Charlotte Milligan Fox


Charlotte Milligan was an Irish composer and music collector.

Life

Charlotte Milligan was born in Omagh, Co Tyrone on 17 March 1864 to Methodist parents, Seaton Milligan and Charlotte Burns. Fox was the eldest of eleven children, with nine surviving including Alice Milligan and Edith Wheeler. All nine children enrolled at Methodist College, Belfast which provided a privileged and exceptional education. She studied classical piano and composition at the Royal College of Music in London and the Conservatoires of Frankfurt and Milan. In 1892 after her marriage to Charles Eliot Fox she settled in London. She founded the Irish Folk Song Society in London in 1904 acting as the society's honorary secretary. She was a musician in her own right and toured Ireland collecting folk songs and airs. Fox undertook a series of tours of Antrim between 1909 and 1910 with her sisters Edith Wheeler and Alice Milligan. The sisters recorded and transcribed songs by Irish singers, then publishing articles and musical scores in The Journal of Irish Folk Song.
In 1910 Fox visited the east coast of America where the New York branch of the Irish Folk Song Society was formed. "The Bardic Recital" was produced on 16 March at the National Theatre, Washington. Fox collected and arranged the music for the play.
Fox re-discovered Edward Bunting's papers, and under the provision of her will they came to Queen's University Belfast in 1916. From these papers she wrote The Annals of the Irish Harpers. The publication of The Annals of the Irish Harpers stimulated a revival of interest in both the Irish harp and Edward Bunting. Alice Milligan nursed her sister prior to Fox's death in London on 25 March 1916. An obituary of Charlotte Milligan Fox is in The Irish Booklover. The Journal of the Irish Folk Song Society has a poem in remembrance of Charlotte Milligan Fox. The same issue has a memoir of Fox by Alice Milligan and an appreciation of Fox by Alfred Perceval Graves.

Composer

Fox composed music for Aine Ní Threasaigh. Fox also composed an original orchestral score for The Last Feast of the Fianna by Alice Milligan.

Irish Folk Song Society

In 1905 Fox co-founded with Alfred Perceval Graves the Irish Folk Song Society, an offshoot of Folk Song Society formed in 1898. Its aim was to collect and publish Irish airs and ballads, in addition to holding lectures and concerts on the subject. In 1904 the President of the Society was the Earl of Shaftesbury and the Vice-Presidents included PW Joyce, Francis Joseph Bigger, WH Grattan Flood, Alfred Perceval Graves, Rev. Richard Henebry and Lady Waterford. Committee members included: Herbert Hughes and Mrs Edith Wheeler. The Officers for 1905 have a publication committee comprising Claude Aveling, Charlotte Milligan Fox, Herbert Hughes, Rev Michael Moloney and Dr John Todhunter as chairman. The rules of the Society are collected in volume 4 of the Journal of the Irish Folk Song Society. The subscription is 5 shillings payable every January and committee meetings are held at the Rooms of the Irish Literary Society in London.

''Journal of the Irish Folk Song Society''

Milligan Fox jointly edited, with Herbert Hughes, the early issues of the Journal of the Irish Folk Song Society. Charlotte Milligan Fox wrote many articles for each journal issue before she died:
During 2010/2011 Ulster History Circle mounted plaques for famous Ulster figures. Charlotte Milligan Fox and Alice Milligan have a plaque mounted on Omagh Library, 1 Spillar's Place, Omagh, Co Tyrone.

Published works