Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Sir Charles Langham, 13th Baronet

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Sir Langham,

Died
  
October 3, 1951

Education
  
Eton College


Sir Charles Langham, 13th Baronet

Sir Herbert Charles Arthur Langham, 13th Baronet (24 May 1870, Cottesbrooke, Northamptonshire - 3 October 1951, Tempo) was an English landowner, photographer, ornithologist and entomologist. He was educated at Eton and later became a lieutenant in the Northamptonshire Regiment. He married Ethel (known in the family as Jenny) Tennent in 1893 and came to live in Tempo Manor, County Fermanagh, which she had inherited. The house and estate had been built by her grandfather, another naturalist, James Emerson Tennent. Langham was deputy lieutenant and justice of the peace for the county. In 1930 he was appointed High Sheriff of Fermanagh.

Contents

Photography

Langham used a full-plate camera with a tripod and hand-held cameras manufactured by Leica and Voigtländer and other cameras from the American company Kodak. His subjects included the village and people of Tempo, the Alps, family and the female nude.

Entomology

From 1890 Langham spent spring and summer in the French and Swiss Alps. He was primarily a collector. His butterfly and moth collection includes English and Irish specimens. The French Alps, Swiss Alps and Alpine collection is butterflies only and is augmented by specimens (purchased) from Scandinavia, Palestine (ex Philip Graves), Persia, North Africa and Russia.

References

Sir Charles Langham, 13th Baronet Wikipedia