Lavinia Fenton was probably the daughter of…
1728 CE
Lavinia Fenton was probably the daughter of a naval lieutenant named Beswick, but she bore the name of her mother's husband.
She was thought to have been born in Charring Cross, and had been a child prostitute before becoming an actress.
Her first appearance had been as Monimia in Thomas Otway's The Orphan, in 1726 at the Haymarket Theatre.
She had then joined the company of players at the theater in Lincoln's Inn Fields, where her success and beauty have made her the toast of the beaux.
It is in John Gay's Beggar's Opera, as Polly Peachum, that Miss Fenton makes her greatest success.
Her pictures are in great demand, verses ware written to her and books published about her, and she is the most talked-of person in London.
Hogarth's picture shows her in one of the scenes, with the Duke of Bolton in a box.
After appearing in several comedies, and then in numerous repetitions of the Beggar's Opera in 1728, she runs away with her lover Charles Powlett, 3rd Duke of Bolton, a man much older than herself. (After the death of his wife in 1751, Powlett will marry her at Aix-en-Provence, by which time they already had three sons: Charles, Percy, and Horatio Armand, who will enter the church, the navy, and the army respectively.The duchess will survive her husband and die in 1760 at Westcombe House in Greenwich, being buried in St Alfege's Church, Greenwich on 3 February 1760.)