affairs
is published, a passionate defense of American colonists’ rights and their struggle against British imperial policies.

1775-83

George Caleb Bingham, Washington Crossing the Delaware (c. 1856–71), Chrysler Museum of Art (via Wikimedia Commons)

Revolutionary War

Generally speaking, the American Revolution was a rebellion by thirteen British colonies in North America that resulted in their independence and the creation of the United States. It grew out of rising tensions after Britain tried to tighten control over the colonies following years of relative autonomy.

1777

Louis Boudan, Veüe de l’Hostel de Sens à Paris (c. 1695–1713), Bibliothèque nationale de France (via Wikimedia Commons)

Macaulay visits France

1778

Second Marriage

History since the Revolution published; Marries again, this time to William Graham, who was about 26 years old (she was 57), a scandal in British polite society.

1781

Sixth and Seventh Volumes of History

Sixth and seventh volumes of the History published.

1783

Eighth Volume of History; Treatise on the Immutability of Moral Truth

Eighth and final volume of the History and A Treatise on the
Immutability of Moral Truth
published.

1784-5

John Adams to Catharine Macaulay [on the Tea Act], December 11, 1773. (The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, GLC01787)

Visit to America

Traveled to America and connected with many friends, most notably many famous American revolutionaries.

1785-6

Macaulay visits France (again)

1789

Isidore-Stanislas Helman (after Charles Monnet), Assemblée Nationale: Abandon of All Privileges, Night of 4–5 August 1789 (1790), Musée Carnavalet (via Wikimedia Commons)

Outbreak of the French Revolution

The French Revolution broke out amid a deep financial crisis, widespread social inequality, and growing resentment toward the monarchy’s attempts to raise taxes and assert control. These tensions led to political upheaval, beginning with the meeting of the Estates-General and popular uprisings like the storming of the Bastille.

1790

Publication of Letters on Education; Observations on Religious and Metaphysical Subjects

Letters on Education, with Observations on Religious and
Metaphysical Subjects and Observations on the Reflections of
the Right Hon. Edmund Burke on the Revolution in France
published.

June 1791

Death

Catharine Macaulay dies at age 60 in Binfield, Berkshire.