Mary Lacy
Mary Lacy (c. 1740 – 1801) was a British sailor, shipwright and memoirist. She was arguably the first woman to have been given an exam and a pension from the British Admiralty as a shipwright. Early lifeLacy was born in Wickham, Kent in 1740.[1] She became a domestic servant, aged twelve.[1] In 1759, aged nineteen, Lacy ran away from home dressed as a boy.[2] Using the name William Chandler, Lacy worked as a servant for a ship's carpenter of the Royal Navy.[2] William was her father's name and Chandler was her mother's maiden name.[3] Lacy then studied as an apprentice to be a shipwright in 1763, going on to successfully complete the apprenticeship.[2] In 1770, she took her exam as a shipwright, arguably the first woman to have done so.[4] In 1771, however, she was forced to stop working because of her rheumatism, and applied for a pension from the Admiralty under her legal name, Mary Lacy, which was granted. She published her memoirs The Female Shipwright in 1773.[3] This was reprinted by the National Maritime Museum in 2008. Later lifeOn 25 October 1772, at St Mary Abbots, Kensington,[5] Mary Lacy married Josias Slade, a shipwright, of Deptford, Kent.[6] That same year, Mary gave birth to her first child,[7] Margaret Lacey Slade, who was baptized at St Nicholas, Deptford, Kent, on 29 August.[8] Their other children were Josias Slade (1775–1777), Mary Slade (1777–1777), Josias Slade (1778–1781), Elizabeth Slade (1780–1780), and John Slade (born 1784).[9] In 1775 Mary petitioned for her husband to be granted a servant because of his 16 years' service as a shipwright.[10] She had also applied unsuccessfully before Lord Sandwich for her husband to succeed Thomas Boyles, who lined the stuff for the Sawyers at the dockyard.[10] Mary died in 1801 and was buried at St Paul's, Deptford, Kent, on 3 May 1801.[11][8] Her husband, Josias Slade, died in 1814 and was also buried at St Paul, Deptford, Kent, on 13 February 1814.[12] In his will and codicil, he only mentions his son, John Slade, and daughter, Margaret, now wife of Joseph Ward[13] (Margaret Lacey Ward died the following year and was buried at St Paul, Deptford, Kent, on 23 April 1815).[12] A chapter in Suzanne Stark's book Female Tars: Women Aboard Ship in the Age of Sail features Lacy's life in eighteenth century England.[3] Published works
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