Charles Mackay was born in
Perth. His father, George Mackay, was a bombardier in the Royal Artillery, and his mother Amelia Cargill died shortly after his birth. Mackay was educated at the
Caledonian Asylum, in London. In 1828 he was placed by his father at a school in
Brussels, on the boulevard de Namur, shortly taken over by
William James Joseph Drury; and studied languages. In 1830 he was engaged as a private secretary to
William Cockerill, the ironmaster, near
Liège, began writing in French in the
Courrier belge, and sent English poems to a local newspaper called
The Telegraph. In the summer of 1830 he visited Paris, and he spent 1831 with Cockerill at
Aix-la-Chapelle. In May 1832 his father brought him back to London, where he first found employment in teaching Italian to the future opera manager
Benjamin Lumley.
Family Mackay was twice married—first, during his Glasgow editorship, to Rosa Henrietta Vale, by whom he had three sons and a daughter; and secondly to Mary Elizabeth Mills, who was likely a servant in the household previously. His first wife died on 28 December 1859, and his second wife in 1875. ==Journalist==