In 1863, at the age of eighteen, Maria Beauclerc was engaged for two months as shorthand
amanuensis to a
phrenological lecturer visiting Birmingham. Later
George Dawson (1821–1876), editor of the
Birmingham Morning News between 1871 and 1873, also engaged Maria Beauclerc because of her outstanding shorthand reporting skills. The appointment of a female reporter by the
Birmingham Morning News was extraordinary as it was the first time in England that a female had been engaged by a newspaper as a shorthand reporter. Maria Beauclerc became professionally known as Marie Beauclerc and her work at the
Birmingham Morning News included the reporting of many public meetings, conferences and lectures. At this time, shorthand was still a male dominated expertise however from approximately 1865 until Dawson's sudden death in 1876, Marie Beauclerc also recorded most of the content of the nine volumes of Dawson's lectures,
prayers and sermons. Four volumes were published after Dawson's death. George St. Clair, the editor of these volumes, acknowledges in the
prefaces that "The discourses are mostly from the shorthand reports of Miss Marie Beauclerc." A similar preface reads, "When a lecture is reported by Miss Beauclerc – as is the case with the one on the
Shadow of Death – we have a near approach to fulness and accuracy". Further on St. Clair adds, "I have had, as before, the invaluable help of Miss Beauclerc in collating and transcribing." Marie Beauclerc is also credited in prefaces of volumes of work by author and preacher Christopher J. Street (1855–1931). When
Unitarian clergyman and lecturer,
Robert Collyer (1823–1912), visited Birmingham from the United States, he engaged Marie Beauclerc to report and edit his sermons and prayers which were delivered at Newhall Hill Church Birmingham on 2 September, 1883 and published during the same year. ==Teacher==