Banks, Sarah Sophia, 1744-1818
Sarah Sophia Banks (1744–1818) was based in London and collected prints and printed ephemera, coins, medals and tokens.
There are more than 15,000 objects related to Sarah Sophia Banks in the British Museum.
Banks created a collection like no other, documenting the time she lived in. Going to the theatre, to see friends or shopping, Banks saw the value in even the smallest witness to these transactions and interactions, a record of daily life in the 18th and 19th centuries. Her collection was initially bequeathed to her sister-in-law, Dorothea, who immediately donated it to the British Museum.
The daughter of William Banks, the MP for Grampound, Banks probably began collecting in her teenage years. Later, she was heavily influenced by her close association with her brother, with whom she lived, the great botanist Sir Joseph Banks.
Sir Joseph was probably the most influential man of science of the day, and a Trustee of the British Museum.
Coins, medals, broadsheets, newspaper clippings, visiting cards, engravings, advertisements and playbills – these small and often short-lived items today give us a historically invaluable window on the social world of the elite society in which the Banks siblings moved.
Sir Joseph Banks was exceptionally famous. He'd been Captain Cook's companion on Cook's voyages to Brazil, Tahiti, New Zealand and Australia. Later, Sir Joseph was the director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, as well as President of the Royal Society, so it was possible for Sarah Sophia Banks to access scientific and scholarly circles which were otherwise usually closed to women.
Sarah Sophia Banks followed local and international developments and her collecting scope ranged widely. Banks didn't travel but people brought back objects for her collection.
One example is Mungo Park, who provoked hostility while exploring West Africa. When Park reached the kingdom of Bambara, the king gave him 5,000 cowrie shells – the local currency – to leave the area. Upon arrival back in London he gave his remaining four shells to Banks.
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Banks documented her collection thoroughly, bringing order to the varied objects, and laid the groundwork for future curators of her collection. She's known to have been highly selective and exchanged many items with other interested collectors.
Banks organised her collection taxonomically and systematically. A favourite method of organisation was the scrapbook which reflected contemporary creations of anthologies and lexica for publication.
Banks died in 1818 and bequeathed her collection to her sister-in-law, Dorothea Banks, who immediately donated the collection to the British Museum and Royal Mint Museum. Banks' collections can now be seen in the British Museum, British Library and Royal Mint Museum.
Citations
BiogHist
Sarah Sophia Banks (1744-1818), sister of Sir Joseph Banks, famed botanist and President of the Royal Society, was like her brother, an avid collector. Born on October 28, 1744, one and a half years after her brother, Sarah Sophia spent much of her childhood and teenage years on the family's estate at Revesby Abby, Lincolnshire, where the Banks family grew up collecting antiquities and objects of natural history. While her brother's collections focused on specimens of natural history, Sarah Sophia gathered predominately man-made materials, including printed ephemera, coins, tokens, and medals from around the world. Her collections, amounting to more than 30,000 objects, were presented to the British Museum upon her death in September 1818 by Sir Joseph's wife, Lady Dorothea Banks. After working through her sizable collections, the curators at the British Museum donated 2000 out of the 9,000 coins, medals, and tokens to the Royal Mint Museum and a portion of her books and printed ephemera to the British Library.
While there is no record of when Sarah Sophia began collecting objects, two fashion plates from her collection of pocket-book imagery dated 1760 suggests she began collecting while she was a teenager.1 Later in life, her collections were heavily influenced by her brother's travels and collections of natural history. Between 1768 and 1771, Sarah Sophia corresponded with her brother regularly during his international travels aboard the Endeavour Voyage, where he accompanied Captain James Cook on his first journey to the Pacific. As a natural scientist and botanist on the Endeavour Voyage, Sir Joseph collected natural specimens and descriptions of flora fauna that astounded the scientific community when he returned home to England. Sir Joseph kept all that he had collected from his journey, from which Sarah Sophia helped him organize his collections. After his marriage to Dorothea, he invited Sarah Sophia to live with him and his wife at their house at 32 Soho Square in 1777. Inseparable from her brother and his wife, Sarah Sophia never married and was drawn into the same elite circles as Sir Joseph and Dorothea. Through her close relationship with them, Sarah Sophia was able to form her own connections in order to develop her own collections of coins and printed ephemera, while supporting her brother's collections of natural history.
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As Arlene Leis tells us, “The gift of Sarah Sophia’s collection to the British Museum was the largest and most varied collection of printed ephemera the museum had ever accepted. That it was a woman's collection rendered its acquisition all the more remarkable."2 While John Gascoigne claims that Sarah Sophia's merits made her life "very much an extension of her brother's,"3 the nature of her collections, particularly her scrapbooks, shows the degree to which her collection engaged in a published (for scrapbooks were considered to be published material once compiled)4 and popularly-engaged observation and commentary on the heterogeneous nature of public life and scientific progress.
Sarah Sophia's collecting practice has often been gendered and demeaned, but recent scholarship on Sarah Sophia and her collection has showcased the strategic manner of her collecting, as well as her distinct tastes and taxonomies.5 As Patricia Fara contends, Sarah Sophia "seems to have been a frustrated academic," and "as an adult she was ridiculed for stuffing her pockets with books so that she would never be short of something to read."6 Fara writes, "Had she been a man, her inelegant clothes and studious demeanor would have been praised as signs of her intellectual aptitude. Instead, she was mocked for lacking the appropriate feminine graces."7
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As a woman of fashion and a collector, it is noted of Sarah Sophia in A Book for a Rainy Day, or, Recollections of the Events of the Years 1766-1833, by John Thomas Smith, that she was known for her "old school dress" and for her "immense pockets, stuffed with books of all sizes."9 Smith writes of Sarah Sophia walking all over town and making inquiries in order to locate objects of collection, like "halfpenny ballads."10 He describes an instance in which Sarah Sophia was offered a large number of tokens for her collection, but, out of that large number, she found "not one" she wanted,11 illustrating the highly selective and itinerant nature of Sarah Sophia's collecting practice. Smith describes Sarah Sophia as "wanting civility" toward a certain person and writes that a "great genius" had arrived early for dinner at her home as she was putting away "knick knacks" and observed to Sarah Sophia that is was a "fine day," to which she responded, "I know nothing at all about it, you must speak to my brother upon that subject when you are at dinner."12 Rather than demonstrating civility, Sarah Sophia was as much engrossed in cataloguing her, "knick knacks," her collection, as her brother would be.
As you navigate this site, you will be introduced to a few particular aspects of Sarah Sophia's collection: her African coins and her scrapbook on balloons and other curiosities.13 The size and dispersed nature of Sarah Sophia's collection makes it challenging to study.
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Sarah Sophia Banks and her collections offer significant links connecting The Monster, print culture, women’s narratives, and the imperial ambitions and exploitations of the Banks family.
Through her coin collection, consisting of more than 9,000 coins, medals, and tokens collected in the latter part of the eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth centuries, Sarah Sophia created "an ethnography of Britain with direct parallels to her brother's collection."15 Leis argues that Sarah Sophia's coin collection "seems to have complimented her brother's dedication to reforming British coinage."16 Sarah Sophia's collection, however, remains distinct in its objects and formation. Neil Chambers argues that Joseph Banks's interest in coinage "derived from a formidable knowledge not only of their history but also of the contemporary economic and monetary arrangements of the realm."17 Unique as a female collector of coins, a pursuit generally considered to be "for gentlemen and antiquaries,"18 Sarah Sophia demonstrates through her collection not only her own "formidable knowledge" of the subject of coinage and antiquity but also her own perspective on the geopolitical structures of her time. Her unique geographical approach to the organization of coinage, noted by scholar Catherine Eagleton to be rather new in Sarah Sophia's period and distinct from her brother's empirical strategies, reflects the geographical and cultural constructions of eighteenth and nineteenth century conceptions of global power and space. [...]
Likewise, her scrapbook on ballooning and other curiosities, housed in the British Library, presents the mania for the hot air balloon from the perspective of a female collector intimately connected with the voyages of discovery championed by Joseph Banks. As such, Sarah Sophia's scrapbook on ballooning traverses the line between fancy and science, destabilizes norms of masculine collecting and scientific endeavour, and illustrates feminine commentary on the relationship of science to the imagination. Additionally, it demonstrates an intense interest and investment in the sensational that broadens the scope of our understanding of science in the life of the public during this period of growing specialization, highlighting the function of spectacle and performance in the pursuit of improvement, progress, and national identity. While women’s collections of printed ephemera can offer us alternative narratives on public phenomena to those constructed by men, we aim to demonstrate through Sarah Sophia Banks’s collection of ephemera related to The London Monster, within her scrapbook on ballooning and other curiosities, how these narratives also participated in constructing ideas of femininity as white, pure, and in opposition to the exploited bodies of Indigenous women.
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Sarah Sophia's process of cutting, arranging, and pasting was, as Leis argues, ultimately a means to "construct, record, and circulate a wide range of aesthetic values and visual standards of taste."19 Across the various aspects of her collection, from the heraldry, to the coins, to the scrapbooks and printed ephemera, one can trace a theme of interest in not only print culture, public access to and interest in historical events, but also the performative aspects of ceremony and the spectacle of fashionable life, and most importantly, in the objects and subjects of public interest themselves.
Citations
BiogHist
Occupation: Coin collectors
Sarah Sophia Banks (28 October 1744 – 27 September 1818)[2] was an English antiquarian collector and sister and collaborator of botanist Joseph Banks. She collected coins and medals and ephemera which are now historically valuable like broadsheets, newspaper clippings, visiting cards, prints, advertisements and playbills.[3][4][5][6][7]
She was born on 28 October 1744 at 30 Argyll Street in Soho, London[8] the daughter of William Banks, the Member of Parliament for Grampound, and his wife Sarah.[2][9]
She "discussed questions of plant biology with her brother..." and "...influenced him greatly."[10] Many "of her ideas made their way into his writings [and she] also provided valuable support by recopying and editing the entire manuscript of Banks' Newfoundland voyage (published 1766)."[10]
Her varied collections were left to her brother and sister-in-law who presented them to the British Museum and the Royal Mint Museum.[1][3][4][5][6][7] Her coin collection is now divided between the British Museum and the Royal Mint, while her prints are housed between the British Museum and British Library. The rediscovery of her scrapbook on the London Monster, a man who attacked dozens of women 1788–90, led directly to Jan Bondeson's book on the subject in 2000.
Citations
Date: 1744-10-28 (Birth) - 1818-09-27 (Death)
BiogHist
Nationality: English
Gender: Female
Occupation: Antiquarians
Occupation: Women collectors
Banks, Sarah Sophia, 1744-1818; Variants
Banks, S. S. (Sarah Sophia), 1744-1818
Banks, Sarah, 1744-1818
Citations
Unknown Source
Citations
Name Entry: Banks, Sarah Sophia, 1744-1818
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Name Entry: Banks Sarah, 1744-1818
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Place: Kent, England
Found Data: Kent, England
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Worplesdon, Surrey
Found Data: Worplesdon, Surrey
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Kirkby Overblow, West Riding of Yorkshire
Found Data: Kirkby Overblow, West Riding of Yorkshire
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: England
Found Data: England
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Petworth, Sussex
Found Data: Petworth, Sussex
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Farnham Royal al. Verdon, Buckinghamshire
Found Data: Farnham Royal al. Verdon, Buckinghamshire
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Long Horsley, Northumberland
Found Data: Long Horsley, Northumberland
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Lincolnshire, England
Found Data: Lincolnshire, England
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Witham, River (England)
Found Data: Witham, River (England)
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Catton, Yorkshire
Found Data: Catton, Yorkshire
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Norfolk, England
Found Data: Norfolk, England
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: London, England
Found Data: London, England
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Revesby, Lincolnshire
Found Data: Revesby, Lincolnshire
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Place: Clewer, Berkshire
Found Data: Clewer, Berkshire
Note: Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.