Before her marriage, Maria Hester Park gave four well-received performances, mostly in the Oxford area, on both the piano and the
harpsichord. Her first public appearance was at the age of twenty-two as Maria Hester Reynolds in the
Hanover Square concert series with a concerto on the harpsichord. She played a
Clementi duet with
Jane Mary Guest on 29 April 1783, a concerto at
Willis's Rooms in March 1784 and a performance as Mrs Park ("late Reynolds") in May 1791. she ended her career as a performer, although she earned even more fame as composer and teacher. Her marriage appears to have been happy; several of her husband's love poems to her still exist. She corresponded with
Joseph Haydn, who, on 22 October 1794, sent her a
sonata of his composition (Hob. XVI:51) and a
thank you letter in exchange for two of her pieces. She died in
Hampstead, London at the age of 53, after many years of ill health. The Parks had five daughters and a son. ==Park's music==