Hannah Bevan


Hannah Marishall Bevan or Hannah Marishall Bennett was a British philanthropist. She visited convict ships and workhouses and was involved in creating the Band of Hope in London.

Life

Bevan was born in London in 1798 to a Quaker family, William and Hannah Bevan. Her father was a tea merchant. When she was twelve she was sent to Croyden for schooling. Her mother was part paralysed from a stroke and on her return she cared for her until she died. Her father soon followed in 1818 and she was head of the family business and head of the family of herself and her two brothers... and soon one of them died.
Elizabeth Fry started the "British Ladies Society for promoting the reform of female prisoners" in 1821 after visiting a prison and being horrified by the conditions in 1821. In 1822 she was listed as one of Elizabeth Pryor's helpers visiting convict ships together with Elizabeth Hanbury and Katherine Fry. Hanbury would in time take over the organisation of convict ship visiting after Elizabeth Pryor was disowned after she asked the prison authorities for remuneration.
In 1827 she stopped visiting ships but continued to attend meetings until 1831. That year she married, the surgeon Thomas Bevan, and in 1828 she had their first child and she was made a Quaker minister. The following year her child died. She started the Foster Street ragged school during the time of 1829 to 1842 when she had seven children.
The first "Band of Hope" in London was formed at her house by Thomas Bywater Smithies and it included some of her neighbours and children.
1847 was not a great year. Her husband and two youngest children died. Five years later she was in Darlington where she took an interest in improving the lot of children, in particular, in the local workhouse. She had a long decline starting in 1859 in Darlington that progressed via a stroke and taking her to London where she died in Penge in 1798.