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Hensleigh Wedgwood

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Nationality
  
English

Children
  
Frances Julia Wedgwood

Parents
  
Josiah Wedgwood II


Role
  
Author

Name
  
Hensleigh Wedgwood

Siblings
  
Emma Darwin

Born
  
January 21, 1803 (
1803-01-21
)
Tarrant Gunville, Dorset

Resting place
  
Stoke Minster (The Church of St. Peter ad Vincula) 53°00′15″N 02°10′53″W / 53.00417°N 2.18139°W / 53.00417; -2.18139

Alma mater
  
Christ's College, Cambridge

Occupation
  
Barrister, magistrate, Philologist

Known for
  
Writing on English Etymology

Spouse(s)
  
Frances Emma Elizabeth Mackintosh Catherine (Kitty) Allen

Died
  
June 2, 1891, Gower Street, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
A dictionary of English etymology, On the Development of the Understanding

Similar People
  
Emma Darwin, Josiah Wedgwood, Anne Darwin, Charles Darwin, Horace Darwin

Hensleigh Wedgwood (21 January 1803 – 2 June 1891) was a British etymologist, philologist and barrister, author of A Dictionary of English Etymology. He was a cousin of Charles Darwin - whom his sister Emma married in 1839.

Contents

Early life

Wedgwood was born at Tarrant Gunville in Dorset, the fourth son of Josiah Wedgwood II and Elizabeth Allen of Cresselly, Pembrokeshire.

He was educated at Rugby School, then entered St John's College, Cambridge in 1820 but switched to Christ's College the following year. Though he did well in maths, graduating as 8th wrangler, he finished bottom in the classical tripos at Cambridge in 1824, for which he was awarded the first "wooden wedge", equivalent to the wooden spoon, and jokingly named for him.

Career

After leaving Cambridge, Wedgwood read for the chancery bar. In 1828, he qualified as a barrister, but never practiced. Between 1831 and 1837, he served as a Police Magistrate and sat at the Surrey Magistrates court at Union Hall, Southwark.

A notable case that came before him during his tenure was that of James Pratt and John Smith in 1835, who he committed to trial after their arrest for homosexual acts. After their trial and conviction at the Central Criminal Court, the two became the last to be executed for sodomy in England. This was in spite of Wedgwood himself calling for a commutation of their death sentences in a letter to the Home Secretary.

Wedgwood resigned from the Magistracy after deciding that one of his duties, the administrations of oaths, was inconsistent with the commandments of the New Testament. Between 1838 and 1849, he held the post of Registrar of Metropolitan Public Carriage.

His main field of study Philology and Etymology. Publishing his Dictionary of Etymology in 1857. He was also a founding member of the Philological Society.

Spiritualism

Wedgwood became interested in spiritualism and attended séances. In 1874, he attempted to get T.H. Huxley involved in spiritualism by sending him an alleged spirit photograph. Huxley was not impressed and suggested the photograph had been produced fraudulently by the use of a second image placed on the plate inside the camera. Hensleigh refused to believe this explanation and considered the photograph to be genuine.

Wedgwood was a member of the British National Association of Spiritualists and a vice-president of the Society for Psychical Research.

Personal life

He married Frances Emma Elizabeth "Fanny" Mackintosh (1800-1889) in 1832, his first cousin, the daughter of Sir James Mackintosh and his second wife Catherine "Kitty" Allen. They had six children:

  • Frances Julia Wedgwood (1833-1913), feminist philosopher and writer known as "Snow".
  • James Mackintosh Wedgwood (1834-1874)
  • Ernest Hensleigh Wedgwood (1837-1898)
  • Katherine Euphemia Wedgwood (1839-1934), married Thomas Farrer, 1st Baron Farrer.
  • Alfred Allen Wedgwood (1842-1892), father of J. I. Wedgwood.
  • Hope Elizabeth (1844-1935) married her cousin Godfrey Wedgwood.
  • Wedgwood died on 2 June 1891 at his house at 94 Gower Street, London. He was buried at the Church of St. Peter ad Vincula, Stoke on Trent, now known as Stoke Minster.

    Legacy

    A collection of around 550 books from his library is held by the library of the University of Birmingham. They were donated to the university by his daughter, Frances Julia Wedgwood.

    Partial list of works

  • The Principles of Geometrical Demonstration, 1844
  • On the Development of Understanding, 1848.
  • On the Origin of Language, 1866.
  • A Dictionary of English Etymology, Second Edition, 1872.
  • Contested Etymologies in the Dictionary of Rev. W. W. Skeat, 1882.
  • References

    Hensleigh Wedgwood Wikipedia