Shep's Place Family Tree

Felix CAREY  ‎(I2179)‎
Given Names: Felix
Surname: CAREY

Gender: MaleMale
      

Birth: 20 October 1786 25 30 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death: 10 November 1822 ‎(Age 36)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
Personal Facts and Details
Birth 20 October 1786 25 30 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England

Baptism 28 December 1801 ‎(Age 15)‎ Hooghly River, Serampore, Bengal, India


Hide Details Source: A History of Christianity in India 1707-1858

Citation Details:  Page 198


Hide Details Note: Extract from William Carey's Diary
"Dec 29. Yesterday was a day of great joy. I had the happiness to desecrate the Ganges by baptizing the first Hindoo, viz, Krishna, and my son Felix...after the address, I administered the ordinance, first to my son, then to Krishna. At half-past four I administered the Lord's Supper; and a time of real refreshing it was."
‎[The branch of the Ganges which flows by Serampore and Calcutta is the Hooghly River (or Hoogli or Hugli)‎.]

Marriage Margaret Peggy KINSEY - 23 October 1804 ‎(Age 18)‎ Saint Johns Church, Calcutta, Bengal, India


Note: They were married by Rev. Buchanan.
Marriage N. BLACKWELL - 22 March 1811 ‎(Age 24)‎ Burma

Marriage L RUAMBOA - 1815 ‎(Age 28)‎
Marriage Amelia POPE - 2 November 1821 ‎(Age 35)‎ Saint Johns Church, Calcutta, Bengal, India

Biographical Notes


Source: Pioneers of Modern Missions - The Carey Family
Publication: Northamptonshire Nonconformist, Vol.X, Sep, Oct 1898, No. 116, 117

Hide Details Source: Dorothy Carey, The Tragic and Untold Story of Mrs. William Carey
Publication: Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1992.
Citation Details:  Page 121

Hide Details Source: Felix Carey, A Tiger Tamed
Publication: Serampore, Chatterjee, 1991
Citation Details:  Page 72

Hide Details Source: Dictionary of Indian Biography
Publication: London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co. Bloomsbury 1906
Citation Details:  Page 72


Hide Details Note: Culross:
"Their second child was Felix, born 1785. He inherited his father's rare linguistic genius, but without his steadfastness of purpose and his faculty of "plodding." Otherwise he was very fascinating. Felix was baptized in the Ganges along with Krishna, the first Hindoo convert of the Mission. In July, 1803, the first Sunday School in India was opened, under the care of Felix and his brother William and Mr. Fernandez, one of the missionaries."

"In 1807 Mardon and Chater were sent forth from Serampore as missionaries to Burmah.... Carey's eldest son, Felix, soon took the place of Mardon. He was a skilful medical missionary and a printer of Oriental languages trained under Ward."

"Felix Carey's linguistic ability and his medical skill brought him into favour with the Burmese government, by whom he was loaded with honours. But at Serampore, his father regarded these honours with little pleasure. "I fear,' he wrote, 'these honours have not been beneficial to his soul.' He adds, "It is a very distressing thing to be forced to apologise for those you love.'

"Later on, the ‎[Burmese]‎ king ennobled him and employed him as ambassador to the supreme government at Calcutta to bring some pending negotiations to a close.....In the course of his voyage, the brig in which he sailed was struck by a sudden squall and went down; he alone was saved, his wife and two children being drowned in the Irrawaddy. At the same time his MS dictionary went to the bottom and was lost. Rather than face the king, he threw himself among the wild tribes to the east of Bengal where he passed through a succession of adventures, such as are seldom known except in the pages of a romance. His father writes, 'He is, in my opinion very much sunk, and is absolutely shrivelled up as regards Divine things.'

In 1818 he was induced by Willliam Ward to return to Serampore, where his profound acquaintance with eastern philology enabled him to render valuable assistance to his father in revising his Bengali translations."

On November 2, 1821 Felix married Amelia Pope. His daughter was born on 21 October 1822, about three weeks before Felix's death on 10 November 1822. He is bured in the Serampore burial ground.

Pearce Carey:
"When Felix returned to Rangoon and heard of the king's moodiness, he feared his displeasure and fled. For three years he roamed over the frontier-borders between Burmah and Assam--exploring, botanizing, learning vernaculars, serving the Raja of Cachar, gathering and transmitting to Calcutta political information of the much-agitated tribes and peoples, and once even captaining a little force against hopelessly out-numbered Burmese raiders. Throughout the three years he kept in touch with his father, whose letters, he said, 'cheered my soul.'

Beck:
"...Felix was a gifted linguist who was very skilled in the vernacular, as is 'usually experienced by children brought up mainly by servants.'"

"In 1804 at eighteen years of age he married fifteen-year-old Margaret Kinsey. The Serampore missionaries sent young Felix and his wife off to Burma where they hoped to establish a new mission. Felix had obtained some medical training in Calcutta and was eventually able to offer small pox inoculations to the family of the king of Burma. Felix and Margaret had some struggles in Burma. "Mrs. Felix Carey had no missionary feelings and she did not like to be deprived of bread, butter, meat, etc."

"Ã?n 1807 Felix received news of his mother's death. The news hit him hard. During the next year he visited Serampore with his family. He returned to Burma alone since his wife was about to give birth to their third child. Margaret died soon after childbirth at nineteen years of age. William Carey cared for the three children ‎(Lucy, Dorothy, and William)‎ and urged his son Felix to remain a missionary in Burma. In 1811 Felix married again and had two children by his second wife. A tragic river accident took the lives of his second wife and two young children. Death stalked his footsteps. His father William wrote, "I mourn for Felix in silence, and still tremble to think what may be the next stroke. I am dumb with silence because God has done it."

Chatterjee:
"Felix was the best Bengali scholar among the Europeans living in Bengal at that time." He was proficient not only in Bengali and Burmese, but in Sanskrit and Pali."

Buckland:
" Carey, Felix ‎(1782-1822)‎
Missionary : son of the Rev. Dr. W. Carey ‎(q.v.)‎ : went with his parents to India : assisted his father in his Biblical translations : besides many translations in Bengali, he published a Burmese grammar, and began a Burmese dictionary and Pali grammar : he died at Serampur Nov. 10, 1822."

From an unidentified biographical dictionary, London, page 974:
"CAREY, FELIX ‎(1786-1822)‎, orientalist, eldest son of William Carey ‎[q.v.]‎, missionary to India, was born in 1786. He also became a missionary to India, and died at Serampur 10 Nov. 1822. He published a Burmese grammar, 1814, and left behind him materials for a Burmese dictionary, which was published in 1826. He also translated the 'Pilgrim's Progress,' the 'Vicar of Wakefield,' and the Bible."
‎[Life of William Carey, 1836; Brit. Mus. Catalogue.]‎

Tombstone


Hide Details Source: British Library - India & Oriental Reading Room
Publication: Miscellaneous records of the British in India.
Citation Details:  Biographical Index


Hide Details Note: Sacred to the Memory of
Felix Carey, eldest
son of the Rev.
W. Carey, D.D., who
departed this life on the
10th of November,
1822, ‎[Aged]‎ 36
years and 20
A prisoner of
hope released

Death 10 November 1822 ‎(Age 36)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India

Cause of death: Liver disease & Fevers
Burial Mission Burial Ground, Serampore, Bengal, India

Last Change 3 March 2008 - 21:12:09
View Details for ...

Parents Family  (F1610)
Rev. William CAREY
1761 - 1834
Dorothy Dolly PLACKETT
1756 - 1807
Ann CAREY
1782 - 1784
Felix CAREY
1786 - 1822
William CAREY
1788 - 1853
Peter CAREY
1789 - 1794
Lucy CAREY
1790 - 1792
Jabez CAREY
1793 - 1862
Jonathan CAREY
1796 - 1874

Immediate Family  (F1611)
Margaret Peggy KINSEY
1789 - 1808
Lucy CAREY
1805 - 1876
Dorothy Dolly CAREY
1805 -
William CAREY
1807 - 1809

Immediate Family  (F1612)
N. BLACKWELL
1789 - 1814
William CAREY
1812 - 1814
Eliza Frances CAREY
1814 - 1814

Immediate Family  (F1648)
L RUAMBOA
1800 - 1821

Immediate Family  (F1649)
Amelia POPE
1802 - 1869
Margaret Amelia CAREY
1823 - 1864


Notes
Baptism Extract from William Carey's Diary
"Dec 29. Yesterday was a day of great joy. I had the happiness to desecrate the Ganges by baptizing the first Hindoo, viz, Krishna, and my son Felix...after the address, I administered the ordinance, first to my son, then to Krishna. At half-past four I administered the Lord's Supper; and a time of real refreshing it was."
‎[The branch of the Ganges which flows by Serampore and Calcutta is the Hooghly River (or Hoogli or Hugli)‎.]
Marriage They were married by Rev. Buchanan.
Marriage They were married by Rev. Buchanan.
Biographical Notes Culross:
"Their second child was Felix, born 1785. He inherited his father's rare linguistic genius, but without his steadfastness of purpose and his faculty of "plodding." Otherwise he was very fascinating. Felix was baptized in the Ganges along with Krishna, the first Hindoo convert of the Mission. In July, 1803, the first Sunday School in India was opened, under the care of Felix and his brother William and Mr. Fernandez, one of the missionaries."

"In 1807 Mardon and Chater were sent forth from Serampore as missionaries to Burmah.... Carey's eldest son, Felix, soon took the place of Mardon. He was a skilful medical missionary and a printer of Oriental languages trained under Ward."

"Felix Carey's linguistic ability and his medical skill brought him into favour with the Burmese government, by whom he was loaded with honours. But at Serampore, his father regarded these honours with little pleasure. "I fear,' he wrote, 'these honours have not been beneficial to his soul.' He adds, "It is a very distressing thing to be forced to apologise for those you love.'

"Later on, the ‎[Burmese]‎ king ennobled him and employed him as ambassador to the supreme government at Calcutta to bring some pending negotiations to a close.....In the course of his voyage, the brig in which he sailed was struck by a sudden squall and went down; he alone was saved, his wife and two children being drowned in the Irrawaddy. At the same time his MS dictionary went to the bottom and was lost. Rather than face the king, he threw himself among the wild tribes to the east of Bengal where he passed through a succession of adventures, such as are seldom known except in the pages of a romance. His father writes, 'He is, in my opinion very much sunk, and is absolutely shrivelled up as regards Divine things.'

In 1818 he was induced by Willliam Ward to return to Serampore, where his profound acquaintance with eastern philology enabled him to render valuable assistance to his father in revising his Bengali translations."

On November 2, 1821 Felix married Amelia Pope. His daughter was born on 21 October 1822, about three weeks before Felix's death on 10 November 1822. He is bured in the Serampore burial ground.

Pearce Carey:
"When Felix returned to Rangoon and heard of the king's moodiness, he feared his displeasure and fled. For three years he roamed over the frontier-borders between Burmah and Assam--exploring, botanizing, learning vernaculars, serving the Raja of Cachar, gathering and transmitting to Calcutta political information of the much-agitated tribes and peoples, and once even captaining a little force against hopelessly out-numbered Burmese raiders. Throughout the three years he kept in touch with his father, whose letters, he said, 'cheered my soul.'

Beck:
"...Felix was a gifted linguist who was very skilled in the vernacular, as is 'usually experienced by children brought up mainly by servants.'"

"In 1804 at eighteen years of age he married fifteen-year-old Margaret Kinsey. The Serampore missionaries sent young Felix and his wife off to Burma where they hoped to establish a new mission. Felix had obtained some medical training in Calcutta and was eventually able to offer small pox inoculations to the family of the king of Burma. Felix and Margaret had some struggles in Burma. "Mrs. Felix Carey had no missionary feelings and she did not like to be deprived of bread, butter, meat, etc."

"Ã?n 1807 Felix received news of his mother's death. The news hit him hard. During the next year he visited Serampore with his family. He returned to Burma alone since his wife was about to give birth to their third child. Margaret died soon after childbirth at nineteen years of age. William Carey cared for the three children ‎(Lucy, Dorothy, and William)‎ and urged his son Felix to remain a missionary in Burma. In 1811 Felix married again and had two children by his second wife. A tragic river accident took the lives of his second wife and two young children. Death stalked his footsteps. His father William wrote, "I mourn for Felix in silence, and still tremble to think what may be the next stroke. I am dumb with silence because God has done it."

Chatterjee:
"Felix was the best Bengali scholar among the Europeans living in Bengal at that time." He was proficient not only in Bengali and Burmese, but in Sanskrit and Pali."

Buckland:
" Carey, Felix ‎(1782-1822)‎
Missionary : son of the Rev. Dr. W. Carey ‎(q.v.)‎ : went with his parents to India : assisted his father in his Biblical translations : besides many translations in Bengali, he published a Burmese grammar, and began a Burmese dictionary and Pali grammar : he died at Serampur Nov. 10, 1822."

From an unidentified biographical dictionary, London, page 974:
"CAREY, FELIX ‎(1786-1822)‎, orientalist, eldest son of William Carey ‎[q.v.]‎, missionary to India, was born in 1786. He also became a missionary to India, and died at Serampur 10 Nov. 1822. He published a Burmese grammar, 1814, and left behind him materials for a Burmese dictionary, which was published in 1826. He also translated the 'Pilgrim's Progress,' the 'Vicar of Wakefield,' and the Bible."
‎[Life of William Carey, 1836; Brit. Mus. Catalogue.]‎
Tombstone Sacred to the Memory of
Felix Carey, eldest
son of the Rev.
W. Carey, D.D., who
departed this life on the
10th of November,
1822, ‎[Aged]‎ 36
years and 20
A prisoner of
hope released

View Notes for ...


Sources

Source
Carey Family Association

Source
British Library - India & Oriental Reading Room
Publication: Miscellaneous records of the British in India.
Citation Details:  Biogra‎[joca; omdex N1/11f/531‎
Baptism A History of Christianity in India 1707-1858
Citation Details:  Page 198
Biographical Notes Pioneers of Modern Missions - The Carey Family
Publication: Northamptonshire Nonconformist, Vol.X, Sep, Oct 1898, No. 116, 117
Biographical Notes Dorothy Carey, The Tragic and Untold Story of Mrs. William Carey
Publication: Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1992.
Citation Details:  Page 121
Biographical Notes Felix Carey, A Tiger Tamed
Publication: Serampore, Chatterjee, 1991
Citation Details:  Page 72
Biographical Notes Dictionary of Indian Biography
Publication: London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co. Bloomsbury 1906
Citation Details:  Page 72
Tombstone British Library - India & Oriental Reading Room
Publication: Miscellaneous records of the British in India.
Citation Details:  Biographical Index

View Sources for ...


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Family with Parents
Father
Rev. William CAREY ‎(I2160)‎
Birth 17 August 1761 25 27 Paulerspury, Northamptonshire, England
Death 9 June 1834 ‎(Age 72)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
-6 years
Mother
 
Dorothy Dolly PLACKETT ‎(I4624)‎
Birth 25 January 1756 35 Hackleton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 8 December 1807 ‎(Age 51)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India

Marriage: 10 June 1781 -- Piddington, Northamptonshire, England
7 months
#1
Sister
Ann CAREY ‎(I2178)‎
Birth 1782 20 25 Hackleton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 1784 ‎(Age 2)‎ Piddington, Northamptonshire, England
5 years
#2
Felix CAREY ‎(I2179)‎
Birth 20 October 1786 25 30 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 10 November 1822 ‎(Age 36)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
19 months
#3
Brother
William CAREY ‎(I2198)‎
Birth June 1788 26 32 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 3 February 1853 ‎(Age 64)‎ Cutwa, Bengal, India
7 months
#4
Brother
Peter CAREY ‎(I2199)‎
Birth 1789 27 32 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 11 October 1794 ‎(Age 5)‎ Mudnabati, Bengal, India
1 year
#5
Sister
Lucy CAREY ‎(I2206)‎
Birth 1790 28 33 Leicester, Leicestershire, England
Death 1792 ‎(Age 2)‎ Leicester, Leicestershire, England
3 years
#6
Brother
Jabez CAREY ‎(I2214)‎
Birth 12 May 1793 31 37 Piddington, Northamptonshire, England
Death 13 May 1862 ‎(Age 69)‎ Calcutta, Bengal, India
3 years
#7
Brother
Jonathan CAREY ‎(I1469)‎
Birth January 1796 34 39 Mudnabati, Bengal, India
Death 13 April 1874 ‎(Age 78)‎ 8 The Paragon 15 Clapton Square, Hackney, London, England
Family with Margaret Peggy KINSEY
Felix CAREY ‎(I2179)‎
Birth 20 October 1786 25 30 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 10 November 1822 ‎(Age 36)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
2 years
Wife
 
Margaret Peggy KINSEY ‎(I2181)‎
Birth 1789
Death 26 December 1808 ‎(Age 19)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India

Marriage: 23 October 1804 -- Saint Johns Church, Calcutta, Bengal, India
11 months
#1
Daughter
Lucy CAREY ‎(I2182)‎
Birth 23 September 1805 18 16 Bengal, India
Death 13 February 1876 ‎(Age 70)‎ Bedford, Bedfordshire, England
2 months
#2
Daughter
Dorothy Dolly CAREY ‎(I2183)‎
Birth 22 November 1805 19 16 Serampore, Bengal, India
2 years
#3
Son
William CAREY ‎(I2184)‎
Birth 5 December 1807 21 18 Serampore, Bengal, India
Death 1809 ‎(Age 12 months)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
Family with N. BLACKWELL
Felix CAREY ‎(I2179)‎
Birth 20 October 1786 25 30 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 10 November 1822 ‎(Age 36)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
3 years
Wife
 
N. BLACKWELL ‎(I2190)‎
Birth 11 September 1789 Bassein, Burma
Death 31 August 1814 ‎(Age 24)‎ Irrawaddy River, Burma

Marriage: 22 March 1811 -- Burma
11 months
#1
Son
William CAREY ‎(I4761)‎
Birth 6 February 1812 25 22
Death 30 August 1814 ‎(Age 2)‎ Irrawaddy River, Burma
2 years
#2
Daughter
Eliza Frances CAREY ‎(I2193)‎
Birth 10 July 1814 27 24 Burma
Death 30 August 1814 ‎(Age 51 days)‎ Irrawaddy River, Burma
Family with L RUAMBOA
Felix CAREY ‎(I2179)‎
Birth 20 October 1786 25 30 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 10 November 1822 ‎(Age 36)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
13 years
Wife
 
L RUAMBOA ‎(I4759)‎
Birth circa 1800
Death circa 1821 ‎(Age 21)‎ Burma

Marriage: 1815
Family with Amelia POPE
Felix CAREY ‎(I2179)‎
Birth 20 October 1786 25 30 Moulton, Northamptonshire, England
Death 10 November 1822 ‎(Age 36)‎ Serampore, Bengal, India
16 years
Wife
 
Amelia POPE ‎(I4760)‎
Birth 16 May 1802
Death 15 April 1869 ‎(Age 66)‎ Monirampore, Bengal, India

Marriage: 2 November 1821 -- Saint Johns Church, Calcutta, Bengal, India
14 months
#1
Daughter
Margaret Amelia CAREY ‎(I5352)‎
Birth 8 January 1823 36 20 Calcutta, Bengal, India
Death 4 November 1864 ‎(Age 41)‎