Determined to help the troops, Mary travelled to the Crimea at her own expense and set up 'The British Hotel' outside Balaklava, where she tended to the sick and wounded. She became widely known as 'Mother Seacole', a familiar face on the battlefield and was later awarded the British Crimean medal, the Turkish Medjidie and the French Legion of Honour.
Comparisons are often made between Mary and the Lady with the Lamp, but Florence Nightingale did not associate with Mary, perhaps because of Victorian propriety – Mary sold alcohol to soldiers.
"Mary wasn’t a black Nightingale," explained Helen. "She operated in a completely different way, with a totally different agenda."
The artist to whom the picture is credited was only 22 years old in 1869 and is listed as an art student, living in Hammersmith, in the census of 1871. It is assumed that he or his family must have had some connection to Mary, but the provenance of the painting is difficult to trace.
Helen had to research Albert Charles Challon genealogically: "What is poignant is that this artist is completely unknown," she said, adding that "he died aged only 34, just months after Mary."
The painting, which was found in good condition, is on loan to the gallery indefinitely.
"I can only hope this will inspire others to research black history, especially black women’s history," said Helen, who would also like to hear from any members of the Challon family, last recorded in Stoke Newington in the 1920s.