She was born at "Forest Home",
Huonville,
Van Diemen's Land on 23 March 1855, a daughter of George Green Sherwin and Elizabeth Sherwin, née Dean. She was taught singing by her mother and later by Hobart organist
Frederick Augustus Packer, who instilled in her a love of opera and
oratorio. Her talent was recognised by
William Russell, a former Covent Garden conductor, who gave her a part in his
operetta Zillah. and
pantomime Puss in Boots. From 1887 to 1889, she toured Australia, New Zealand, Japan, the U.S. and Germany. In 1896, she had a tour in South Africa and was in Australia from 1897 to 1898 and in 1902 and 1903. In Melbourne she met flautist
John Lemmone and contracted him as her accompanist for the remainder of the tour, and when she founded her own Grand Opera company, he was a member.Amy Sherwin, noted operatic soprano, died here today. She was eighty-one. The singer, who once filled the concert halls of the U.S. with her golden voice and earned as much as 3,000 pounds sterling yearly, died almost forgotten, lonely and penniless. Living in a fine style had depleted her resources and charges of the nursing home where she died had to be paid by charity. ==Family==