She was the second child and eldest daughter of Elizabeth Dixon, who was from Ballyshannon, Ireland. Mary’s father, Edward John Wollstonecraft, was a handkerchief weaver. He became a gentleman farmer after he got an inheritance from his father, who was a master weaver and residential real estate developer, but farming did not prove successful. The family moved seven times in ten years as their finances were exhausted. Edward drank heavily, and Mary often had to shield her mother from his violence. Her schooling was limited, but a friend in Hoxton, near London, had a respectable library, and she spent a great amount of time exploring it. Through these friends, she met Fanny Blood, two years older and skilled at drawing, watercolors, sewing, and the piano. She inspired Mary to begin cultivating her
She was the second child and eldest daughter of Elizabeth Dixon, who was from Ballyshannon, Ireland. Mary’s father, Edward John Wollstonecraft, was a handkerchief weaver. He became a gentleman farmer after he got an inheritance from his father, who was a master weaver and residential real estate developer, but farming did not prove successful. The family moved seven times in ten years as their finances were exhausted. Edward drank heavily, and Mary often had to shield her mother from his violence. Her schooling was limited, but a friend in Hoxton, near London, had a respectable library, and she spent a great amount of time exploring it. Through these friends, she met Fanny Blood, two years older and skilled at drawing, watercolors, sewing, and the piano. She inspired Mary to begin cultivating her