Arethusa Gibson, the daughter of Mary Anne Cullum (née Eggers) and Rev. Sir Thomas Gery Cullum, 8th Baronet, of
Hardwick House, Suffolk, was born in 1814, and spent her early years mainly in Italy. She married in 1832
Thomas Milner Gibson, who was to become a Conservative and later a Liberal member of parliament, and who advocated for free trade and against so-called
Taxes on knowledge. Arethusa Gibson, acting as a formidable society hostess, established a
salon of radical politicians, diplomats, literary figures and European emigrees; in her circle were
Benjamin and
Mary Anne Disraeli,
Cobden,
Dickens,
Hugo,
Thackeray, and
Louis Napoleon, whom she had met in his exile. Arethusa Gibson was an active supporter of Giuseppe Mazzini, who she met in 1844, in the struggle for the unification of Italy. During his exile in London, her salon provided a locus for his introduction to her wide circle of influential friends. In company with a group of like-minded and largely feminist friends, she organised fund-raising events – bazaars, concerts, raffles – following a successful pattern established by women supporters of the
Anti-Corn Law League, ==Notes==