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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Noteworthy Families (Modern Science), by
+Francis Galton and Edgar Schuster
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Noteworthy Families (Modern Science)
+ An Index to Kinships in Near Degrees between Persons Whose Achievements Are Honourable, and Have Been Publicly Recorded
+
+
+Author: Francis Galton and Edgar Schuster
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 21, 2005 [eBook #17128]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTEWORTHY FAMILIES (MODERN
+SCIENCE)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Lybarger, Laura Wisewell, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
++--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+| |
+| Transcriber's Note: In this plain text version, italics have been |
+| rendered using underscores; both bold and small-caps using |
+| all-caps (these never occur near each other, so no confusion |
+| should arise); and the surnames of the subjects, which were in |
+| bold sans-serif in the original, have been rendered in all-caps |
+| with the # symbol on either side. The underscores have been |
+| removed from a few italicized abbreviations where they were felt |
+| to be a distraction. |
+| |
++--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTEWORTHY FAMILIES
+
+(MODERN SCIENCE)
+
+An Index to Kinships in Near Degrees
+between Persons Whose Achievements
+Are Honourable, and Have Been
+Publicly Recorded
+
+by
+
+FRANCIS GALTON, D.C.L., F.R.S., HON. D.Sc (CAMB.)
+
+and
+
+EDGAR SCHUSTER
+Galton Research Fellow in National Eugenics
+
+VOL I
+of the Publications of the Eugenics Record Office
+of the University of London
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+London
+John Murray, Albemarle Street
+
+1906
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ I. INTRODUCTORY NOTE vii
+
+ PREFACE ix
+
+ CHAPTER
+
+ GENERAL REMARKS ix
+
+ II. NOTEWORTHINESS xi
+
+ III. HIGHEST ORDER OF ABILITY xiv
+
+ IV. PROPORTION OF NOTEWORTHIES TO THE GENERALITY xviii
+
+ V. NOTEWORTHINESS AS A STATISTICAL MEASURE OF ABILITY xx
+
+ VI. NOMENCLATURE OF KINSHIPS xxvi
+
+ VII. NUMBER OF KINSFOLK IN EACH DEGREE xxviii
+
+VIII. NUMBER OF NOTEWORTHY KINSMEN IN EACH DEGREE xxxiii
+
+ IX. MARKED AND UNMARKED NOTEWORTHINESS xxxv
+
+ X. CONCLUSIONS xxxix
+
+ NOTEWORTHY FAMILIES:
+ OF SIXTY-SIX F.R.S.'S WHO WERE LIVING IN 1904 1
+
+ APPENDIX:
+ FATHERS OF SOME OF THE SIXTY-SIX F.R.S.'S CLASSIFIED
+ BY THEIR OCCUPATIONS 80
+
+ INDEX 85
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+
+
+The brief biographical notices of sixty-six noteworthy families
+printed in this book are compiled from replies to a circular issued
+by me in the spring of 1904 to all living Fellows of the Royal
+Society. Those that first arrived were discussed in "Nature," August
+11, 1904.
+
+On Mr. Schuster's appointment by the University of London, in
+October, 1904, to the Research Fellowship in National Eugenics, all
+my materials were placed in his hand. He was to select from them
+those families that contained at least three noteworthy kinsmen, to
+compile lists of their achievements on the model of the
+above-mentioned memoir, to verify statements as far as possible, and
+to send what he wrote for final approval by the authors of the
+several replies.
+
+This was done by Mr. Schuster. The results were then submitted by him
+as an appendix to his Report to the Senate last summer.
+
+After preliminary arrangements, it was determined by the Senate that
+the list of Noteworthy Families should be published according to the
+title-page of this book, I having agreed to contribute the preface,
+Mr. Schuster's time being fully occupied with work in another branch
+of Eugenics.
+
+So the list of "Noteworthy Families" in this volume is entirely the
+work of Mr. Schuster, except in respect to some slight alterations
+and additions for which I am responsible, as well as for all the
+rest.
+
+ FRANCIS GALTON.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.--GENERAL REMARKS.
+
+
+This volume is the first instalment of a work that admits of wide
+extension. Its object is to serve as an index to the achievements of
+those families which, having been exceptionally productive of
+noteworthy persons, seem especially suitable for biographical
+investigation.
+
+The facts that are given here are avowedly bald and imperfect;
+nevertheless, they lead to certain important conclusions. They show,
+for example, that a considerable proportion of the noteworthy members
+in a population spring from comparatively few families.
+
+The material upon which this book is based is mainly derived from the
+answers made to a circular sent to all the Fellows of the Royal
+Society whose names appear in its Year Book for 1904.
+
+The questions were not unreasonably numerous, nor were they
+inquisitorial; nevertheless, it proved that not one-half of those who
+were addressed cared to answer them. It was, of course, desirable to
+know a great deal more than could have been asked for or published
+with propriety, such as the proneness of particular families to
+grave constitutional disease. Indeed, the secret history of a family
+is quite as important in its eugenic aspect as its public history;
+but one cannot expect persons to freely unlock their dark closets and
+drag forth family skeletons into the light of day. It was necessary
+in such a work as this to submit to considerable limitations, while
+turning to the fullest account whatever could be stated openly
+without giving the smallest offence to any of the persons concerned.
+
+One limitation against which I still chafe in vain is the
+impracticability of ascertaining so apparently simple a matter as the
+number of kinsfolk of each person in each specific degree of near
+kinship, without troublesome solicitations. It was specially asked
+for in the circular, but by no means generally answered, even by
+those who replied freely to other questions. The reason must in some
+cases have been mere oversight or pure inertia, but to a large extent
+it was due to ignorance, for I was astonished to find many to whom
+the number of even their near kinsfolk was avowedly unknown.
+Emigration, foreign service, feuds between near connections,
+differences of social position, faintness of family interest, each
+produced their several effects, with the result, as I have reason to
+believe, that hardly one-half of the persons addressed were able,
+without first making inquiry of others, to reckon the number of their
+uncles, adult nephews, and first cousins. The isolation of some few
+from even their nearest relatives was occasionally so complete that
+the number of their brothers was unknown. It will be seen that this
+deficiency of information admits of being supplied indirectly, to a
+considerable degree.
+
+The collection of even the comparatively small amount of material now
+in hand proved much more troublesome than was anticipated, but as the
+object and limitations of inquiries like this become generally
+understood, and as experience accumulates, the difficulty of similar
+work in the future will presumably lessen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.--NOTEWORTHINESS.
+
+
+The Fellowship of the Royal Society is a distinction highly
+appreciated by all members of the scientific world. Fifteen men are
+annually selected by its council out of some sixty candidates, each
+candidate being proposed by six, and usually by more, Fellows in a
+certificate containing his qualifications. The candidates themselves
+are representatives of a multitude of persons to whom the title would
+be not only an honour but a material advantage. The addition of the
+letters "F.R.S." to the names of applicants to any post, however
+remotely connected with science, is a valuable testimonial and a
+recognised aid towards success, so the number of those who desire it
+is very large. Experience shows that no special education, other than
+self-instruction, is really required to attain this honour. Access to
+laboratories, good tuition, and so forth, are doubtless helpful, so
+far that many have obtained the distinction through such aid who
+could not otherwise have done so, but they are far from being
+all-important factors of success. The facts that lie patent before
+the eyes of every medical man, engineer, and the members of most
+professions, afford ample material for researches that would command
+the attention of the scientific world if viewed with intelligence and
+combined by a capable mind.
+
+It is so difficult to compare the number of those who might have
+succeeded with the number of those who do, that the following
+illustration may perhaps be useful: By adding to the 53 registration
+counties in England, the 12 in Wales, the 33 in Scotland and the 32
+in Ireland, an aggregate of 130 is obtained. The English counties,
+and the others in a lesser degree, have to be ransacked in order to
+supply the fifteen annually-elected Fellows; so it requires more than
+eight of these counties to yield an annual supply of a single Fellow
+to the Royal Society.
+
+It is therefore contended that the Fellows of the Royal Society have
+sufficient status to be reckoned "noteworthy," and, such being the
+case, they are a very convenient body for inquiries like these. They
+are trained to, and have sympathy with, scientific investigations;
+biographical notices are published of them during their lifetime,
+notably in the convenient compendium "Who's Who," to which there will
+be frequent occasion to refer; and they are more or less known to one
+another, either directly or through friends, making it comparatively
+easy to satisfy the occasional doubts which may arise from their
+communications. It was easier and statistically safer to limit the
+inquiry to those Fellows who were living when the circulars were
+issued--that is, to those whose names and addresses appear in the
+"Royal Society's Year Book" of 1904. Some of them have since died,
+full of honours, having done their duty to their generation; others
+have since been elected; so the restriction given here to the term
+"Modern Science" must be kept in mind.
+
+Another and a strong motive for selecting the F.R.S. as subjects of
+inquiry was that so long ago as 1863-1864 I had investigated the
+antecedents of 180 of those who were then living, who were further
+distinguished by one or other of certain specified and recognised
+honours. My conclusions were briefly described in a Friday evening
+lecture, February 27, 1864, before the Royal Institution. These,
+together with the data on which they were founded, were published in
+the same year in my book "English Men of Science." Readers who desire
+fuller information as to the antecedents conducive to success that
+are too briefly described further on should refer to the above book.
+
+The epithet "noteworthy" is applied to achievements in all branches
+of effort that rank among the members of any profession or calling as
+equal, at least, to that which an F.R.S. holds among scientific men.
+This affords a convenient and sufficiently definite standard of
+merit. I could think of none more appropriate when addressing
+scientific men, and it seems to have been generally understood in
+the desired sense. It includes more than a half of those whose names
+appear in the modern editions of "Who's Who," which are become less
+discriminate than the earlier ones. "Noteworthiness" is ascribed,
+without exception, to all whose names appear in the "Dictionary of
+National Biography," but all of these were dead before the date of
+the publication of that work and its supplement. Noteworthiness is
+also ascribed to those whose biographies appear in the "Encyclopædia
+Britannica" (which includes many who are now alive), and, in other
+works, of equivalent authority. As those persons were considered by
+editors of the last named publications to be worthy of note, I have
+accepted them, on their authority, as noteworthy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.--HIGHEST ORDER OF ABILITY.
+
+
+No attempt is made in this book to deal with the transmission of
+ability of the very highest order, as the data in hand do not furnish
+the required material, nor will the conclusions be re-examined at
+length that I published many years ago in "Hereditary Genius." Still,
+some explanation is desirable to show the complexity of the
+conditions that are concerned with the hereditary transmission of the
+highest ability, which, for the moment, will be considered as the
+same thing as the highest fame.
+
+It has often been remarked that the men who have attained pinnacles
+of celebrity failed to leave worthy successors, if any. Many
+concurrent causes aid in producing this result. An obvious one is
+that such persons are apt to be so immersed in their pursuit, and so
+wedded to it, that they do not care to be distracted by a wife.
+Another is the probable connection between severe mental strain and
+fertility. Women who study hard have, as a class--at least, according
+to observant caricaturists--fewer of the more obvious feminine
+characteristics; but whether this should be considered a cause or a
+consequence, or both, it is difficult to say. A third, and I think
+the most important, reason why the children of very distinguished
+persons fall sometimes lamentably short of their parents in ability
+is that the highest order of mind results from a fortunate mixture of
+incongruous constituents, and not of such as naturally harmonize.
+Those constituents are _negatively_ correlated, and therefore the
+compound is unstable in heredity. This is eminently the case in the
+typical artistic temperament, which certainly harmonizes with
+Bohemianism and passion, and is opposed to the useful qualities of
+regularity, foresight, and level common sense. Where these and
+certain other incongruous faculties go together in well-adjusted
+proportions, they are capable of achieving the highest success; but
+their heritage is most unlikely to be transmitted in its entirety,
+and ill-balanced compounds of the same constituents are usually of
+little avail, and sometimes extraordinarily bad. A fourth reason is
+that the highest imaginative power is dangerously near lunacy. If
+one of the sanest of poets, Wordsworth, had, as he said, not
+unfrequently to exert strength, as by shaking a gate-post, to gain
+assurance that the world around him was a reality, his mind could not
+at those times have been wholly sane. Sanity is difficult to define,
+except negatively; but, even though we may be convinced of the truths
+of the mystic, that nothing is what it seems to be, the
+above-mentioned conduct suggests temporary insanity. It is sufficient
+to conclude, as any Philistine would, that whoever has to shake a
+gate-post to convince himself that it is not a vision is dangerously
+near madness. Mad people do such things; those who carry on the work
+of the world as useful and law-abiding citizens do not. I may add
+that I myself had the privilege of hearing at first hand the
+narrator's own account of this incident, which was much emphasized by
+his gestures and tones. Wordsworth's unexpected sally was in reply to
+a timid question by the late Professor Bonamy Price, then a young
+man, concerning the exact meaning of the lines in his famous "Ode to
+Immortality," "not for these I raise the song of praise; but for
+those obstinate _questionings of sense and outward things_," etc.
+
+I cannot speak from the present returns, but only from my own private
+knowledge of the somewhat abnormal frequency with which eccentricity,
+or other mental unsoundness, occurs in the families of very able
+scientific men. Lombroso, as is well known, strongly asserted the
+truth of this fact, but more strongly, as it seems to myself, than
+the evidence warrants.
+
+It is, therefore, not in the highest examples of human genius that
+heredity can be most profitably studied, men of high, but not of the
+highest, ability being more suitable. The only objection to their use
+is that their names are, for the most part, unfamiliar to the public.
+
+The vastness of the social world is very imperfectly grasped by its
+several members, the large majority of the numerous persons who have
+been eminent above their far more numerous fellows, each in his own
+special department, being unknown to the generality. The merits of
+such men can be justly appreciated only by reference to records of
+their achievements. Let no reader be so conceited as to believe his
+present ignorance of a particular person to be a proof that the
+person in question does not merit the title of noteworthy.
+
+I said what I have to say about the modern use of the word "genius"
+in the preface to the second edition of my "Hereditary Genius." It
+has only latterly lost its old and usual meaning, which is preserved
+in the term of an "ingenious" artisan, and has come to be applied to
+something akin to inspiration. This simply means, as I suppose,
+though some may think differently, that the powers of unconscious
+work possessed by the brain are abnormally developed in them. The
+heredity of these powers has not, I believe, been as yet especially
+studied. It is strange that more attention has not been given until
+recently to unconscious brain-work, because it is by far the most
+potent factor in mental operations. Few people, when in rapid
+conversation, have the slightest idea of the particular form which a
+sentence will assume into which they have hurriedly plunged, yet
+through the guidance of unconscious cerebration it develops itself
+grammatically and harmoniously. I write on good authority in
+asserting that the best speaking and writing is that which seems to
+flow automatically shaped out of a full mind.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.--PROPORTION OF NOTEWORTHIES TO THE GENERALITY.
+
+
+The materials on which the subject of this chapter depends are too
+various to lead to a single definite and trustworthy answer. Men who
+have won their way to the front out of uncongenial environments owe
+their success principally, I believe, to their untiring energy, and
+to an exceptionally strong inclination in youth towards the pursuits
+in which they afterwards distinguished themselves. They do not seem
+often to be characterized by an ability that continues pre-eminent on
+a wider stage, because after they have fully won a position for
+themselves, and become engaged in work along with others who had no
+early difficulties to contend with, they do not, as a rule, show
+greatly higher natural ability than their colleagues. This is
+noticeable in committees and in other assemblies or societies where
+intellects are pitted against one another. The bulk of existing
+noteworthies seem to have had but little more than a fair education
+as small boys, during which their eagerness and aptitude for study
+led to their receiving favour and facilities. If, in such cases, the
+aptitudes are scholastic, a moderate sum suffices to give the boy a
+better education, enabling him to win scholarships and to enter a
+University. If they lie in other directions, the boy attracts notice
+from some more congenial source, and is helped onwards in life by
+other means. The demand for exceptional ability, when combined with
+energy and good character, is so great that a lad who is gifted with
+them is hardly more likely to remain overlooked than a bird's nest in
+the playground of a school. But, by whatever means noteworthiness
+is achieved, it is usually after a course of repeated and
+half-unconscious testings of intelligence, energy, and character,
+which build up repute brick by brick.
+
+If we compare the number of those who achieved noteworthiness through
+their own exertions with the numbers of the greatly more numerous
+persons whose names are registered in legal, clerical, medical,
+official, military, and naval directories, or in those of the titled
+classes[A] and landed gentry, or lastly, of those of the immense
+commercial world, the proportion of one noteworthy person to one
+hundred of the generality who were equally well circumstanced as
+himself does not seem to be an over-estimate.
+
+[A] By a rough count of the entries in Burke's "Peerage, Baronetage
+ and Knightage," I find that upwards of 24,000 ladies are of
+ sufficient rank to be included by name in his Table of
+ Precedence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.--NOTEWORTHINESS AS A MEASURE OF ABILITY.
+
+
+Success is the joint result of the natural powers of mind and body,
+and of favourable circumstances. Those of the latter which fall into
+definite groups will be distinguished as "environment," while the
+others, which evade classification, will be called "accidental."
+
+The superstitions of old times cling so tenaciously to modern thought
+that the words "accident" and "chance" commonly connote some
+mysterious agency. Nothing of the kind is implied here. The word
+"accident" and the like is used in these pages simply to express the
+effect of unknown or unnoted causes, without the slightest
+implication that they are unknowable. In most cases their neglect has
+been partly due to their individual insignificance, though their
+combined effect may be very powerful when a multitude work in the
+same direction. Moreover, a trifling pressure at the right spot
+suffices to release a hair-trigger and thereby to cause an explosion;
+similarly, with personal and social events, a trifling accident will
+sometimes determine a career.
+
+Noteworthiness and success may be regarded statistically as the
+outcome of ability and environment and of nothing else, because the
+effects of chance tend to be eliminated by statistical treatment. The
+question then becomes, How far may noteworthiness be accepted as a
+statistical measure of ability?
+
+Ability and environment are each composed of many elements that
+differ greatly in character. Ability may be especially strong in
+particular directions as in administration, art, scholarship, or
+science; it is, nevertheless, so adaptive that an able man has often
+found his way to the front under more than one great change of
+circumstance. The force that impels towards noteworthy deeds is an
+innate disposition in some men, depending less on circumstances than
+in others. They are like ships that carry an auxiliary steam-power,
+capable of moving in a dead calm and against adverse winds. Others
+are like the ordinary sailing ships of the present day--they are
+stationary in a calm, but can make some way towards their destination
+under almost any wind. Without a stimulus of some kind these men are
+idle, but almost any kind of stimulus suffices to set them in action.
+Others, again, are like Arab dhows, that do little more than drift
+before the monsoon or other wind; but then they go fast.
+
+Environment is a more difficult topic to deal with, because
+conditions that are helpful to success in one pursuit may be
+detrimental in another. High social rank and wealth conduce to
+success in political life, but their distractions and claims clash
+with quiet investigation. Successes are of the most varied
+descriptions, but those registered in this book are confined to such
+as are reputed honourable, and are not obviously due to favour.
+
+In attacking the problem it therefore becomes necessary to fix the
+attention, in the first instance, upon the members of some one large,
+special profession, as upon artists, leaders in commerce,
+investigators, scholars, warriors, and so forth, then to divide these
+into subclasses, until more appears to be lost through paucity of
+material than is gained through its increasing homogeneity.
+
+Whatever group be selected, both ability and environment must be
+rated according to the requirements of that group. It then becomes
+possible, and it is not difficult, to roughly array individuals under
+each of these two heads successively, and to label every person with
+letters signifying his place in either class. For purposes of the
+following explanation, each quality will be distributed into three
+grades, determined not by value, but by class place--namely, the
+highest third, the medium third, and the lowest third. In respect to
+ability, these classes will be called A, B, and C. In respect to
+environment, the grades will refer to its helpfulness towards the
+particular success achieved, and the classes will be called E, F, G.
+It must be clearly understood that the differences between the grades
+do not profess to be equal, merely that A is higher than B, and B
+than C; similarly as to E, F, and G. The A, B, C may be quite
+independent of E, F, G, or they may be correlated. Both cases will
+be considered.
+
+Ability and Environment being mutually helpful towards success, the
+successes statistically associated with AE will be reckoned higher
+than those associated with AF. Again, for simplicity of explanation
+only, it will here be assumed that Ability and Environment are
+equally potent in securing success. Any other reasonable relation
+between their influences may be substituted for the purpose of
+experiment, but the ultimate conclusion will be much the same.
+
+ TABLE I.--COMBINATIONS OF ABILITY AND ENVIRONMENT.
+
+ +-------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | AE. I. | AF. I. | AG. II. |
+ +-------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | BE. I. | BF. II. | BG. III. |
+ +-------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | CE. II. | CF. III. | CG. III. |
+ +-------------+-------------+-------------+
+
+First, suppose Ability and Environment to be entirely independent, A
+being as frequently associated with E as it is with F or with G;
+similarly as regards B and C, then the nine combinations shown in
+Table I. will be equally frequent. These tabular entries fall into
+three equal groups. The three that lie in and about the upper
+left-hand corner contain the highest constituents--namely, either
+_high_ combined with _high_, or one _high_ with one _medium_. They
+produce Successes of Grade I. The three in the middle diagonal band
+running between the lower left and the upper right corners are either
+one _high_ and one _low_, or both are _medium_; they will produce
+Successes of Grade II. The three in and about the right-hand corner
+are either one _medium_ with one _low_, or both are _low_; they will
+produce Successes of Grade III. This is still more clearly seen by
+sorting the results into Table II., from which it is clear that a
+high grade of Success is statistically associated with a high, but
+less, grade of Ability, a medium with a medium, and a low grade of
+Success with a low, but less low, grade of Ability.
+
+ TABLE II.--ABILITY INDEPENDENT OF ENVIRONMENT.
+ _____________________________________________________________________
+| | | |
+| Grades of | | |
+| Success. | Contributory Combinations. | Corresponding Abilities. |
+|___________|_____________________________|___________________________|
+| | | | | | | |
+| I. | AE | AF | BE | 2 of A | 1 of B | -- |
+| II. | AG | BF | CE | 1 of A | 1 of B | 1 of C |
+| III. | CG | BG | CF | -- | 1 of B | 2 of C |
+|___________|_________|_________|_________|_________|________|________|
+
+Secondly, suppose A, B, C to be correlated with E, F, G, so that A is
+more likely to be associated with E than it is with F, and much more
+likely than with G. Similarly, C is most likely to be associated with
+G, less likely with F, and least likely with E. The general effect of
+these preferences will be well represented by divorcing the couples
+which differ by two grades--namely, AG and CE, by re-mating their
+constituents as AE and CG, and by re-sorting them, as in Table III.
+The couples that differ by no more than one grade are left
+undisturbed. The results now fall into five grades of Success, in
+four of which each grade contains two-ninths of the whole number, and
+one, the medium Grade 3, contains only one-ninth.
+
+As remarked previously, the grades are not supposed to be separated
+by equal steps. They are numbered in ordinary numerals to distinguish
+them from those in Table II.
+
+ TABLE III.--ABILITY CORRELATED WITH ENVIRONMENT.
+ _____________________________________________________________________
+| | | |
+| Grades of Success. | Contributory | Corresponding Abilities. |
+| | Combinations. | |
+|____________________|_______________|________________________________|
+| | | | | | |
+| 1 | AE | AE | 2 of A | -- | -- |
+| 2 | AF | BE | 1 of A | 1 of B | -- |
+| 3 | BF | -- | -- | 1 of B | -- |
+| 4 | BG | CF | -- | 1 of B | 1 of C |
+| 5 | CG | CG | -- | -- | 2 of C |
+|____________________|_______|_______|__________|__________|__________|
+
+It clearly appears from this table that the effect of correlation
+between Ability and Environment is to increase, and not to diminish,
+the closeness of association between Success and Ability. Indeed, if
+the correlation were perfect, Success would become an equal measure
+_both_ of Ability and of Favourableness of Environment.
+
+These arguments are true for each and every branch of Success, and
+are therefore true for all: Ability being construed as Appropriate
+Ability, and Environment as Appropriate Environment.
+
+The general conclusion is that Success is, statistically speaking, a
+magnified, but otherwise trustworthy, sign of Ability, high Success
+being associated with high, but not an equally high, grade of
+Ability, and low with low, but not an equally low. A few instances to
+the contrary no more contradict this important general conclusion
+than a few cases of death at very early or at very late ages
+contradict the tables of expectation of life of a newly-born infant.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.--NOMENCLATURE OF KINSHIP.
+
+
+Specific kinships are such as "paternal uncle" or "maternal uncle,"
+as distinguished from the general term "uncle." The phrase "first
+cousin" covers no less than eight specific kinships (four male and
+four female), not taking the issue of mixed marriages into account.
+Specific kinships are briefly expressed by a nomenclature in which
+_fa_, _me_, _bro_, _si_, _son_, _da_, _Hu_, _Wi_, stand respectively
+for _father_, _mother_, _brother_, _sister_, _son_, _daughter_,
+_Husband_, _Wife_. Each of these syllables is supposed to have the
+possessive _'s_ added to it whenever it is followed by another
+syllable of the set, or by the word _is_ when it is not. _Example_:
+Let the person from whom the kinships are reckoned be called _P_, and
+let _Q_ and _R_ be two of _P_'s kinsfolk, described respectively as
+_fa bro_ and _me si son_. That means that _P's father's brother_ is
+_Q_, and that _P's mother's sister's son_ is _R_. It is a simple and
+easily intelligible nomenclature, and replaces intolerable verbiage
+in the description of distant kinships. My correspondents used it
+freely, and none of them spoke of any difficulty in understanding it.
+Its somewhat babyish sound is soon disregarded.
+
+ TABLE IV.--ABBREVIATIONS.
+ ______________________________________________________________________
+| | |
+| Males. | Females. |
+|_________________________________|____________________________________|
+| | |
+| Grandfather, paternal _fa fa_ | Grandmother, paternal _fa me_ |
+| " maternal _me fa_ | " maternal _me me_ |
+| Father _fa_ | Mother _me_ |
+| Uncle, paternal _fa bro_ | Aunt, paternal _fa si_ |
+| " maternal _me bro_ | " maternal _me si_ |
+| | |
+| Brother _bro_ | Sister _si_ |
+| | |
+| Son _son_ | Daughter _da_ |
+| Nephew, brother's son _bro son_ | Niece, brother's daughter _bro da_ |
+| Nephew, sister's son _si son_ | Niece, sister's daughter _si da_ |
+| | |
+| Male first cousins: | Female first cousins: |
+| 1. Son of paternal | 1. Dau. of paternal |
+| uncle _fa bro son_ | uncle _fa bro da_ |
+| 2. Son of maternal | 2. Dau. of maternal |
+| uncle _me bro son_ | uncle _me bro da_ |
+| 3. Son of paternal | 3. Dau. of paternal |
+| aunt _fa si son_ | aunt _fa si da_ |
+| 4. Son of maternal | 4. Dau. of maternal |
+| aunt _me si son_ | aunt _me si da_ |
+|_________________________________|____________________________________|
+
+Those relationships that are expressed by different combinations of
+these letters differ _specifically_; therefore, in saying, in the
+next chapter, that each person has "roughly, on the average, one
+fertile relative in each and every form of specific kinship," it
+means in each and every combination of the above syllables that is
+practically possible.
+
+Relationship may also be expressed conveniently for some purposes in
+Degrees of remoteness, the number of the Degree being that of the
+number of syllables used to express the specific kinship.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.--NUMBER OF KINSFOLK IN EACH DEGREE.
+
+
+The population may be likened to counters spread upon a table, each
+corresponding to a different individual. The counters are linked
+together by bands of various widths, down to mere threads, the widths
+being proportional to the closeness of the several kinships. Those in
+the first degree (_father_, _mother_, _brother_, _sister_, _son_,
+_daughter_) are comparatively broad; those in the second degree
+(_grandparent_, _uncle_, _aunt_, _nephew_, _niece_, _grandchild_) are
+considerably narrower; those in the third degree are very narrow
+indeed. Proceeding outwards, the connections soon become thinner than
+gossamer. The person represented by any one of these counters may be
+taken as the subject of a pedigree, and all the counters connected
+with it may be noted up to any specified width of band. In this book
+one of the counters is supposed to represent a Fellow of the Royal
+Society, whose name appears in the "Year-Book" of that Society for
+1904, and the linkage proceeds outwards from him to the third degree
+inclusive. Usually it stops there, but a few distant kinships have
+been occasionally inserted chiefly to testify to a prolonged
+heritage of family traits.
+
+The intensity with which any specified quality occurs in each or any
+degree of kinship is measured by the proportion between the numbers
+of those who possess the quality in question and the total number of
+persons in that same degree. Particular inquiries were made on the
+latter point, but, as already stated, the answers were incomplete.
+There is, however, enough information to justify three conclusions of
+primary importance to the present inquiry--namely, the _average_
+number (1) of brothers of the subject, (2) of brothers of his father,
+and (3) of brothers of his mother.
+
+The number of Fellows to whom circulars were addressed was 467. The
+number of those who gave useful replies was 207, a little more than
+one-half of whom sent complete returns of the numbers of their
+brothers and uncles; some few of these had, however, placed a query
+here or there, or other sign of hesitation. As the number of
+completely available returns scarcely exceeded 100, I have confined
+the following tables to that number exactly, taking the best of the
+slightly doubtful cases. It would have been possible, by utilizing
+partial returns and making due allowances, to have obtained nearly
+half as many again, but the gain in numbers did not seem likely to be
+compensated by the somewhat inferior quality of the additional data.
+
+The first three lines of Table V. show that there is no significant
+difference between the average numbers of brothers and sisters, nor
+between those of fathers' brothers and fathers' sisters, nor again
+between those of mothers' brothers and mothers' sisters; nor is there
+any large difference between those of male and female cousins, but it
+is apparently a fact that the group of "brothers" is a trifle smaller
+than that of uncles on either side. It seems, therefore, that the
+generation of the Subjects contains a somewhat smaller number of
+individuals than that of either of their Parents, being to that
+extent significant of a lessening population so far as their class is
+concerned.
+
+ TABLE V.--NUMBER OF KINSFOLK IN ONE HUNDRED FAMILIES WHO
+ SURVIVED CHILDHOOD.
+ ______________________________________________________________________
+| | | | | |
+| Generic | Specific | Number of | Specific | Number of |
+| Kinships. | Kinships. | Persons. | Kinships. | Persons. |
+|_______________|_______________|___________|______________|___________|
+| | | | | |
+|Brothers and | _bro_ | 206 | _si_ | 207 |
+| sisters | | | | |
+|_______________|_______________|___________|______________|___________|
+| | | | | |
+|Uncles and | _fa bro_ | 228 | _fa si_ | 207 |
+| aunts | _me bro_ | 219 | _me si_ | 238 |
+|_______________|_______________|___________|______________|___________|
+| | | | | |
+| | Mean | 224 | Mean | 223 |
+|_______________|_______________|___________|______________|___________|
+| | | | | |
+|First cousins, | _fa bro son_ | 265 | _fa bro da_ | 302 |
+| male and | _fa si son_ | 184 | _fa si da_ | 208 |
+| female | _me bro son_ | 236 | _me bro da_ | 266 |
+| | _me si son_ | 237 | _me si da_ | 246 |
+|_______________|_______________|___________|______________|___________|
+
+It may seem at first sight surprising that a brother and a sister
+should each have the same average number of brothers. It puzzled me
+until I had thought the matter out, and when the results were
+published in "Nature," it also seems to have puzzled an able
+mathematician, and gave rise to some newspaper controversy, which
+need not be recapitulated. The essence of the problem is that the sex
+of one child is supposed to give no clue of any practical importance
+to that of any other child in the same family. Therefore, if one
+child be selected out of a family of brothers and sisters, the
+proportion of males to females in those that remain will be, _on the
+average_, identical with that of males to females in the population
+at large. It makes no difference whether the selected child be a boy
+or a girl. Of course, if the conditions were "given a family of three
+boys and three girls," each boy would have only two brothers and
+three sisters, and each girl would have three brothers and two
+sisters, but that is not the problem.
+
+Subject to this explanation, the general accuracy of the observed
+figures which attest the truth of the above conclusion cannot be
+gainsaid on theoretical grounds, nor can the conclusions be ignored
+to which they lead. They enable us to make calculations concerning
+the average number of kinsfolk in each and every specified degree in
+a stationary population, or, if desired, in one that increases or
+decreases at a specified rate. It will here be supposed for
+convenience that the average number of males and females are equal,
+but any other proportion may be substituted. The calculations only
+regard its fertile members; they show that every person has, on the
+average, about one male fertile relative in each and every form of
+specific kinship.
+
+Kinsfolk may be divided into direct ancestry, collaterals of all
+kinds, and direct descendants. As regards the direct ancestry, each
+person has one and only one ancestor in each specific degree, one
+_fa_, one _fa fa_, one _me fa_, and so on, although in each _generic_
+degree it is otherwise; he has two grandfathers, four
+great-grandfathers, etc. With collaterals and descendants the average
+number of _fertile_ relatives in each specified degree must be
+stationary in a stationary population, and calculation shows that
+number is approximately _one_. The calculation takes no cognizance of
+infertile relatives, and so its results are unaffected by the detail
+whether the population is kept stationary by an increased birth-rate
+of children or other infertiles, accompanied by an increased
+death-rate among them, or contrariwise.
+
+The exact conclusions were ("Nature," September 29, 1904, p. 529),
+that if 2_d_ be the number of children in a family, half of them _on
+the average_ being male, and if the population be stationary, the
+number of fertile males in each specific ancestral kinship would be
+_one_, in each collateral it would be _d_-œ, in each descending
+kinship _d_. If 2_d_ = 5 (which is a common size of family), one of
+these on the average would be a fertile son, one a fertile daughter,
+and the three that remained would leave no issue. They would either
+die as boys or girls or they would remain unmarried, or, if married,
+would have no children.
+
+The reasonable and approximate assumption I now propose to make is
+that the number of fertile individuals is not grossly different to
+that of those who live long enough to have an opportunity of
+distinguishing themselves. Consequently, the calculations that apply
+to fertile persons will be held to apply very roughly to those who
+were in a position, so far as age is concerned, to achieve
+noteworthiness, whether they did so or not. Thus, if a group of 100
+men had between them 20 noteworthy paternal uncles, it will be
+assumed that the total number of their paternal uncles who reached
+mature age was about 100, making the intensity of success as 20 to
+100, or as 1 to 5. This method of roughly evading the serious
+difficulty arising from ignorance of the true values in the
+individual cases is quite legitimate, and close enough for present
+purposes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.--NUMBER OF NOTEWORTHY KINSMEN IN EACH DEGREE.
+
+
+The materials with which I am dealing do not admit of adequately
+discussing noteworthiness in women, whose opportunities of achieving
+distinction are far fewer than those of men, and whose energies are
+more severely taxed by domestic and social duties. Women have
+sometimes been accredited in these returns by a member of their own
+family circle, as being gifted with powers at least equal to those of
+their distinguished brothers, but definite facts in corroboration of
+such estimates were rarely supplied.
+
+The same absence of solid evidence is more or less true of gifted
+youths whose scholastic successes, unless of the highest order, are a
+doubtful indication of future power and performance, these depending
+much on the length of time during which their minds will continue to
+develop. Only a few of the Subjects of the pedigrees in the following
+pages have sons in the full maturity of their powers, so it seemed
+safer to exclude all relatives who were of a lower generation than
+themselves from the statistical inquiry. This will therefore be
+confined to the successes of fathers, brothers, grandfathers, uncles,
+great-uncles, great-grandfathers, and male first cousins.
+
+Only 207 persons out of the 467 who were addressed sent serviceable
+replies, and these cannot be considered a fair sample of the whole.
+Abstention might have been due to dislike of publicity, to inertia,
+or to pure ignorance, none of which would have much affected the
+values as a sample; but an unquestionably common motive does so
+seriously--namely, when the person addressed had no noteworthy
+kinsfolk to write about. On the latter ground the 260 who did not
+reply would, as a whole, be poorer in noteworthy kinsmen than the 207
+who did. The true percentages for the 467 lie between two limits:
+the upper limit supposes the richness of the 207 to be shared by the
+260; the lower limit supposes it to be concentrated in the 207, the
+remaining 260 being utterly barren of it. Consequently, the upper
+limit is found by multiplying the number of observations by 100 and
+dividing by 207, the lower by multiplying by 100 and dividing by 467.
+These limits are unreasonably wide; I cannot guess which is the more
+remote from the truth, but it cannot be far removed from their mean
+values, and this may be accepted as roughly approximate. The
+observations and conclusions from them are given in Table VII., p. xl.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.--MARKED AND UNMARKED DEGREES OF NOTEWORTHINESS.
+
+
+Persons who are technically "noteworthy" are by no means of equal
+eminence, some being of the highest distinction, while others barely
+deserve the title. It is therefore important to ascertain the amount
+of error to which a statistical discussion is liable that treats
+everyone who ranks as noteworthy at all on equal terms. The problem
+resembles a familiar one that relates to methods for electing
+Parliamentary representatives, such as have been proposed at various
+times, whether it should be by the coarse method of one man one vote,
+or through some elaborate arrangement which seems highly preferable
+at first sight, but may be found on further consideration to lead to
+much the same results.
+
+In order to test the question, I marked each noteworthy person whose
+name occurs in the list of sixty-six families at the end of this book
+with 3, 2, or 1, according to what I considered his deserts, and soon
+found that it was easy to mark them with fair consistency. It is not
+necessary to give the rules which guided me, as they were very often
+modified by considerations, each obvious enough in itself, but
+difficult to summarize as a whole. Various provisional trials were
+made; I then began afresh by rejecting a few names as undeserving any
+mark at all, and, having marked the remainder individually, found
+that a total of 657 marks had been awarded to 332 persons; 117 of
+them had received 3 marks; 101, 2 marks; 104, 1 mark; so the three
+subdivisions were approximately equal in number. The marks being too
+few to justify detailed treatment, I have grouped the kinsmen into
+first, second, and third degrees, and into first cousins, the latter
+requiring a group to themselves. The first degree contains father and
+brothers; the second, grandfathers and uncles; the third,
+great-grandparents and great-uncles. The results are shown in Table
+VI. The marks assigned to each of the groups are given in the first
+line (total 657), and the number of the noteworthy persons in each
+group who received any mark at all is shown in the third line (total
+329). In order to compare the first and third lines of entries on
+equal terms, those in the first were multiplied by 329 and divided by
+657, and then entered in the second line. The closeness of
+resemblance between the second and third lines emphatically answers
+the question to be solved. There is no significant difference between
+the results of the marked and the unmarked observations. The reason
+probably is that the distribution of triple, double, and single marks
+separately is much the same in each of the groups, and therefore
+remains alike when the three sets of marks are in use at the same
+time. It is thus made clear that trouble taken in carefully marking
+names for different degrees of noteworthiness would be wasted in such
+a rough inquiry as this.
+
+ TABLE VI.--COMPARISON OF RESULTS WITH AND WITHOUT
+ MARKS IN THE SIXTY-FIVE FAMILIES.
+ ___________________________________________________________________
+| | | | | | |
+| | First | Second | Third | First | Total |
+| | Degree.| Degree.| Degree.| Cousins.| |
+|______________________|________|________|________|_________|_______|
+| | | | | | |
+|Number of marks | 225 | 208 | 102 | 122 | 657 |
+| assigned | | | | | |
+|______________________|________|________|________|_________|_______|
+| | | | | | |
+|Number of marks | | | | | |
+| reduced | | | | | |
+| proportionately | 113 | 104 | 51 | 61 | 329 |
+|Number of individuals | | | | | |
+| unmarked | 110 | 112 | 46 | 61 | 329 |
+|______________________|________|________|________|_________|_______|
+| | | | | | |
+| Mean | 111 | 108 | 49 | 61 | 329 |
+|______________________|________|________|________|_________|_______|
+
+Table VII., in the next chapter, affords an interesting illustration
+of the character of the ignorance concerning the noteworthiness of
+kinsmen in distant degrees, showing that it is much lessened when
+they bear the same surname as their father, or even as the maiden
+surname of their mother. The argument is this: Table V. has already
+shown that _me bros_ are, speaking roughly, as frequently noteworthy
+as _fa bros_--fifty-two of the one to forty-five of the other--so
+noteworthiness is so far an equal characteristic of the maternal and
+paternal lines, resembling in that respect nearly all the qualities
+that are transmitted purely through heredity. There ought, therefore,
+to be as many persons recorded as noteworthy in each of the four
+different kinds of great-grandparents. The same should be the case in
+each of the four kinds of great-uncles. But this is not so in either
+case. The noteworthy great-grandfathers, _fa fa fa_, who bear the
+same name as the subject are twice as numerous as the _me fa fa_ who
+bear the maiden surname of the mother, and more than five times as
+numerous as either of the other two, the _fa me fa_ and _me me fa_,
+whose surnames differ from both, unless it be through some accident,
+whether of a cross marriage or a chance similarity of names. It is
+just the same with the great-uncles. Now, the figures for
+great-grandfathers and great-uncles run so closely alike that they
+may fairly be grouped together, in order to obtain a more impressive
+whole--namely, two sorts of these kinsmen, bearing the same name as
+the Subject, contain between them 23 noteworthies, or 11.50 each; two
+sorts having the mother's maiden surname contain together 11
+noteworthies, or 5.50 each; four sorts containing between them 7
+names, or an average of 1.75 each. These figures are self-consistent,
+being each the sum of two practically equal constituents, and they
+are sufficiently numerous to be significant. The remarkable
+differences in their numbers, 11.50, 5.50, 1.75, when they ought to
+have been equal, has therefore to be accounted for, and the
+explanation given above seems both reasonable and sufficient.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.--CONCLUSIONS.
+
+
+The most casual glance at Table VII. leaves no doubt as to the rapid
+diminution in the frequency of noteworthiness as the distance of
+kinship to the F.R.S. increases, and it would presumably do the same
+to any other class of noteworthy persons.
+
+In drawing more exact conclusions, the returns must be deemed to
+refer not to a group of 207 F.R.S., because they are not a fair
+sample of the whole body of 467, and, for reasons already given, they
+are too rich in noteworthiness for the one and too poor for the
+other. They will, therefore, be referred to the number that is the
+mean of these two limits--namely, to 337. I am aware of no obvious
+guidance to any better hypothesis.
+
+The value of the expectation that noteworthiness would be found in
+any specified kinsman of an F.R.S., of whom nothing else is known,
+may be easily calculated from Table VII. on the two hypotheses
+already mentioned and justified: (1) That the figures should be taken
+to refer to 337, and not to 207; (2) that 1 per cent. of the
+generality are noteworthy--that is to say, there are 3.37
+noteworthies to every 337 persons of the generality.
+
+ TABLE VII.--NUMBER OF NOTEWORTHY KINSMEN RECORDED
+ IN 207 RETURNS.
+ __________________________________________________________
+ | | || | |
+ | Kinship. | Numbers || Kinship. | Numbers |
+ | | Recorded.|| | Recorded. |
+ |_________________|__________||________________| __________|
+ | | || | |
+ | _fa_ | 81 || --- | --- |
+ | _bro_ | 104 || --- | --- |
+ | | || | |
+ | _fa fa_ | 40 || _fa fa fa_ | 11 |
+ | _me fa_ | 42 || _fa me fa_ | 2 |
+ | _fa bro_ | 45 || _me fa fa_ | 5 |
+ | _me bro_ | 52 || _me me fa_ | 1 |
+ | | || | |
+ | _fa bro son_ | 30 || _fa fa bro_ | 12 |
+ | _me bro son_ | 19 || _fa me bro_ | 2 |
+ | _fa si son_ | 28 || _me fa bro_ | 6 |
+ | _me si son_ | 22 || _me me bro_ | 2 |
+ |_________________|__________||________________|___________|
+
+Thus, for the fathers of F.R.S., 81 are recorded as noteworthy,
+against 3.37 of fathers of the generality--that is, they are 24.1
+times as numerous. For the first cousins of F.R.S. there are 99
+noteworthies, divided amongst four kinds of male first-cousins, or
+24.75 on an average to each kind, against the 3.37 of the
+generality--that is, they are 7.3 times as numerous.
+
+On this principle the expectation of noteworthiness in a kinsman of
+an F.R.S. (or of other noteworthy person) is greater in the following
+proportion than in one who has no such kinsman: If he be a father, 24
+times as great; if a brother, 31 times; if a grandfather, 12 times;
+if an uncle, 14 times; if a male first cousin, 7 times; if a
+great-great-grandfather on the paternal line, 3œ times.
+
+The reader may work out results for himself on other hypotheses as to
+the percentage of noteworthiness among the generality. A considerably
+larger proportion would be noteworthy in the higher classes of
+society, but a far smaller one in the lower; it is to the bulk, say,
+to three-quarters of them, that the 1 per cent. estimate applies, the
+extreme variations from it tending to balance one another.
+
+The figures on which the above calculations depend may each or all of
+them be changed to any reasonable amount, without shaking the truth
+of the great fact upon which Eugenics is based, that able fathers
+produce able children in a much larger proportion than the
+generality.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The parents of the 207 Fellows of the Royal Society occupy a wide
+variety of social positions. A list is given in the Appendix of the
+more or less noteworthy parents of those Fellows whose names occur in
+the list of sixty-six families. The parents are classified according
+to their pursuits. Many parents of the other Fellows in the 207
+families were not noteworthy in the technical sense of the word, but
+were reported to be able. It was also often said in the replies that
+the general level of ability among the members of the family of the
+F.R.S. was high. Other parents were in no way remarkable, so the
+future Fellow was simply a "sport," to use the language of
+horticulturists and breeders, in respect to his taste and ability. It
+is to be remembered that "sports" are transmissible by heredity, and
+have been, through careful selection, the origin of most of the
+valuable varieties of domesticated plants and animals. Sports have
+been conspicuous in the human race, especially in some individuals of
+the highest eminence in music, painting, and in art generally, but
+this is not the place to enter further into so large a subject. It
+has been treated at length by many writers, especially by Bateson and
+De Vries, also by myself in the third chapter of "Natural
+Inheritance" and in the preface to the second edition of "Hereditary
+Genius."
+
+
+
+
+NOTEWORTHY FAMILIES OF
+
+FELLOWS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY
+
+LIVING IN 1904.
+
+
+
+#AVEBURY#, Lord. See LUBBOCK.
+
+
+
+#BALFOUR#, Right Hon. Arthur James (b. 1848), P.C., etc., F.R.S.,
+ Leader of the House of Commons, 1895; Prime Minister, 1902;
+ President of the British Association, 1904; author of "The
+ Foundations of Belief." [For fuller references, see "Who's Who"
+ and numerous other biographies.]
+
+_bro_, Francis Maitland BALFOUR (1851-1882), F.R.S., Professor of
+Animal Morphology at Cambridge; brilliant investigator in embryology;
+gold medal, Royal Society, 1881; killed by a fall in the Alps.
+
+_bro_, Right Hon. Gerald W. BALFOUR (b. 1853), P.C., Fellow of
+Trinity College, Cambridge; President of the Board of Trade, 1902.
+
+_si_, Eleanor Mildred (Mrs. Henry SIDGWICK), Principal of Newnham
+College, Cambridge.
+
+_si_, Evelyn, wife of LORD RAYLEIGH, F.R.S., and mother of Hon.
+Robert John STRUTT, F.R.S. (q.v.).
+
+_me bro_, 3rd Marquis of SALISBURY, Robert A.T. GASCOIGNE-CECIL
+(1830-1903), K.G., P.C., etc., F.R.S.; eminent statesman; Prime
+Minister, 1885-1886, 1886, 1895-1903; Chancellor of the University of
+Oxford; President of the British Association, 1894; in earlier life
+essayist and critic; also an experimenter in electricity.
+
+It is difficult to distinguish those in the able family of the Cecils
+whose achievements were due to sheer ability from those who were
+largely helped by social influence. A second _me bro_ and five _me
+bro sons_ are recorded in "Who's Who."
+
+
+
+Sir Robert Stawell #BALL#, LL.D., F.R.S. (b. 1840), Lowndean Prof.
+ of Astronomy and Geometry, Cambridge; Fellow of King's College,
+ Cambridge; Member of the Council of the Senate; Director of the
+ Cambridge Observatory since 1892; Royal Astronomer of Ireland,
+ 1874-1892; Ex-President of Royal Astronomical Soc., Mathematical
+ Assoc., and of Royal Zoological Soc. of Ireland; author of many
+ works on astronomical, mathematical, and physical
+ subjects.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, Robert BALL (1802-1857), Hon. LL.D., Trinity Coll.,
+distinguished naturalist; Secretary of Royal Zoological Soc. of
+Ireland; President of Geological Soc. of Ireland; Director of
+Trinity Coll. Museum, 1844.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Valentine BALL, LL.D., C.B., F.R.S. (1843-1895); on staff of
+Geological Survey of India, 1864-1880; Prof. of Geology and
+Mineralogy in the University of Dublin, 1880-1882; Director and
+Organizer of National Museum, Dublin, 1882-1895; author of "Jungle
+Life in India," of an elaborate treatise on the economic geology of
+India, and of "Diamonds and Gold of India."--["Obit. Notice, P.R.S.,"
+1895.]
+
+_bro_, Sir Charles Bent BALL, M.D., M.Ch., F.R.C.S.I., Hon. F.R.C.S.,
+England; Regius Professor of Surgery, Univ. of Dublin; Surgeon to Sir
+Patrick Dun's Hospital, and Honorary Surgeon to the King in Ireland;
+author of various surgical works.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro son_, Ames HELLICAR, the successful manager of the leading
+bank in Sydney, N.S.W.
+
+
+
+Thomas George #BARING#, first Earl of NORTHBROOK (1826-1904), P.C.,
+ D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S.; Under-Secretary of State for India, Home
+ Department, and for War; Viceroy of India, 1872-1876; First Lord
+ of the Admiralty, 1880-1885.--["Who's Who," and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, Sir Francis BARING (1710-1810), Chairman of East India
+Company, 1792-1793; created baronet 1793.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Alexander BARING, first Baron ASHBURTON (1774-1848),
+financier and statesman; head for many years of Baring Brothers and
+Co.; member of Sir Robert Peel's Cabinet of 1835; raised to peerage
+1835; Commissioner to U.S.A., 1842, for Settlement "Ashburton Treaty"
+of Boundary Dispute.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me me_, Hon. Lady GREY, née WHITBREAD (1770-1858), prominent in
+every work of Christian philanthropy during twenty-four years in the
+Commissioner's house in Plymouth, afterwards in Ireland.--["Record"
+newspaper, May 26, 1858.]
+
+_fa_, Francis Thornhill BARING (1786-1866), first Baron NORTHBROOK,
+double first at Oxford, 1817; First Lord of the Admiralty.--["Dict.
+N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Thomas BARING (1799-1873), financier; refused
+Chancellorship of Exchequer, also a peerage; head for many years of
+Baring Brothers and Co.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Charles BARING (1807-1879), double first at Oxford, 1829;
+Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol, 1856, of Durham, 1861.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro son_, Evelyn BARING (b. 1841), first Earl CROMER, P.C.,
+son of H. Baring, M.P.; passed first into staff college from Royal
+Artillery; made successively Baron, Viscount, and Earl, for services
+in Egypt.--["Who's Who," and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa fa si son_, Henry LABOUCHERE (1798-1869), first Baron TAUNTON,
+first-class "Greats" at Oxford; Cabinet Minister under Lord Melbourne
+and Lord John Russell; raised to peerage 1859.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, Sir George GREY (1799-1882), Home Secretary 1846-1852,
+1855-1858, 1861-1866; carried the Bill that abolished transportation.
+
+_me fa bro_, Charles GREY (1764-1845), second Earl GREY, Prime
+Minister; carried the Reform Bill.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me si son_, Sir Edward JENKINSON (b. 1835), K.C.B., Private
+Secretary to Lord Spencer when Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+Descended from _fa fa fa bro_, Rev. S. BARING-GOULD (b. 1834),
+author of numerous novels and works on theology and history.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+
+
+William Thomas #BLANFORD#, LL.D., F.R.S.; (1832-1905), on staff of
+ Geological Survey of India, 1855-1882; accompanied Abyssinian
+ Expedition and Persian Boundary Commission; sometime President of
+ Geological Society and of Asiatic Soc. of Bengal, also of
+ Geological Section British Assoc.; author of works dealing with
+ the geology and zoology of Abyssinia, Persia, and India.--["Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa_, William BLANFORD, established a manufacturing business in
+London, and was a founder, and for many years Chairman, of the Thames
+Plate Glass Company.
+
+_me bro_, Alfred SIMPSON, established a large and successful
+manufacturing business in Adelaide, S. Australia.
+
+_bro_, Henry Francis BLANFORD, F.R.S., for many years at the head of
+the Indian Meteorological Department, which he originally organized.
+
+
+
+Right Hon. Charles #BOOTH# (b. 1840), P.C., F.R.S., economist and
+ statistician; President of the Royal Statistical Soc., 1892-1894;
+ originated and carried through a co-operative inquiry in minute
+ detail into the houses and occupations of the inhabitants of
+ London, which resulted in the volumes "Life and Labour of the
+ People of London"; author of memoirs on allied subjects. ["Ency.
+ Brit.," xxvi. 306; "Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Thomas BOOTH, successful merchant and shipowner at
+Liverpool.
+
+_fa bro_, Henry BOOTH (1788-1869), railway projector; co-operated
+with Stephenson in applying steam to locomotion, published much
+relating to railways, and invented mechanical contrivances still in
+use on railways; secretary and then railway director.--["Dict. N.
+Biog.," v. 382.]
+
+_fa bro_, James BOOTH (1796-1880), C.B., Parliamentary draughtsman;
+became Permanent Secretary to the Board of Trade.
+
+_me si son_, Charles CROMPTON, Fourth Wrangler, Q.C., and for some
+years M.P. for the Leek Division of Staffordshire.
+
+_me si son_, Henry CROMPTON, a leader in the Positivist Community;
+authority on Trades Union Law, and author of "Industrial
+Conciliation."
+
+_me si son_, Sir Henry Enfield ROSCOE, F.R.S. (q.v.)
+
+
+
+Robert Holford Macdowall #BOSANQUET#, F.R.S. (b. 1841). Fellow of
+ St. John's Coll., Oxford; author of many mathematical and
+ physical memoirs, chiefly in the "Philosophical Magazine."
+
+_fa fa bro_, Sir John Bernard BOSANQUET (1773-1847), Judge of Common
+Pleas, 1830; Lord Commissioner of Great Seal, 1835-1836.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Bernard BOSANQUET (b. 1848), Prof. of Moral Philosophy, St.
+Andrews, since 1903; formerly Fellow of University Coll., Oxford;
+worked in connection with Charity Organization Society; author of
+many books on philosophy.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Vice-Admiral Day Hort BOSANQUET (b. 1843),
+Commander-in-Chief West Indian Station since 1904; previously
+Commander-in-Chief East Indian.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa son_, Charles Bertie Pulleine BOSANQUET (b. 1834), a founder
+and the first secretary of the Charity Organization Society.
+
+_me fa bro_, Hay MACDOWALL (d. 1806), Commander-in-Chief of Madras
+Presidency.
+
+_fa son son_, Robert Carr BOSANQUET (b. 1871), archæologist,
+director of British School of Archæology at Athens.
+
+_me si son_, Ralph DUNDAS, head of large and influential firm of
+Dundas and Wilson, Writers to the Signet, Edinburgh. His relatives on
+his father's side include his--
+
+ _fa_, John DUNDAS, worked up the business of Dundas and Wilson
+ into its present position.
+
+ _fa fa son_, Sir David DUNDAS (1799-1877), Judge-Advocate-General
+ and Privy Councillor, 1849.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+ _fa fa son_, George DUNDAS, Judge in Scotch Courts under the
+ title of Lord MANOR.
+
+ _fa fa son son_, David DUNDAS, K.C. (b. 1854), Judge in Scotch
+ Courts under the title of Lord DUNDAS; Solicitor-General for
+ Scotland, 1903.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+James Thomson #BOTTOMLEY# (Hon. LL.D., Glasgow), D.Sc., F.R.S.,
+ electrical engineer (1870-1899); Arnott and Thomson, Demonstrator
+ in the University of Glasgow.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, James THOMSON.
+
+_me bro_, William THOMSON, Lord Kelvin, F.R.S.
+
+_me bro_, James THOMSON, F.R.S.
+
+See THOMSON for the above.
+
+
+
+Sir Dietrich #BRANDIS# (b. 1824), K.C.I.E., F.R.S., Superintendent
+ of Forests, British Burmah, 1856-1864; Inspector-General of
+ Forests to the Government of India, 1864-1883.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Joachim Dietrich BRANDIS, born at Hildesheim, where his
+ancestors had governed the town as Burgemeister for centuries;
+practised medicine at Brunswick, Driburg, and Pyrmont; Professor of
+Pathology at Kiel; ultimately physician to the Queen of Denmark.
+
+_fa_, Christian August BRANDIS, secretary of the Prussian Legation in
+Rome, 1818; afterwards Professor of Philosophy at Bonn; went to
+Athens, 1837-1839, as confidential adviser to King Otho, partly with
+regard to the organization of schools and colleges in Greece; author
+of a "History of Greek Philosophy."
+
+_me bro_, Friedrich HAUSMANN, Professor of Mineralogy and Geology at
+Göttingen; author of a "Handbook of Mineralogy."
+
+_bro_, Johannes BRANDIS, for many years Kabinetsrath of H.M. Empress
+Augusta, Queen of Prussia.
+
+_me si son_, Julius VON HARTMANN, commanded a cavalry division in the
+Franco-German War; after the war was Governor of Strasburg.
+
+
+
+Alexander Crum #BROWN# (b. 1838), M.D., D.Sc., LL.D., F.R.S.,
+ Professor of Chemistry at Edinburgh University since 1869;
+ president of the Chemical Soc., London, 1892-1893.--["Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, John BROWN (1722-1787), of Haddington, Biblical
+commentator; as a herd boy taught himself Latin, Greek, and learned
+Hebrew with the aid of a teacher, at one time a pedlar; served as a
+soldier in the Edinburgh garrison, 1745; minister to the Burgher
+congregation at Haddington, 1750-1787; acted as Professor of Divinity
+to Burgher students after 1767.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa_, John BROWN (1754-1832), Scottish divine; minister of Burgher
+church at Whitburn, 1776-1832; wrote memoirs of James Hervey, 1806,
+and many religious treatises.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, John BROWN (1784-1858), minister of Burgher church at Biggor,
+1806; of Secession Church at Edinburgh, 1822; D.D., 1830; Professor
+of Exegetics Secession Coll., 1834, and in United Presbyterian Coll.
+1847; author of many exegetical commentaries.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, Walter CRUM, F.R.S., manufacturer at Thornliebank, near
+Glasgow; a successful man of business and a very able chemist.
+
+_fa son_, John BROWN (1810-1882), M.D., practised in Edinburgh with
+success; author of "Horæ Subsecivæ," "Rab and his Friends."--["Dict.
+N. Biog."]
+
+_fa si son_, Robert JOHNSTONE (b.1832), D.D., LL.B., Professor of
+New Testament Literature and Exegesis in the United Free Church
+Coll., Aberdeen; has published works on the New Testament.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_si son_, Charles STEWART-WILSON, Postmaster-General, Punjab, since
+1899.--["India List."]
+
+_me bro son_, Alexander CRUM, managing director of the "Thornliebank
+Co.," for some time M.P. for Renfrewshire.
+
+
+
+Sir James Crichton #BROWNE# (b. 1840), M.D., LL.D., F.R.S., Lord
+ Chancellor's Visitor in Lunacy since 1875; Vice-President and
+ Treasurer Royal Institution since 1889; author of various works
+ on mental and nervous diseases.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Andrew BALFOUR, successful printer in Edinburgh;
+collaborated with Sir David Brewster in production of the "Edinburgh
+Encyclopædia," the forerunner of the "Ency. Brit."; one of the
+leaders of the Free Church disruption.
+
+_fa_, William Alexander Francis BROWNE, F.R.S.E., physician; largely
+instrumental in introducing humane methods for the treatment of the
+insane into Scotland; was appointed First Scotch Commissioner in
+Lunacy; author of works on mental diseases.
+
+_me bro_, John Hutton BALFOUR (1808-1884), M.D., LL.D., F.R.S. and
+F.R.S.E., Professor of Botany at Glasgow, 1841; and at Edinburgh,
+1845; wrote botanical text-books.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, John Hutton BALFOUR-BROWNE, K.C. (b. 1845), Leader of the
+Parliamentary Bar; Registrar and Secretary to Railway Comm., 1874;
+author of numerous legal works.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro son_, Isaac Bayley BALFOUR, M.D., D.Sc., LL.D., F.R.S. (b.
+1853), King's Botanist in Scotland; Regius Keeper of Royal Botanic
+Garden, Edinburgh; Professor of Botany at Glasgow and at Oxford, and
+since 1888 at Edinburgh.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+Sir John Scott #BURDON-SANDERSON#, Bart., cr. 1899, M.D., D.C.L.,
+ LL.D., D.Sc., F.R.S.; held a succession of important offices,
+ beginning with Inspector Med. Dep. Privy Council, 1860-1865;
+ Superintendent Brown Institution, 1871-1878; Professor of
+ Physiology University Coll., London, 1874-1882; in Oxford,
+ 1882-1895; President Brit. Assoc., 1893; Regius Professor of
+ Medicine at Oxford, 1895-1904; served on three Royal Commissions;
+ author of many physiological memoirs.--["Ency. Brit.," xxvi. 464;
+ "Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Sir Thomas BURDON, Kt., several times Mayor of Newcastle,
+knighted for his services in quelling a riot.
+
+_me fa_, Sir James SANDERSON, Bart., M.P., Lord Mayor of London; a
+successful merchant.
+
+_fa_, Richard BURDON-SANDERSON, graduated first class and gained
+Newdigate prize; Fellow of Oriel Coll., Oxford; was Secretary to Lord
+Chancellor Eldon.
+
+_bro_, Richard BURDON-SANDERSON, the first promoter of the
+"Conciliation Board" of coal-owners and colliers at
+Newcastle-on-Tyne, and of the first reformatory in Northumberland.
+
+_si son_, Rt. Hon. Richard Burdon HALDANE (b. 1856), P.C., M.P.,
+high honours at Edinburgh and three other Scotch universities; author
+of "Life of Adam Smith" and of "Memoirs on Education."--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_si son_, John Scott HALDANE (b. 1860), q.v., M.D., F.R.S.,
+University Lecturer on Physiology at Oxford; joint editor and founder
+of "Journal of Hygiene."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_si da_, Elizabeth Sanderson HALDANE (q.v.).
+
+_More distant kinsmen and connections:_
+
+_fa me bro_, John SCOTT, first Earl of ELDON (1751-1838), famous Lord
+Chancellor of England.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa me bro_, William SCOTT (1745-1836), first Baron STOWELL, eminent
+maritime and international lawyer; judge of High Court of Admiralty,
+(1798-1828).--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_wife's bro_, FARRER, first Lord HERSCHELL, Lord Chancellor of
+England.
+
+
+
+Charles #CHREE#, Sc.D. (Camb.), LL.D. (Aberdeen), F.R.S. (1860),
+ Superintendent Observatory Department, National Physical Lab.;
+ graduated Aberdeen, 1879, obtaining gold medal awarded to the
+ most distinguished graduate in Arts of the year; Sixth Wrangler,
+ Cambridge, 1883; first division Math. Tripos, Part III.; first
+ class Natural Sciences Tripos, Part II.; and Fellow of King's
+ College, 1885; re-elected as Research Fellow, 1890.--["Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa_, Charles CHREE, Hon. D.D. Aberdeen University; for many years
+clerk to Presbytery of Meigle, and convener of committee for
+examining divinity students in St. Andrew's University. Had
+considerable reputation in Church of Scotland for general
+scholarship, and especially for knowledge of Hebrew.
+
+_bro_, William CHREE, after graduating with first class mathematical
+honours at Aberdeen University, obtained a "Fullerton" mathematical
+scholarship. In addition to prizes in mathematics and physics at
+Aberdeen, obtained also prizes in Latin, natural history, and moral
+philosophy. At Edinburgh University was awarded either first or
+second prizes in Scots Law, conveyancing, civil law, public law, and
+constitutional history. Practises as advocate at Scotch Bar.
+
+_bro_, Alexander Bain CHREE, died young, having graduated at Aberdeen
+University with first class honours in mathematics, obtaining prizes
+in mathematics, physics, Latin, Greek, moral philosophy, and natural
+history.
+
+_si_, Jessie Search CHREE, obtained two prizes and honours in at
+least four subjects (French, logic, Latin, physics) in the Edinburgh
+University local examinations.
+
+
+
+Arthur Herbert #CHURCH# (b. 1834), F.R.S., D.Sc., Professor of
+ Chemistry at Royal Academy of Arts since 1879; discoverer of
+ turacin, also of churchite and other new minerals; President of
+ the Mineralogical Society, 1898-1901; author of various works on
+ English pottery and porcelain, on precious stones, on food, and
+ on the chemistry of paints and painting.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Henry Francis CHURCH (1824-1899), solicitor, Chief Clerk in
+Chancery, and Master of the High Court of Judicature.
+
+_bro_, Alfred John CHURCH (Rev.), (b. 1829), Headmaster of Henley
+and of Retford Grammar Schools; Professor of Latin at Univ. Coll.,
+London, 1880-1888; prize poem, Oxford, 1883; author of various works
+dealing with classical subjects.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa si da son_, Sir John R. SEELEY, K.C.M.G. (1834-1895), Professor
+first of Latin at Univ. Coll., London, and afterwards of Modern
+History at Cambridge; published in 1865 "Ecce Homo," a work which
+attracted immediate attention and provoked a storm of controversy;
+also works on history and political science.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+
+
+Sydney Monckton #COPEMAN#, F.R.S., M.D. (Camb.), Medical Inspector
+ Local Government Board; Member of Council of Epidemiological
+ Society; Research Scholar and Special Commissioner British
+ Medical Association; recipient of many gold medals and prizes of
+ importance.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, Peter COPEMAN, founder, with his brother Robert, of
+Copeman's Bank, Aylsham, Norfolk (now incorporated with Barclay's);
+successful merchant.
+
+_fa_, Arthur Charles COPEMAN, M.B., London; gold medallist in anatomy
+and physiology, University of London; entered Army Medical Service on
+the nomination of the Chancellor of the University; subsequently
+entered the Church, and became Hon. Canon of Norwich Cathedral; for
+many years Chairman of Norfolk and Norwich Hospital, and of Norwich
+School Board and Board of Guardians.
+
+_fa bro_, Edward COPEMAN, M.D., Aberdeen; President British Medical
+Association; consulting physician to Norfolk and Norwich Hospital;
+author and inventor of gynæcological instruments and of special
+methods of operation.
+
+
+
+James Henry #COTTERILL#, F.R.S. (b. 1836), Lecturer and
+ subsequently Vice-Principal of the Royal School of Naval
+ Architecture, South Kensington; Professor of Applied Mechanics at
+ the Royal Naval Coll., Greenwich, 1873-1897.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa bro_, Thomas COTTERILL, eminent clergyman at Sheffield; A.B.,
+Cambridge, 1801.--["Grad. Cant."]
+
+_bro_, Joseph Morthland COTTERILL, D.D. (hon. causa), St. Andrew's
+University.
+
+_fa son_, Henry COTTERILL, Senior Wrangler, 1835; second classic,
+Fellow of St. John's Coll., Cambridge; Bishop of Edinburgh.--["Grad.
+Cant."]
+
+_bro son_, Joseph M. COTTERILL (b. 1851), Surgeon to Edinburgh
+Royal Infirmary, Lecturer at Edinburgh School of Medicine.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_bro son_, Arthur COTTERILL, Head of Permanent Way Department
+Egyptian Railway Administration.
+
+_fa bro son_, Thomas COTTERILL, third wrangler, 1832; fellow of St.
+John's Coll., Cambridge; one of the earliest members of the London
+Mathematical Soc., to which he contributed many papers of
+importance.--["Grad. Cant."]
+
+
+
+George Howard #DARWIN# (b. 1845), F.R.S., second wrangler, 1868;
+ Plumian Professor of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy,
+ Cambridge; author of many papers in the "Philosophical
+ Transactions" relating to tides, physical astronomy, and cognate
+ subjects; President of British Association in 1905 at Cape
+ Town.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, Erasmus DARWIN, M.D., F.R.S. (1731-1802), physician,
+poet, and philosopher; author of "Botanic Garden," "Zoonomia," and
+other works, in which he maintained a view of evolution subsequently
+expounded by Lamarck.--["Life," by Ch. R. Darwin, and "Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa fa_, Robert Waring DARWIN (1766-1848), M.D., F.R.S., sagacious
+and distinguished physician; described by his son, Charles R. Darwin,
+as "the wisest man I ever knew."--["Life and Letters of Charles R.
+Darwin," i. 10-20.]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Charles DARWIN (1758-1778), of extraordinary promise,
+gained first gold medal of Æsculapian Society for experimental
+research; died from a dissection wound, aged twenty; many obituary
+notices.--["Life and Letters of Charles R. Darwin," i. 7.]
+
+_fa bro_, Erasmus DARWIN. (See Carlyle's inexact description, and the
+appreciations of him by his brother and others, in "Life and Letters
+of Charles R. Darwin," i. 21-25.)
+
+_fa_, Charles Robert DARWIN (1809-1882), F.R.S., the celebrated
+naturalist. The dates of his works are "Voyage of the _Beagle_,"
+1840; "Origin of Species," 1859; followed by a succession of eight
+important volumes ranging from 1862 to 1881, each of which confirmed
+and extended his theory of descent. Among the very numerous
+biographical memoirs it must suffice here to mention "Life and
+Letters," by Francis Darwin, and "Dict. N. Biog."
+
+_me me fa_, Josiah WEDGWOOD, F.R.S. (1730-1795), the famous founder
+of the pottery works.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me me bro_, Thomas WEDGWOOD (1771-1805), an experimenter in early
+life, and in one sense the first to create photography; a martyr to
+ill-health later. Sydney Smith knew "no man who appeared to have
+made such an impression on his friends," his friends including many
+of the leading intellects of the day.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa fa_ (she was her husband's _fa bro dau_), Josiah WEDGWOOD,
+F.R.S.; see above.
+
+_me bro_, Hensleigh WEDGWOOD (1803-1891), author of "Etymological
+Dictionary" and of other works, partly mathematical.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_me bro dau_, Julia WEDGWOOD, essayist.
+
+_bro_, Francis DARWIN (b. 1848), F.R.S., botanist; biographer of
+his father; reader in botany at Cambridge, 1876-1903; foreign sec.
+Royal Society. Author of botanical works and memoirs.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Major Leonard DARWIN (b. 1850), late R.E., second in the
+examination of his year for Woolwich; served on several scientific
+expeditions, including transit of Venus of 1874 and 1882; Staff
+Intelligence Dep. War Office, 1885-1890; M.P. for Lichfield,
+1892-1895. Author of "Bimetallism," "Municipal Trade."--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_bro_, Horace DARWIN (b. 1851), F.R.S., engineer and mechanician;
+joint founder of the Cambridge Scientific Instrument Company and its
+proprietor. It is now a limited company, of which he is
+chairman.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_More distant relation:_
+
+_fa fa si son_, Francis GALTON, F.R.S. (q.v.).
+
+
+
+Sir John #EVANS# (b. 1823), K.C.B., D.C.L., LL.D., Sc.D., F.R.S.,
+ President of the Royal Numismatic Society since 1874; trustee of
+ the British Museum; treasurer and vice-president of the Royal
+ Society during twenty years; has been president of numerous
+ learned societies; author of works on the coins of the Ancient
+ Britons, and on their stone and bronze implements.--["Who's Who,"
+ and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa fa_, Lewis EVANS (1755-1827), F.R.S., F.A.S., mathematician;
+first Mathematical Master of R.M.A., Woolwich.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Arthur Benoni EVANS (1781-1854), D.D., miscellaneous writer;
+Professor of Classics and History, R.M.C., 1805-1822; headmaster of
+Market Bosworth Grammar School, 1825-1854.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_ and _wi fa_, John DICKINSON (1782-1869), F.R.S., inventor of
+paper-making machine.
+
+_bro_, Sebastian EVANS, LL.D., poet, artist, and author.
+
+_si_, Anne EVANS (1820-1870), poet and musician, composer.--["Dict.
+N. Biog."]
+
+_son_, Arthur John EVANS (b. 1851), D.Litt. (Oxon), Hon. D.Litt.
+(Dublin), Hon. LL.D. (Edinburgh), F.R.S., Keeper of Ashmolean Museum,
+Oxford, since 1884; in 1893 started investigations in Crete, which
+resulted in the discovery of the pre-Phoenician script; in
+1900-1905 excavated the prehistoric palace of Knossos.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_me bro son_ and _wi bro_, John DICKINSON (1815-1876), writer on
+India, and founder of Indian Reform Society, 1853.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+
+
+Right Hon. Sir Edward #FRY# (b. 1827), D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S., Judge
+ of High Court, Chancery Division, 1877-1883; Lord Justice of
+ Appeal, 1883-1892; President of the Royal Com. on the Irish Land
+ Acts, 1897-1898; Chairman of the Court of Arbitration under the
+ Metropolitan Water Act, 1902; member of the Permanent Court of
+ International Arbitration at the Hague; author of a "Treatise on
+ the Specific Performance of Contracts," of "British Mosses," and
+ "The Mycetozoa."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa bro_, Francis FRY (1803-1886), member of the firm of J.S. Fry and
+Co., Bristol; a great authority on bibliography.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Right Hon. Lewis FRY (b. 1832), M.P. for Bristol, 1878-1885;
+N. Bristol, 1885-1892, and 1895-1900.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Joseph Storrs FRY, has maintained and extended a large
+manufacturing business, and taken an active part in philanthropic
+work.
+
+_fa fa fa_, Joseph FRY (1728-1787), practised medicine in Bristol,
+afterwards manufactured cocoa and chocolate; started type-founding
+business with William Pine, 1764.--["Dic. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Edmund FRY (1754-1835), M.D. of Edinburgh; devoted his
+life to the business of type-founding, and to the philological
+studies connected with it.--["Dic. N. Biog."]
+
+_wife_, Mariabella, née HODGKIN, _dau_ of the historian.
+
+
+
+Francis #GALTON# (b. 1822), D.C.L., Hon. Sc.D. (Camb.), F.R.S.,
+ traveller, anthropologist and biometrician; author of many works
+ and memoirs on these and analogous subjects, including
+ meteorology, heredity, identification by fingerprints; latterly a
+ promoter of the study of Eugenics. Gold medal R. Geog. Soc.,
+ 1853, for travels in Damaraland, S. Africa; Royal medal, 1886,
+ and Darwin medal, 1903, of the Royal Soc., for applications of
+ measurement to human faculty; Huxley medal of the Anthropol.
+ Institute, 1901.--["Ency. Brit.," and "Who's Who."]
+
+_fa si_, SCHIMMELPENNINCK (1778-1856), Mrs. Mary Anne, author of
+various works, mostly theological, and on the Port Royalists and
+Moravians.--["Dic. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, Samuel GALTON (1720-1799), cultured Quaker
+philanthropist, contractor and banker.--[See life of above M.A.S.,
+and the "Annual Register."]
+
+_fa me œ bro_, Robert Barclay ALLARDICE (1779-1854), commonly known
+as Capt. BARCLAY of Ury, pedestrian, noted for his walking feats,
+agriculturist.--["Dic. N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa_, Erasmus DARWIN, M.D., F.R.S.--See DARWIN.
+
+_me œ bro son_, Charles Robert DARWIN, F.R.S., the naturalist.--See
+DARWIN.
+
+_si son_, Edward G. WHELER (b. 1850), a founder and president of
+the Land Agents' Society; commissioner and estate agent during
+sixteen years for 155,000 acres of various descriptions of property.
+
+_fa bro son_, Sir Douglas GALTON (1822-1901), K.C.B., D.C.L., LL.D.,
+F.R.S., passed from Woolwich to Royal Engineers with the best
+examination then on record, obtaining first prize in every subject,
+1840; Inspector of Railways, and Secretary of Railway Dept., Board of
+Trade, 1856; Assistant Inspector-General of Fortifications, 1860;
+designed and constructed the Herbert Hospital at Woolwich; Director
+of Public Works and Building in H.M. Works, 1870-1875; General
+Secretary of British Assoc., 1870-1895; President of it, 1895;
+authority on hospital construction, and on the sanitation,
+ventilation, etc., of public buildings.--["Dict. N. Biog.," Suppl.
+ii.]
+
+_His kindred by his mother's side are:_
+
+ _me fa fa_, Jedediah STRUTT (1726-1797), hosiery manufacturer and
+ cotton spinner; inventor of machine for making ribbed stockings;
+ partner of Sir Richard Arkwright.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+ _me fa_, Joseph STRUTT (1765-1844), first Mayor of Derby, 1835,
+ and donor of the arboretum; great friend of the poet Thomas
+ Moore.--["Dict. N. Biog.," and "Life and Letters" of T. Moore.]
+
+ _me fa bro_, William STRUTT (1756-1830), ingenious mechanician
+ and inventor; friend of Erasmus Darwin, R.L. Edgeworth, Robert
+ Owen, Joseph Lancaster, Samuel Bentham Dalton, etc.; originator
+ and designer of the first Derby Infirmary.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+ _me fa bro son_, Edward STRUTT (1801-1880), created Baron BELPER,
+ 1856; M.P., F.R.S.; a philosophical Radical, intimate with
+ Bentham, the Mills, and Macaulay; Chancellor of the Duchy of
+ Lancaster, 1852-1854; President of University Coll., London,
+ 1871.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+ _me fa bro son_, Anthony STRUTT (1791-1875), ingenious
+ mechanician.
+
+ _me me si son_, Sir Charles FOX (1810-1874), constructing
+ engineer of London and Birmingham Railway; knighted after
+ designing Exhibition buildings in Hyde Park, 1851; made first
+ narrow-gauge line in India; built Berlin Waterworks.--["Dict. N.
+ Biog."]
+
+
+
+Sir Archibald #GEIKIE# (b. 1835), F.R.S., and many foreign
+ distinctions; Director-General Geological Survey of United
+ Kingdom, and Director Museum Practical Geology in Jermyn Street,
+ 1882-1901; medallist of the Royal and other societies; Secretary
+ of the Royal Society; author of numerous works on geology, also
+ of biographies of David Forbes, Sir R. Murchison, and Sir A.
+ Ramsay.--["Who's Who," "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa_, James Stewart GEIKIE (1811-1883), musician and musical critic;
+author of much psalmody, and of several well-known Scottish melodies,
+such as "My Heather Hills."
+
+_fa bro_, Walter GEIKIE (1795-1837). R.S.A., painter and draughtsman;
+author of "Etchings Illustrative of Scottish Character and
+Scenery."--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, William THOMS, master mariner; subsequently teacher of
+navigation in New York; author of an elaborate treatise on
+navigation.
+
+_bro_, James GEIKIE (b. 1839), LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S.; Professor of
+Geology and Mineralogy since 1882, and Dean of the Faculty of Science
+Edinburgh; author of many works on geology, and of "Songs and Lyrics
+by Heinrich Heine."--["Who's Who," and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa bro son_, Cunningham GEIKIE (b. 1824), LL.D., D.D., a
+clergyman; author of many religious works.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa bro son_, Walter Bayne GEIKIE, Professor of Anatomy, and Dean of
+Medical Faculty, Trinity Coll., Toronto.
+
+
+
+Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Haversham #GODWIN-AUSTEN# (b. 1834),
+ F.R.S., geologist; Topographical Assistant to the Trigonometric
+ Survey of India; surveyed the high country and glaciers of
+ Kashmir and by Ladak, also between Darjeeling and Punakha;
+ numerous scientific memoirs.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, Robert AUSTEN, archæologist and coin collector; he was
+one of the few in his time who understood the value of local maps; a
+good surveyor of his own property and neighbourhood.
+
+_fa fa_, Sir Henry E. AUSTEN, interested in forestry, and planted
+largely on his estate; he also knew the value of maps, and had
+excellent ones of his property.
+
+_fa_, Robert Alfred C. GODWIN-AUSTEN (1808-1884), F.R.S., geologist,
+took additional surname of Godwin; wrote important papers on the
+geology of Devonshire, Southern England, and parts of France.
+--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa_, Major-General Sir Thomas H. GODWIN (1784-1853), K.C.B.,
+served in Hanover and the Peninsula, Commander-in-Chief in second
+Burmese War.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Harold GODWIN-AUSTEN, Assistant-Commissioner to the Andaman
+Islands for thirteen years; was selected by Ney Elias to accompany
+him on a mission to Yarkand and Kashmir; is now a Deputy Commissioner
+in S. India.
+
+_me_, Maria Elizabeth GODWIN-AUSTEN, was certainly above the average
+of women of her time; interested in natural history; drew well in pen
+and pencil; was an accomplished musician.
+
+_si son_, Bertram H.M. HEWETT, civil engineer; surveyed the great
+glaciers of the Mustakh Range, Kashmir, and elsewhere; is now in sole
+charge of main shaft of tunnel under the river in New York.
+
+
+
+Francis #GOTCH# (b. 1853), D.Sc, F.R.S., Waynflete Professor of
+ Physiology at Oxford; formerly Holt Professor of Physiology at
+ University Coll., Liverpool; author of many scientific
+ papers.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Ebenezer FOSTER, founder of well-known banking firm of
+Messrs. Foster, Cambridge.
+
+_fa_, Fredrick William GOTCH, LL.D., late President of Baptist
+College, Bristol; Hebrew scholar; member of committee for the
+authorized version of the Old Testament.
+
+_fa bro son_, Thomas Cooper GOTCH (b. 1854), well-known
+painter.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_wi bro_, Sir Victor HORSLEY (q.v.)
+
+
+
+Right Hon. Sir Mountstuart Elphinstone #GRANT DUFF# (b. 1829),
+ G.C.S.I., P.C., F.R.S., sometime Under-Secretary of State for
+ India and the Colonies, and Governor of Madras; has been Lord
+ Rector of Aberdeen University, and president of many learned
+ societies; King's Trustee of British Museum since 1903; author
+ of political, literary, and biographical works.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, James GRANT DUFF (1789-1858), while still a lieutenant, aged
+twenty-eight, reduced the Sattara State to order after the overthrow
+of the Peishwa, and restored it to the descendant of its ancient
+princes, whom he guided as resident till his health broke down at the
+age of thirty-three. Returning to this country, he wrote the "History
+of the Mahrattas."--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa_, Sir Whitelaw AINSLIE (1767-1837), surgeon in the East India
+Company's service, 1788-1815; published "Materia Medica of
+Hindoostan," and other works.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_son_, Arthur Cuninghame GRANT DUFF (b. 1861), lately First
+Secretary to H.M.'s Legation, Mexico.
+
+_son_, Evelyn Mountstuart GRANT DUFF (b. 1863), First Secretary to
+H.M.'s Legation, Persia.
+
+_son_, Adrian GRANT DUFF (b. 1869), Staff-Captain (Intelligence
+Dept.) Army Headquarters.
+
+
+
+John Scott #HALDANE# (b. 1860), F.R.S., University Lecturer in
+ Physiology, Oxford; joint editor and founder of "Journal of
+ Hygiene"; has served on several departmental committees, and
+ carried out special inquiries for Government departments; author
+ of "Blue Books on the Cause of Death in Colliery Explosions,"
+ 1895; "Ankylostomiasis in Mines," 1902-1903, etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, James Alexander HALDANE (1768-1851), in the East India
+Company's naval service till 1797; then devoted himself to itinerary
+evangelization in Scotland; author of several theological
+treatises.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Robert HALDANE (1764-1842), in the Royal Navy till 1797;
+sold his estate in Stirlingshire to devote the proceeds to missions
+in India, but was prevented by the Government from carrying out this
+scheme. Carried on evangelistic work in Geneva and the South of
+France, and co-operated in Scotland with his brother, endowing places
+of worship and training young ministers. Wrote several theological
+treatises.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Daniel Rutherford HALDANE (1824-1887), M.D., LL.D.,
+President of Edinburgh College of Physicians.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, Sir John BURDON-SANDERSON, Bart, M.D., F.R.S.,
+etc.--(q.v.)
+
+_bro_, Rt. Hon. Richard Burdon HALDANE, P.C., M.P., LL.D., a
+distinguished politician; author of books on philosophy.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_si_, Elizabeth Sanderson HALDANE, authoress of "Life of Ferrier,"
+translator of Hegel's "History of Philosophy"; promoter of education
+and of reforms in Scotland.
+
+_fa bro son_, Alexander Chinnery HALDANE, LL.D., Bishop of Argyll and
+the Isles.
+
+_fa bro son_, Lieutenant-Colonel James Aylmer Lowthorpe HALDANE (b.
+1862), D.S.O., served with distinction in Chitral, Tirah, and South
+Africa, and has won rapid promotion; author of "How we Escaped from
+Pretoria."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa me bro_, John SCOTT, first Earl of ELDON (1751-1838), famous
+Lord Chancellor of England.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa me bro_, William SCOTT, first Baron STOWELL (1745-1836), Judge
+of High Court of Admiralty.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa me bro_, Adam DUNCAN (1731-1804), cr. Viscount DUNCAN of
+CAMPERDOWN 1797, after the Battle of Camperdown, in which he defeated
+the Dutch Admiral, De Winter.--["Dict. N. Biog.," and "Life," by his
+great-grandson, the present Earl of Camperdown.]
+
+_fa me me bro_, Sir Ralph ABERCROMBY (1734-1801), General; served
+with distinction in Flanders, 1795; commanded expedition against
+French in West Indies, 1795; commanded troops in Mediterranean, 1800;
+defeated French at Alexandria, where he died of his wounds.--["Dict.
+N. Biog."]
+
+_fa me me bro_, Sir Robert ABERCROMBY (1740-1827), General; Governor
+and Commander-in-Chief, Bombay, 1790; reduced Tippoo Sultan, 1792;
+conducted second Rohilla War.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+
+
+William Abbott #HERDMAN# (b. 1858), D.Sc., F.R.S., P.L.S., General
+ Secretary of British Association, Professor of Natural History,
+ University of Liverpool, since 1881; has worked particularly at
+ marine biology; was one of the founders of the Port Erin
+ Biological Station, and of the seafish hatchery at Piel; was sent
+ to Ceylon 1901-1902 to investigate the pearl oyster fishery for
+ the Government (results published by the Royal Society,
+ 1903-1905); author of numerous zoological works.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa me_, Sophia HERDMAN, great ability and strength of character
+shown by the way she brought up her four sons, after having been left
+a widow early in life.
+
+_fa_, Robert HERDMAN (1829-1888), R.S.A., well known in Scotland as a
+portrait and historical painter; also a good Greek scholar, an
+antiquary, and student of Shakespearian literature.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, William HERDMAN, Presbyterian minister at Rattray; an
+antiquary, good botanist, and geologist.
+
+_fa bro_, James Chalmers HERDMAN, D.D. (hon.), Presbyterian minister
+of Melrose; a popular preacher and convener of foreign missions.
+
+_fa bro son_, James Chalmers HERDMAN, D.D. (hon.), occupies a leading
+position in the Scottish Church in Canada.
+
+
+
+Sydney John #HICKSON# (b. 1859), F.R.S., D.Sc., Professor of
+ Zoology, Owens Coll., Manchester, since 1894; author of "A
+ Naturalist in North Celebes," "The Fauna of the Deep Sea," "The
+ Story of Life in the Seas," and many scientific memoirs.--["Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa bro_, William Edward HICKSON (1803-1870), educational writer;
+author of "Time and Faith," etc.; editor of "Westminster Review,"
+1840-1852.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, Sir Sydney Hedley WATERLOW (b. 1822), K.C.V.O., first
+Bart., Lord Mayor of London, 1872-1873; M.P. for co. Dumfries,
+1868-1869; Maidstone, 1874-1880; Gravesend, 1880-1885; very active
+philanthropist.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro son_, Sir Ernest WATERLOW (b. 1850), R.A., President Royal
+Society Painters in Water-colours.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa si da_ and _me bro da_, Mrs. Ruth HOMAN, educationalist; member
+of London School Board; co-opt. member Education Committee L.C.C.
+
+
+
+Leonard #HILL#, F.R.S. (b. 1866), Hunterian Professor Royal College
+ Surgeons, previously Demonstrator of Physiology, Oxford, and
+ Assistant-Professor of Physiology, University Coll., London;
+ author of books and memoirs on physiology.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Arthur HILL, headmaster of Bruce Castle School; reformer of
+education.
+
+_fa_, G. Birkbeck HILL, author of many books on eighteenth-century
+literature.
+
+_fa bro_, Edward Bernard Lewin HILL (b. 1834), C.B., retired as
+senior Assistant-Secretary-General Post Office.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa bro_, Sir John Edward Gray HILL (b. 1839), President of the
+Incorporated Law Society, and of the International Law Association,
+1903-1904; author of "With the Beduins" and papers on various
+subjects connected with maritime law, etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro_, Sir John SCOTT (b. 1841), K.C.B., judge in the High
+Court, Bombay; appointed to reform administration of criminal law in
+Egypt.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Norman HILL, Secretary to the Shipping Association; a
+distinguished Liverpool lawyer, and writer and authority on the
+Economics of Shipping.
+
+_fa fa fa_, Thomas Wright HILL (1736-1851), school-master and
+stenographer.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Sir Rowland HILL (1795-1879), inventor of penny postage;
+as Chairman of the Brighton Railway introduced express and excursion
+trains, 1843-1846.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Edwin HILL (1793-1876), inventor and author; supervisor
+of stamps at Somerset House; with Mr. De la Rue invented machine for
+folding envelopes; exhibited 1851.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Matthew Davenport HILL (1792-1872), first recorder of
+Birmingham; reformer of criminal law and of the treatment of
+criminals.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+
+
+Sir Joseph Dalton #HOOKER# (b. 1817), G.C.S.I., F.R.S., President
+ Royal Society, 1872-1877, eminent botanist and traveller;
+ director of the Royal Gardens, Kew, 1855-1865; naturalist to
+ H.M.S. "Erebus" in Antarctic expedition, 1839-1843; botanical
+ travels in the Himalaya, 1847-1851; Morocco and Atlas in 1871;
+ California and Rocky Mountains, 1877; many botanical
+ publications, including "Genera Plantarum."--["Ency. Brit.,"
+ xxix., 324; "Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Dawson TURNER, F.R.S. (1775-1858).--See PALGRAVE.
+
+_fa_, Sir William Jackson HOOKER (1758-1865), F.R.S., eminent
+botanist; director of the Royal Gardens, Kew, which he greatly
+extended and threw open to the public, and where he founded the
+museum of economic botany; Regius Professor of Botany, Glasgow, 1820;
+knighted 1847; many botanical publications.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me si sons_, the four brothers PALGRAVE.--See PALGRAVE.
+
+
+
+Sir Victor A. Haden #HORSLEY#, F.R.S., M.D. (b. 1857), eminent
+ surgeon and operator; Professor-Superintendent of Brown
+ Institution, 1884-1890; Professor of Pathology University
+ College, 1893-1896.
+
+_fa fa_, William HORSLEY (1774-1858), Mus. Bac. Oxford, musical
+composer, especially of glees, and writer on musical topics.
+--["Dict. N. Biog.," and Grove's "Dict. of Music."]
+
+_me fa_, Charles Thomas HADEN, a rising London physician, who
+initiated a treatment for gout, much noted at the time (d. young in
+1823).--[Unpublished information.]
+
+_fa_, John Callcott HORSLEY, R.A., distinguished painter.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_fa bro_, Charles Edward HORSLEY (1822-1876), composer of oratorios;
+best known in America; author of "Text-book of Harmony."--["Dict. N.
+Biog.," and Grove's "Dict. of Music."]
+
+_me bro_, Sir F. Seymour HADEN (b. 1818), surgeon. Founder and
+President of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers. A well-known
+sanitarian, especially in respect to the disposal of the dead. Grand
+Prix, Paris, 1889 and 1900; many publications.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa si son_, Isambard BRUNEL, Chancellor to the Diocese of Ely;
+ecclesiastical barrister.
+
+_Ancestors in more remote degrees:_
+
+_fa me fa_, John Wall CALLCOTT (1766-1821), composer, mainly of glees
+and catches; published "Musical Grammar," 1806.--["Dict. N. Biog.,"
+and Grove's "Dict. of Music."]
+
+_fa me fa bro_, Sir Augustus Wall CALLCOTT, R.A. (1779-1844),
+distinguished painter, mainly of landscapes; knighted, 1837.--["Dict.
+N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa fa_, Thomas HADEN, the principal doctor and three times Mayor
+of Derby.--[Unpublished information.]
+
+_wife_, née BRAMWELL.
+
+_wife's fa_, Sir Frederick BRAMWELL, Bart. (1818-1903), F.R.S.,
+eminent engineer; President British Association, 1888; Pres.
+Institution of Civil Engineers, 1884-1885; Hon. Sec. Royal
+Institution.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_wife's fa bro_, Lord BRAMWELL (1808-1902), Judge, 1856; Lord
+Justice, 1876-1881; raised to peerage, 1882.--["Dict. N. Biog.,"
+Suppl. i.]
+
+
+
+John #JOLY# (b. 1858), D.Sc., F.R.S., Professor of Geology and
+ Mineralogy in the University of Dublin since 1897; has published
+ many contributions to the Royal Soc., Royal Dublin Soc.,
+ etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Henry Edward JOLY, divine and physician; is credited with
+scientific medical views in advance of his time.
+
+_me fa_, Frederick, Comte de LUSI, statesman, author and linguist;
+resident Minister of the King of Prussia in London, St. Petersburg,
+Greece, etc.; made one of the earliest ascents of Mont Blanc, in
+1816.
+
+_fa_, John Plunket JOLY (Rev.), accomplished as a painter of bird,
+insect, and plant life; left a remarkable collection of pictures
+behind him; died early.
+
+_me bro_, Frederick, Comte de LUSI, soldier; distinguished himself
+in the German-Danish War of 1848; decorated for valour in saving the
+life of General Halkett.
+
+_fa bro_, Jasper Robert JOLY, remarkable precosity as a boy; obtained
+distinguished college successes in classics in his thirteenth year at
+Trinity Coll., Dublin. Devoted his life to the collection of Hogarth
+and Bewick, upon whom he was an authority.
+
+_fa si_, Mary JOLY, died young; left a remarkable collection of
+minutely accurate paintings of birds and flowers.
+
+_me fa fa_, Spiridion, Comte de LUSI, the founder of the de Lusi
+family, ennobled by Frederick the Great for statesmanship.--["Percy
+Anecdotes."]
+
+
+
+#KELVIN#, Lord.--See WILLIAM THOMPSON.
+
+
+
+Alfred Bray #KEMPE# (b. 1849), F.R.S., Chancellor of the Dioceses
+ of Newcastle, Southwell, and St. Albans; Treasurer and
+ Vice-President of the Royal Society from 1899; has published
+ works on mathematics.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Alfred John KEMPE (1784-1846), distinguished antiquary;
+published works on Holwood Hill, Kent, and St. Martin-le-Grand
+Church, London.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, John Edward KEMPE (b. 1810), late Rector of St. James's,
+Piccadilly; Hon. Chaplain to the King since 1901.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, John Arrow KEMPE, C.B. (b. 1846), Comptroller and
+Auditor-General.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Harry Robert KEMPE (b. 1852), Principal Technical Officer of
+the Postal Telegraph Department; author of "Handbook of Electrical
+Testing," and other works which have gone through many editions; for
+many years editor of "Electrical Review."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro son_, Edward KEMPE, Captain and Gold Medallist, Radley School;
+scholar of Lincoln Coll., Oxford; editor of "The Huia," New Zealand.
+
+_fa fa si_, Anna Eliza BRAY, née KEMPE (1790-1883), historical
+novelist; completed "Monumental Effigies of Great Britain," commenced
+by her first husband, Charles Alfred Stothard.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+[For further particulars see "A History of the Kempe and Kemp
+Families."]
+
+
+
+Edwin Ray #LANKESTER# (b. 1847), LL.D., F.R.S., celebrated
+ zoologist; Director of Natural History Departments, British
+ Museum, since 1898; Fullerian Professor of Physiology and
+ Comparative Anatomy, Royal Inst., 1898-1900; Linacre Professor of
+ Comparative Anatomy, Oxford, 1891-1898; numerous other
+ distinctions.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, Edwin LANKESTER (1814-1874), M.D., F.R.S., Professor of Natural
+History, New Coll., London, 1850; Medical Officer of Health for
+parish of St. James's, Westminster, and Coroner for Central
+Middlesex; joint editor of "Q.J.M.S.," etc.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me_, Phebe LANKESTER (1825-1900), authoress of "Wild Flowers Worth
+Notice"; the popular portion of Sowerby's "British Botany," and many
+other publications; also wrote weekly in a newspaper for many years
+under the signature of "Penelope."
+
+_me bro_, Samuel POPE, Q.C., successful leader of the Parliamentary
+Bar.
+
+_bro_, E. Forbes LANKESTER, first class in "Greats," Oxford, 1877;
+successful barrister.--["Oxf. Reg."]
+
+_bro_, S. Rushton LANKESTER, H.M. Consul, Batavia.
+
+_si_, Fay LANKESTER, Secretary of National Health Society.
+
+_si_, Marion VATCHER, wife of Rev. Sydney Vatcher, Vicar of St.
+Philip's, Stepney. Both well known in connection with East London
+organization of help to the poor.
+
+_si_, Nina LANKESTER, Superintendent of Female Clerks in Money Order
+Department of Post Office.
+
+
+
+Joseph #LISTER# (b. 1827), created Baronet, 1883; Baron #LISTER#,
+ 1897; F.R.S., P.C., O.M., and numerous other distinctions;
+ President Royal Soc., 1896-1900; Professor of Surgery, Glasgow,
+ 1860-1869, Edinburgh University, 1869-1877, King's Coll., London,
+ 1877-1893; famous for discovery of antiseptic treatment in
+ surgery.--["Ency. Brit.," and "Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, Joseph Jackson LISTER (1786-1869), F.R.S., optical
+investigator, especially in connection with the principles of the
+achromatic microscope, also author of contributions to Zoology, Phil.
+Trans.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Arthur LISTER (b. 1830), F.R.S.; botanist; author of
+monograph on the Mycetozoa.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro son_, Joseph Jackson LISTER, F.R.S., biologist; Fellow of St.
+John's Coll., Cambridge.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro son_, Arthur Hugh LISTER, Ass. Phys., Aberdeen Infirmary;
+obtained "three stars" at University examination, Aberdeen.
+
+_bro da_, Gulielma LISTER, contributed papers to "Linnæan Journal,"
+and, in connection with her brother, to "Journal of Botany."
+
+
+
+Sir Oliver #LODGE# (b. 1851), F.R.S., D.Sc., London, Oxon, and
+ Vict., LL.D., St. Andrews and Glasgow; Principal of the
+ University of Birmingham since 1900; Professor of Physics,
+ University Coll., Liverpool, 1881-1900; author of various works
+ on physics, and of articles in the "Hibbert Journal."--["Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa bro_, Robert J. LODGE, for many years Secretary of the Marine
+Insurance Company, and reckoned a man of considerable ability in the
+city.
+
+_bro_, Richard LODGE (b. 1855), Professor of History, Edinburgh,
+since 1899; First Professor of History, Glasgow University; author
+of "Student's Modern Europe," "Richelieu" (in Foreign Statesmen
+Series), and "The Close of the Middle Ages."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Alfred LODGE, Professor of Pure Mathematics at Cooper's Hill.
+
+_si_, Eleanor Constance LODGE, Sub-head and Lecturer on History in
+Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.
+
+_fa bro son_, George E. LODGE, well-known animal painter and
+engraver.
+
+
+
+Right Hon. Sir John #LUBBOCK# (b. 1834), created Baron #AVEBURY#,
+ 1900, P.C., D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S., banker, head of Robarts,
+ Lubbock and Co., well known for the part he has taken in public
+ affairs; has been a member of many Royal Commissions; For. Sec.
+ R.A., German Order of Merit, Commander Legion of Honour.
+ Biologist, President at various times of many learned societies;
+ author of over 100 memoirs in the Transactions of the Royal Soc.,
+ and of numerous literary, scientific, and popular scientific
+ works.--["Who's Who," and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa fa_, Sir John LUBBOCK, a leading banker and governor of the Royal
+Exchange Assurance Corporation.
+
+_fa_, Sir John William LUBBOCK (1803-1865), F.R.S., astronomer and
+mathematician; Treasurer and Vice-President of the Royal Soc.; First
+Vice-Chancellor of the London University; Deputy Governor of Royal
+Exchange Ass. Corp.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Sir Neville LUBBOCK, K.C.M.G., Chairman West India Committee;
+Governor of the Royal Exchange Ass. Corp.; Chairman of New Colonial
+Company, etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Edgar LUBBOCK, LL.B., director of the Bank of England; law
+scholar of University of London; passed first, and obtained
+Clifford's Inn prize in Law Soc. Exam.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+Sir Francis Leopold #MCCLINTOCK# (b. 1819), K.C.B., D.C.L., LL.D.,
+ F.R.S.; Admiral retired; Elder Brother of Trinity House; served
+ in four Arctic voyages; discovered fate of Franklin's expedition,
+ 1859; author of "The Fate of Sir John Franklin" and "The Voyage
+ of the _Fox_."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa me_, Patience MCCLINTOCK, née FOSTER, came of a family which
+showed in most of its branches a high level of ability, and had
+several distinguished members. Thus, reckoning relationships from
+her, we find her:
+
+ _fa_, John William FOSTER, M.P.
+
+ _fa bro_, Anthony FOSTER (d. 1778), M.P., Chief Baron of
+ Exchequer, Ireland.
+
+ _fa bro son_, John FOSTER, Baron ORIEL (1740-1828); Speaker of
+ Irish House of Commons up to the time of the Union.--["Dict. N.
+ Biog."]
+
+ _fa bro son_, William FOSTER (d. 1797), D.D., Bishop
+ successively of Cork, Kilmore, and Clogher.
+
+ _fa bro son son_, John Leslie FOSTER (d. 1842), F.R.S., Irish
+ Judge; M.P. for Dublin University, etc.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+ _fa bro son son_, Sir Augustus John FOSTER (1780-1848), Bart.,
+ P.C., M.P.; Minister to United States, Denmark, and
+ Turin.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+ _fa bro son son son_, Vere Henry Lewis FOSTER (1819-1900),
+ philanthropist and educationalist.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Alfred Henry MCCLINTOCK (d. 1881), M.D., LL.D., President
+Royal College of Physicians, Ireland.
+
+_fa bro son_, John MCCLINTOCK, M.P. for Co. Louth for many years;
+created Baron RATHONDELL for long political services.
+
+_me fa_, Ven. George L. FLEURY, Archdeacon of Waterford.
+
+_me bro_, Rev. Charles Marley FLEURY, a celebrated preacher in
+Dublin.
+
+_son_, Henry Foster MCCLINTOCK, Assistant Private Secretary to Lord
+Stanley, Postmaster-General; served with Army Post-Office Corps in
+South Africa, and was mentioned in despatches.
+
+_son_, John William Leopold MCCLINTOCK, Commander Royal Navy; passed
+second into the "Britannia."
+
+_son_, Robert Singleton MCCLINTOCK, Brevet-Major R.E.; scholar at
+Charterhouse; served on Sir G. Willcocks' staff in the relief of
+Coomassie, 1900, and was mentioned in despatches.
+
+
+
+Sir Clements R. #MARKHAM# (b. 1830), K.C.B., F.R.S., President for
+ many years of the Royal Geograph. Soc.; served in Arctic
+ Expedition, 1850-1851; travelled in Peru, 1852-1854, bringing
+ thence cinchona-bearing trees for cultivation in India;
+ geographer to the Abyssinian Expedition; author and editor of
+ numerous geographical works.--["Ency. Brit.," xxx. 544; "Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, William MARKHAM (1760-1815), scholar; secretary to Warren
+Hastings in India.
+
+_fa bro son_, Lieutenant-General Sir Edwin MARKHAM (b. 1833),
+K.C.B., R.E., constant active service.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa bro son_, Admiral Sir Albert MARKHAM (b. 1841), K.C.B.,
+Commander of the "Alert" in Arctic Expedition, 1875-1876; various
+high naval appointments, besides unprofessional work when unemployed
+on naval duties.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro son_, Right Hon. Sir Frederick MILNER, Bart. (b. 1849),
+P.C., politician.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me si son_, Right Hon. Francis FOLJAMBE (b. 1830), P.C.,
+politician.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me si son_, Right Hon. Sir Edwin EGERTON (b. 1841), P.C.,
+G.C.M.G., Ambassador at Madrid, then at Rome.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, William MARKHAM (1719-1807), P.C., Archbishop of York;
+one of the best scholars of the day; Headmaster of Westminster
+School, 1753-1765; Dean of Christ Church; Preceptor to the Royal
+Princes, 1771; Archbishop and Lord High Almoner, 1777.--["Dict. N.
+Biog.," xxxvi. 172.]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Admiral John MARKHAM (1761-1827); many services at sea;
+twice on Admiralty Board; M.P. for Portsmouth during seventeen years;
+proposed and carried appointment of Commission on dockyard abuses,
+1806.--["Dict. N. Biog.," xxxvi. 171.]
+
+_fa fa bro_, George MARKHAM (1763-1823), Dean of York; scholar and
+numismatist.
+
+
+
+Mervyn Herbert Nevil Story #MASKELYNE# (b. 1823), F.R.S., Hon.
+ D.Sc., Oxon. Distinguished mineralogist; formerly Keeper of
+ Minerals in British Museum; Professor of Mineralogy at Oxford,
+ 1856-1895; M.P. for Cricklade, 1880-1885; for North Wilts,
+ 1885-1892.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Nevil MASKELYNE (1732-1811), D.D., F.R.S., Astronomer Royal
+for forty-seven years; was the first man to weigh the earth; the
+originator of the Nautical Almanac.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Anthony Mervyn Reeve STORY, F.R.S., gained a double
+first-class in Lit. Hum. and Mathematics, when nineteen years of age,
+at Oxford, in 1810.--["Oxf. Reg."]
+
+_si son_, John Story MASTERMAN, gained a first-class in Lit. Hum.,
+1872; Fellow of Brasenose, Oxford.--["Oxf. Reg."]
+
+_si son_, Herbert Warington SMYTH, Secretary, Mining Dept.,
+Transvaal; Secretary, Siamese Legation, 1898-1901; Order White
+Elephant of Siam, 1897; author of "Five Years in Siam," etc.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_si son_, Major Nevill Maskelyne SMYTH, obtained V.C. at Battle of
+Khartoum.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_wife_, née Dillwyn LLEWELYN.
+
+ _wi fa fa_, Lewis Weston DILLWYN (1778-1855), F.R.S., well known
+ as a botanist; established Cambrian Pottery Works at Swansea;
+ M.P. for Glamorganshire, 1832-1841.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+ _wi fa_, John Dillwyn LLEWELYN, F.R.S., early experimenter in
+ photography.
+
+ _wi fa si son_, Traherne MOGGRIDGE, author of "Flora of Mentone,"
+ "Harvesting Ants," and "Trapdoor Spiders."
+
+ _wi me bro_, Christopher Rice Mansel TALBOT, first-class
+ mathematics, Oxford, 1823; Lord-Lieutenant of Glamorganshire,
+ M.P., "Father of the House of Commons."--["Oxf. Reg."]
+
+ _wi me me si son_, William Henry Fox TALBOT (1800-1877), F.R.S.,
+ independent inventor of photography, his (wet) processes,
+ talbotype, etc., being those which have survived in various
+ forms. He also discovered the direct method of printing by the
+ autotype process. A distinguished mathematician, he furthermore
+ was one of the earliest interpreters of cuneiform writing; M.P.
+ for Chippenham, 1833-1834.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+
+
+Raphael #MELDOLA# (b. 1849), F.R.S., Professor of Chemistry in
+ Finsbury Technical Coll.; discoverer of many new products and
+ processes in the manufacture of coal-tar dyes; also well known as
+ a naturalist; has been President of the Entomological Soc. and of
+ the Essex Field Club.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Raphael MELDOLA (1754-1828), invited to London, in 1805, on
+account of his fame as a theologian, to preside as High Rabbi over
+the London congregation of British Jews belonging to the Spanish and
+Portuguese community; author of many theological works.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, David MELDOLA, succeeded his father as chief of the
+community, though not given the same high rank; author of theological
+works.
+
+_me bro_, Joseph ABRAHAM, founded a large and successful firm in
+Bristol; took a prominent part in municipal affairs, and became the
+first Jewish mayor of Bristol.
+
+_fa si son_, Abram DE SOLA, Professor of Oriental literature in
+McGill Coll., Montreal; the only Jewish divine ever invited to open
+Congress by the U.S. Government; erudite scholar, and author of
+theological works.
+
+_me bro son_, Harry ABRAHAM, a man of business, and councillor and
+Mayor of Southampton.
+
+
+
+Louis C. #MIALL# (b. 1842), F.R.S., Professor of Biology,
+ University, Leeds; Fullerian Professor of Physiology, Royal
+ Inst.; President Zool. Sec. British Assoc., 1897; author of
+ memoirs and books on natural history.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, James Goodeve MIALL (Rev.), Chairman of Congregational Union.
+
+_fa bro_, Edward MIALL (1809-1881), Independent minister at
+Leicester, 1834; established and edited the "Nonconformist," 1841;
+M.P., Rochdale, 1852-1857, Bradford, 1869-1874; strove for
+Disestablishment of Church.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, Charles MACKENZIE, a well-known Haymarket actor
+(stage-name, Henry COMPTON).
+
+_me bro son_, Sir Morell MACKENZIE (1837-1892), celebrated physician;
+specialist on diseases of the throat.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro son_, Sir Stephen MACKENZIE (b. 1844), senior physician,
+London Hospital; consulting Physician, Poplar Hospital, etc.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_son_, Stephen MIALL, first in solicitors' examination, Clement's
+Inn, and "Daniel Reardon" prizeman, 1896; first-class honours, LL.B.
+and LL.D., London.
+
+
+
+Henry Alexander #MIERS# (b. 1858), D.Sc., F.R.S., Waynflete
+ Professor of Mineralogy, Oxford, since 1895; author of many
+ scientific papers, "Mineralogy," etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa me fa_, Francis PLACE (1771-1854), Radical reformer and writer;
+started life as leather-breeches maker; succeeded in getting the laws
+against combinations of workmen repealed.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa_, John MIERS (1789-1879), F.R.S., engineer and botanist;
+accompanied Lord Cochrane to Chile, 1818; made collections of birds,
+insects, and plants; author of many scientific papers.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Francis Charles MIERS, engineer and successful man of business.
+
+_bro_, Edward John MIERS, zoologist; author of a volume on Brachyura
+in "Challenger Reports," etc.
+
+
+
+Alfred #NEWTON# (b. 1829), F.R.S., Professor of Zoology and
+ Comparative Anatomy, Cambridge; has been very active in promoting
+ the protection of wild birds; has been Vice-President of the
+ Royal and Zoological Societies; gold medal of the Royal and of
+ the Linnæan Societies; author of many works dealing principally
+ with birds.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Richard Slater MILNES, M.P. for York; took a prominent part
+in county business.
+
+_fa_, William NEWTON, M.P. for Ipswich.
+
+_me bro_, Robert Pemberton MILNES, M.P. for Pontefract; prominent in
+county business.
+
+_bro_, General William Samuel NEWTON.
+
+_bro_, Robert Milnes NEWTON, Recorder of Cambridge; metropolitan
+police magistrate.
+
+_bro_, Lieutenant-General Horace Parker NEWTON, first of his year in
+R.M.A., Woolwich.
+
+_bro_, Sir Edward NEWTON, K.C.M.G., Colonial Secretary of Mauritius;
+Lieutenant-Governor of Jamaica; author of several zoological papers
+in scientific journals.
+
+_bro son_, Arthur William NEWTON, H.M. Inspector of Schools.
+
+_bro son_, Francis James NEWTON (b. 1857), C.M.G.; Treasurer of
+Southern Rhodesia, 1902; some time Administrator of British
+Bechuanaland, and Colonial Secretary British Honduras and
+Barbadoes.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro son_, Richard Monckton MILNES (1809-1885), first Baron
+HOUGHTON; M.P. for Pontefract, 1837; distinguished in literary
+society; author of poems and critical essays. Did much to secure
+Copyright Act; assisted in the preparation of the "Tribune," 1836;
+established the "Philobiblon Soc.," 1853.--["Dict. N. Biog.," and
+"Life" by Wemyss Reid.]
+
+_me bro son son_, Robert Offley Ashburton CREWE-MILNES, first Earl of
+CREWE, son of Lord Houghton; Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland,
+1892-1895.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+#NORTHBROOK#, Earl.--See BARING.
+
+
+
+Robert Harris Inglis #PALGRAVE# (b. 1827), F.R.S., economist and
+ statistician; editor of the "Economist"; also of "Dictionary of
+ Political Economy."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Dawson TURNER (1775-1858), F.R.S., botanist and
+antiquary.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa bro_, Joseph TURNER, Senior Wrangler, 1768.
+
+_fa_, Sir Francis PALGRAVE (1788-1861) (son of Meyer COHEN, adopted
+the name Palgrave in 1823), historian; deputy-keeper, and assisted in
+the publication, of H.M. Records. Author of the "Rise and Progress of
+the English Commonwealth," 1832; "History of England and Normandy,"
+1851; and other works; greatly promoted study of mediæval history;
+knighted, 1832.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me_, Elizabeth, née Dawson TURNER, assisted her husband in his
+literary work.--[Unpublished information.]
+
+_me bro_, Dawson William TURNER (1815-1885), D.C.L., philanthropist
+and educational writer; Demy of Magdalen Coll., Oxford.
+
+_bro_, Francis Turner PALGRAVE (1824-1897), poet and art critic;
+first-class Lit. Hum.; Professor of Poetry at Oxford; editor of
+"Golden Treasury"; author of many critical essays and other
+publications.--["Dict. N. Biog.," Suppl. iii.]
+
+_bro_, W. Gifford PALGRAVE (1826-1888), traveller and diplomatist;
+at twenty years of age gained first-class Lit. Hum. and second-class
+Math.; became Roman Catholic, and travelled as Jesuit missionary in
+Syria and Arabia, disguised for the purpose. Author of "A Year's
+Journey through Eastern and Central Arabia." Severed his connection
+with the Jesuits in 1865, and thenceforward served as English
+diplomatist in various distant countries.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Sir Reginald F.D. PALGRAVE (1829-1904), K.C.B., Clerk of the
+House of Commons. Author of "Oliver Cromwell the Protector,"
+etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me si son_, Sir Joseph Dalton HOOKER, F.R.S. (q.v.).
+
+
+
+Lawrence #PARSONS# (b. 1840), fourth Earl of ROSSE, D.C.L., LL.D.,
+ Camb. and Dublin, F.R.S.; Chancellor of University of Dublin;
+ author of "Memoirs of Heat of Moon and Stars" (based on
+ experiments with the famous reflecting telescope made by his
+ father), and on other subjects.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, William PARSONS (1800-1867), third Earl of ROSSE, Pres. R.S.;
+constructor of the great reflecting telescope at Parsonstown, and
+first discoverer by its means of nebulæ and other celestial
+phenomena.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, Charles Algernon PARSONS (b. 1854), D.Sc., F.R.S.; notable
+in the development of turbine navigation; proprietor and director of
+electrical and engineering works.
+
+
+
+William Matthew Flinders #PETRIE# (b. 1853), D.C.L., Lit.D., LL.D.,
+ Ph.D., F.R.S.; Edwards Professor of Egyptology, University Coll.,
+ London, since 1892. Principal discoveries: Greek settlements at
+ Naucratis and Daphnæ; prehistoric Egyptian at Koptos and Naqada;
+ inscription of Israelite War at Thebes; Kings of the earliest
+ dynasties at Abydos; has published much on these
+ subjects.--["Who's Who," and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, Martin PETRIE, Commissary-General; good administrator.
+
+_fa fa_, William PETRIE, Commissary-General.
+
+_me fa_, Matthew FLINDERS (1774-1813), naval captain; assisted George
+Bass to survey the coast of New South Wales and Van Dieman's Land,
+1795-1800; in command of the "Investigator," and afterwards of the
+"Porpoise" and "Cumberland"; made the first survey of a large part of
+the Australian coast, 1801-1803.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, William PETRIE, civil engineer; first exhibitor of electric
+light on a large scale, 1848; inventor of various apparatus for that
+and chemical industries.
+
+_me_, Ann FLINDERS PETRIE, writer of some books and articles
+popularizing mineralogy, about 1840; learned both Hebrew and Greek
+without a teacher.
+
+
+
+Percival Spencer Umfreville #PICKERING# (b. 1858), F.R.S., director
+ of the Woburn Experimental Fruit Farm; investigator in chemical
+ physics; editor of "Memoirs of Anna Maria Pickering," and author
+ of 150 papers on chemical and physical subjects.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, John Spencer STANHOPE, F.R.S., and Membre de l'Institut at
+twenty-eight years of age; a man of considerable classical
+attainments, and author of "Platæa and Olympia" and other
+topographical studies in Greece.
+
+_me me_, Elizabeth, née COKE, a woman of considerable artistic
+ability.
+
+_me me fa_, Thomas William COKE (1752-1842), of Holkham, was created
+Earl of LEICESTER; M.P. for Norfolk, 1776-1806, and 1807-1832;
+favoured Protection and Parliamentary Reform; introduced modern
+methods into agriculture; a famous improver of stock.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Percival Andrée PICKERING, Q.C., Fellow of St. John's Coll.,
+Cambridge; Judge of Passage Court; Attorney-General for County
+Palatine; author of classical essays and works on Parliamentary law.
+
+_me_, Anna Maria Wilhelmina, née SPENCER STANHOPE, of decided
+literary and classical ability; author of "Memoirs" recently
+published.
+
+_fa bro_, Edward Hayes PICKERING, Captain of Montem, Eton; Fellow of
+St. John's Coll., Cambridge; died young.
+
+_me bro_, Sir Walter Thomas William SPENCER STANHOPE (b. 1827),
+K.C.B., first-class in Mathematics, Oxford, 1848; M.P. West Riding of
+Yorkshire, S. division, 1872-1880, and 1882-1890.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro_, John Roddam SPENCER STANHOPE, artist.
+
+_si_, Mary Evelyn DE MORGAN artist.
+
+_si_, Anna Maria Diana Wilhelmina STIRLING, author of novels and
+tales under the name of Percival PICKERING.
+
+
+
+Sir William #RAMSAY# (b. 1852), K.C.B., LL.D., D.Sc., Ph.D.,
+ F.R.S., F.C.S.; Professor of Chemistry, University Coll., London,
+ since 1887; sometime Professor of Chemistry and Principal of
+ University Coll., Bristol; has published numerous important
+ scientific papers.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, William RAMSAY, manufacturing chemist; first made acetic
+acid from wood; discovered bi-chrome; President of the first Chemical
+Society, Glasgow, 1796, which was merged in the Glasgow Philosophical
+Society, 1802.
+
+_fa bro_, Sir Andrew Crombie RAMSAY (1814-1891), F.R.S., Professor of
+Geology, University Coll., London, 1847; Director-General of the
+Geological Survey, 1871.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_mo bro_, Robert ROBERTSON, editor of a daily London paper (about
+1835).
+
+
+
+#RAYLEIGH#, Lord.--See STRUTT.
+
+
+
+Clement #REID#, F.R.S., District Geologist on Survey of England and
+ Wales; author of many works on Geology.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_si_, Margery Anna REID, B.Sc., London; science mistress at Ladies'
+Coll., Cheltenham; very successful as a teacher.
+
+_me bro son_, Harold Leslie BARNARD, surgeon, and inventor of
+apparatus for testing blood-pressure.
+
+_me me bro_, Michael FARADAY (1791-1867), F.R.S., Fullerian Professor
+Royal Institution; famous chemist and electrician; started his
+scientific career as assistant to Sir Humphry Davy.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_me fa bro_, George BARNARD, landscape artist and author of many
+books on drawing and painting.
+
+_me fa bro son_, Frederick BARNARD (1846-1896), artist and
+caricaturist; illustrator of Dickens, contributor to "Punch,"
+etc.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+
+
+Sir Henry Enfield #ROSCOE#, Ph.D., LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S., Professor
+ of Chemistry Owens College, Manchester, 1857-1887; President
+ Society of Chemical Industry, 1881; of Chemical Society, 1882;
+ knighted, 1884; M.P. for S. division of Manchester, 1885-1895;
+ President of Brit. Assoc., 1887; Vice-Chancellor of the
+ University of London, 1896-1902; author of many memoirs and works
+ on chemistry.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, William ROSCOE (1753-1831), historian, poet, and
+philanthropist; author of "Lives of Lorenzo de' Medici," of "Leo X.,"
+and of several volumes of verse; M.P. for Liverpool, 1806-1807;
+promoter and first President of its Royal Institution.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Henry ROSCOE (1800-1836), biographer, including Life of his
+father.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Thomas ROSCOE (1791-1871), miscellaneous writer and
+translator.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, William Stanley ROSCOE, poet.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Robert ROSCOE, poet, wrote "King Alfred."
+
+_me_, Maria, née FLETCHER, artist and authoress, wrote "Life of
+Vittoria Colonna."
+
+_me si_, Harriet FLETCHER, authoress of "Tales for Children."
+
+_fa bro son_, William Caldwell ROSCOE (1822-1859), poet and
+essayist.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa si son_, William Stanley JEVONS (1835-1882), F.R.S., economist
+and logician; Professor of Logic and Political Economy at Owens
+Coll., 1866-1879; at University Coll., London, 1876-1880; influential
+writer.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me si son_, Rt. Hon. Charles BOOTH, P.C., F.R.S. (q.v.).
+
+_me si son_, Charles CROMPTON.--See BOOTH.
+
+_me si son_, Henry CROMPTON.--See BOOTH.
+
+
+
+#ROSSE#, fourth Earl of.--See PARSONS.
+
+
+
+Edward John #ROUTH# (b. 1831), Sc.D., Camb., Sc.D. (hon.), Dublin,
+ LL.D. (hon.) Glasgow, F.R.S., Senior Wrangler and Smith's prize,
+ 1854; Adams prize, 1877; has had twenty-seven Senior Wranglers
+ and more than forty Smith's Prizemen for pupils. Author of
+ several books on theoretical dynamics and of many mathematical
+ papers.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, Sir Randolph Isham ROUTH (1782-1858), K.C.B., 1848;
+Commissary-General; saw much foreign service, and was senior
+commissariat officer at Waterloo.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, Hon. Jean Thos. TASCHEREAU, Judge of King's Bench in
+Canada.
+
+_me bro_, His Eminence Elzear Alexandre TASCHEREAU (b. 1820), son
+of the above; Cardinal-Priest of the Roman Catholic Church, and
+Archbishop of Quebec.
+
+_me bro son_, Hon. Sir Henri Thomas TASCHEREAU (b. 1841), Judge of
+the Supreme Court of Canada.
+
+_me bro son_, Hon. Henri Elzear TASCHEREAU (b. 1836), Judge of the
+Supreme Court of Canada; author of many works on law. (For the
+Taschereau family see "Canadian Men and Women of the Time.")
+
+_fa son œ bro_, C.H.F. ROUTH, eminent London physician.
+
+_fa son son_, Amand J. McC. ROUTH, M.D., F.R.C.P., obstetric
+physician to Charing Cross Hospital, consulting obstetric physician
+to three other hospitals; author of numerous papers and articles on
+Midwifery and Gynæcology.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_wife's fa_, Sir George B. AIRY (1801-1892), K.C.B., F.R.S., eminent
+mathematician and astronomer; Senior Wrangler, 1823; Astronomer
+Royal, 1835-1881.
+
+
+
+Dukinfield Henry #SCOTT# (b. 1854), F.R.S., Hon. Keeper Jodrell
+ Lab., Royal Gardens, Kew; Botanical Sec. of the Linnæan Soc.;
+ President of the Royal Microscopical Soc.; author of "An
+ Introduction to Structural Botany," "Studies in Fossil Botany,"
+ and various papers in "Phil. Trans.," etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa fa_, Thomas SCOTT (1747-1821), Chaplain of Lock Hosp., London,
+afterwards Rector of Aston Sandford; produced a commentary on the
+Bible in weekly parts from 1788-1792; author of many religious
+writings.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa_, Thomas SCOTT (1780-1835), Queen's Coll., Cambridge; author
+of many religious works.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Sir George Gilbert SCOTT (1811-1878), R.A., restoring architect
+to Ely, Hereford, Lichfield, Salisbury, and Ripon Cathedrals;
+architect of Indian, Home and Colonial Offices, the Nicolaikirche at
+Hamburg, St. Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh, etc.; President Royal
+Inst. Brit. Architects, 1873-1876; Professor of
+Architecture.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Ven. Melville H. SCOTT, Archdeacon of Stafford.
+
+_bro_, George Gilbert SCOTT, architect of Roman Catholic Cathedral,
+Norwich; first in Moral Science Tripos, Cambridge; Burney Prize
+Essay; author of "History of English Church Architecture."--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_bro son_, Giles Gilbert SCOTT, architect of New Liverpool Cathedral,
+by competition at the age of twenty-two.
+
+_bro son_, Henry George SCOTT, Director of Mines and Geology to the
+Siamese Government at the age of twenty-four.
+
+_fa bro son_, Canon Thomas SCOTT (b. 1831), Whewell University
+prizeman; first in first-class Moral Science Trip., 1854.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_fa bro son_, Ven. Edwin A. SCOTT, Archdeacon of Christchurch, New
+Zealand.
+
+
+
+Robert Henry #SCOTT# (b. 1833), D.Sc., F.R.S., classical scholar
+ Trin. Coll., Dublin, 1853; first Senior Mod. Exp. Physics, 1855;
+ Superintendent Meteorological Office 1867-1900.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, John Pendred SCOTT, resident at the Court of Oude.
+
+_me fa_, Charles BRODRICK, Archbishop of Cashel, Ireland.
+
+_fa_, James Smyth SCOTT, gold medallist Trin. Coll., Dublin.
+
+_me bro_, William John BRODRICK, seventh Viscount MIDLETON, Dean of
+Wells.
+
+_bro_, Charles BRODRICK SCOTT, Senior Classic, Cambridge, 1848;
+Headmaster of Westminster School.
+
+_bro_, James George SCOTT, Archdeacon of Dublin, Chancellor of St.
+Patrick's, Dublin.
+
+_bro_, Edward Ashley SCOTT, Fellow of Trinity Coll., Cambridge.
+
+_bro son_, George Digby SCOTT, first-class Classical tripos,
+Cambridge.
+
+_bro son_, Charles William SCOTT, engineer to Irish Lights Board.
+
+_fa bro son_, Edward William SCOTT, General Bengal Artillery; for
+many years secretary to the Military Board, Bengal.
+
+_me bro son_, George C. BRODRICK (d. 1903), D.C.L., Warden of
+Merton Coll., Oxford; brilliant college career; connected with the
+"Times," 1860-1873; author of "Political Studies" (1879), "Memorials
+of Merton College" (1885), "Memoirs and Impressions" (1900).--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_me si son_, Charles Brodrick BERNARD, Bishop of Tuam, Ireland.
+
+_me bro son son_, William St. John BRODRICK, P.C., Secretary of State
+for War, 1900-1903; subsequently for India.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+Thomas Roscoe Rede #STEBBING# (b. 1835) (Rev.), F.R.S., naturalist;
+ authority on Crustacea; prepared the report on the Amphipoda of
+ the "Challenger" expedition; author of many works on natural
+ history.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, Henry STEBBING (1799-1883), D.D., F.R.S., poet, preacher, and
+historian; editor of the "Athenæum" almost from its commencement,
+1828; published a continuation to Hume and Smollet's history, "Lives
+of the Italian Poets," etc.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro_, William GRIFFIN, Vice-Admiral.
+
+_bro_, William STEBBING, Scholar of Lincoln Coll., scholar and Fellow
+of Worcester Coll., Oxford, first-class Mods., 1852; first-class Lit.
+Hum., 1853, first-class Law and History, 1854; for nearly thirty
+years on the staff of the "Times" as leader writer, and second to the
+late Mr. Delane in the editorship.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+G. Johnstone #STONEY# (b. 1826), D.Sc. F.R.S.; Professor of Natural
+ Philosophy in late Queen's University, Ireland; memoirs on the
+ "Physical Constitution of the Sun and Stars," on the "Internal
+ Motion of Gases," etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro_, William Bindon BLOOD, Professor of Engineering; author of
+professional papers.
+
+_me bro son_, Sir Bindon BLOOD (b. 1842), K.C.B., Commander of the
+Forces in Punjab; distinguished in Chitral Expedition and in Boer
+War.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Bindon Blood STONEY, LL.D., F.R.S., Engineer, especially
+marine; numerous engineering works and publications of great
+originality.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_si son_, Maurice FITZGERALD, Professor of Engineering, Queen's
+Coll., Belfast.
+
+_si son_, George Francis FITZGERALD (1891-1903), F.R.S., Professor of
+Nat. and Exper. Philosophy; Principal of School of Engineering,
+Dublin University. His scientific writings have been edited since his
+death by Dr. Larmor.
+
+_son_, Gerald STONEY, one of the principal engineers in the work of
+the Parson's Steam Turbine Company.
+
+
+
+Lieutenant-General Sir Richard #STRACHEY# (retired 1875), G.C.S.I.,
+ R.E., LL.D., F.R.S., Cambridge. Secretary of Government Central
+ Provinces of India during Mutiny, 1857-1858; Public-Works
+ Secretary to Government of India, 1862; Legislative Member of
+ Governor-General's Council, 1869-1870; Member of Council of
+ India, 1875-1889; Acting Financial Member of Governor-General's
+ Council, 1878; Chairman of East Indian Railway from 1889;
+ Chairman of Meteorological Council from 1883; President of Royal
+ Geographical Soc., 1888-1890; Royal Medal of Royal Soc., 1897.
+ Publications: "Lectures on Geography"; "Finances and Public
+ Works of India" (jointly with his brother, Sir John S.); various
+ scientific memoirs.--["Ency. Brit.," and "Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Sir Henry STRACHEY (1736-1810), Bart., private secretary to
+Lord Clive in India; Joint Under-Secretary of State for the Home
+Department, 1782; cr. Baronet, 1801.--["Dict. N. Biog.," Suppl. iii.]
+
+_me fa_, Lieutenant-General KIRKPATRICK, W. (1754-1812), Orientalist;
+military secretary to Marquess Wellesley; Resident at Poona;
+translated Persian works; expert in Oriental tongues and in Indian
+manners, customs, and laws.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Edward STRACHEY (1774-1832), Chief Examiner of correspondence
+to the India House, the other two being Peacock and James Mill
+(secretaries' work, writing despatches, etc.).
+
+_fa bro_, Sir Henry STRACHEY, Bart. (1772-1858), distinguished Indian
+Civilian, described by James Mill ("Hist. Brit. India," vol. vi.,
+chap, vii.) as "the most intelligent of the Company's servants."
+
+_fa bro_, Richard STRACHEY, Resident at Lucknow and Gwalior.
+
+_me si_, Isabella Barbara BULLER, a well-known centre of literary and
+political society.
+
+_bro_, Sir John STRACHEY, G.C.S.I., eminent Indian statesman;
+Lieutenant-Governor of the N.W. Provinces; Financial Member of
+Governor-General's Council; Member of Council of India. Publications:
+"Finance and Public Works of India," 1882 (jointly with his brother,
+Sir Richard S.); "Hastings and the Rohilla War," 1892; "India," 1888,
+third edition, 1903.--["Ency. Brit.," and "Who's Who," 1904.]
+
+_bro_, Colonel Henry STRACHEY, Tibetan explorer, gold medal of Royal
+Geographical Soc., 1852.
+
+_bro_, Sir Edward STRACHEY (d. 1904), Bart., author of "Hebrew
+Politics in the Time of Sargon and Sennacherib."
+
+_bro_, George STRACHEY (1873-1890), Chargé d'Affaires and Minister
+Resident at Dresden.
+
+_bro son_, Sir Arthur STRACHEY (1858-1901) [son of Sir John S. and of
+Katherine, daughter of George BATTEN], Chief Justice Allahabad, æt.
+thirty-nine; d. æt. forty-three.
+
+_bro son_, John St. Loe STRACHEY (b. 1860) [son of Sir Edward S.
+and Mary, sister of John Addington SYMONDS, writer and critic],
+editor of the "Spectator."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me si son_, Charles BULLER (1806-1848), distinguished politician,
+sent as secretary with Lord Durham to Canada, 1838; Chief Poor-Law
+Commissioner.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me si son_, Sir Arthur BULLER, Judge of the Supreme Court, Calcutta.
+
+_fa fa bro_, John STRACHEY, LL.D. Cambridge, Archdeacon of Suffolk,
+Prebendary of Llandaff, preacher at the Rolls.
+
+_fa fa fa fa_, John STRACHEY (1671-1743), F.R.S., geologist, said to
+have first suggested theory of stratification in his "Observations on
+Different Strata of Earths and Minerals," 1727.--["Dict. N. Biog.,"
+Suppl. iii.]
+
+_Wife and her kinsfolk:_
+
+ _wi_, Jane Maria, née GRANT, second wife, authoress of "Lay
+ Texts," "Poets on Poets," "Memoirs of a Highland Lady,"
+ etc.--["Who's Who," 1904.]
+
+ _wi fa fa_, Sir J.P. GRANT (1774-1848), Chief Justice of Supreme
+ Court, Calcutta.--["Dict. N. Biog.," xxii. 398.]
+
+ _wi fa_, Sir J.P. GRANT, G.C.M.G., K.C.B. (1807-1893), Indian and
+ Colonial Governor; Member of Council; Lieutenant-Governor of
+ Central Provinces of India; Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal;
+ Governor of Jamaica (1866-1873).--["Dict. N. Biog.," Suppl. iii.
+ 341.]
+
+ _wife's me bro son_, Sir Trevor Chichele PLOWDEN, K.C.S.I.,
+ Resident at Kashmir, Hyderabad, and Baghdad.
+
+ _wife's me bro son_, Sir Henry Meredith PLOWDEN, Senior Judge of
+ Chief Court, Punjab (1880-1894).--["Who's Who," 1904.]
+
+_son_, Giles Lytton STRACHEY, Scholarship at Trinity Coll.,
+Cambridge; Chancellor's medal for English verse.
+
+_son_, Oliver STRACHEY, Eton scholarship.
+
+_son_, James Beaumont STRACHEY, scholarship at St. Paul's School.
+
+_da_, Joan Pernel STRACHEY, lecturer on Old French at Royal Holloway
+College.
+
+_da_, Marjorie Colvile STRACHEY, prize offered in 1904 by the
+British Ambassador in Paris to male and female undergraduates of all
+colleges in Great Britain, for examination in French; scholarship at
+Royal Holloway College, 1904.
+
+
+
+Aubrey #STRAHAN# (b. 1852), F.R.S., district geologist on the
+ Geological Survey of England and Wales; author of geological
+ memoirs on Chester, Rhyl, Flint, Isle of Purbeck, Weymouth, South
+ Wales Coalfield, etc., and contributions to scientific
+ journals.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Sir George FISHER, General of Royal Artillery; Commandant of
+Woolwich Arsenal.
+
+_bro_, George STRAHAN, second for Pollock Medal at Addiscombe; Dep.
+Surveyor-General of the Trigonometrical Survey of India, 1889;
+Colonel of Bengal Engineers.
+
+_bro_, Charles STRAHAN, Lieutenant-General of Bengal Engineers;
+Surveyor-General of India, 1895.
+
+_fa bro son_, Herbert KYNASTON (b. 1835), D.D., Camden Medallist
+and Browne Medallist, 1855; bracketed Senior Classic, 1857; Fellow of
+St. John's Coll., Cambridge, 1858; Principal of Cheltenham Coll.,
+1874-1888; Professor of Greek and Classical Literature, University of
+Durham, 1889.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+John William #STRUTT# (b. 1842), third Baron #RAYLEIGH#, D.C.L.
+ (Hon. Oxon.), LL.D., O.M., F.R.S., Hon. Sc.D. (Cambridge and
+ Dublin), Professor of Natural Philosophy, Royal Inst., since
+ 1887; Senior Wrangler and Smith's Prizeman, 1865; Professor of
+ Experimental Physics, Cambridge, 1879-1884; Secretary Roy. Soc.,
+ 1887; author of "Theory of Sound," and many scientific
+ papers.--["Who's Who," and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_bro_, Hon. Edward Gerald STRUTT, successful land-agent and surveyor.
+
+_me si son_, Ronald Montague BURROWS (b. 1867), Professor of Greek
+in the University Coll. of S. Wales and Monmouthshire.--["Who's
+Who."]
+
+_son_, Hon. Robert John STRUTT (b. 1875), F.R.S., Fellow of Trinity
+Coll., Cambridge; author of papers on radium, etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa bro_, Major-General Edward VICARS, R.E., distinguished himself
+under Lord John Hay on North Coast of Spain; brevet majority and
+Spanish orders for gallantry before San Sebastian in 1836; selected
+for special duty with the fleet in 1854, but taken ill on the way
+out, and retired on full pay.
+
+_wife_, see BALFOUR.
+
+
+
+William #THOMSON# (b. 1824), Baron #KELVIN# (1892), P.C., O.M.,
+ F.R.S., and numerous other distinctions; eminent mathematical
+ physicist; inventor of mirror galvanometer, of siphon recorder
+ in connection with submarine telegraphy, of a new form of
+ mariner's compass, etc.; acted as electrical engineer for many
+ submarine cables; President of British Assoc., 1871, of Royal
+ Soc., 1890-1895, and four times of Royal Soc., Edinburgh; author
+ of numerous mathematical and physical memoirs.--["Who's Who," and
+ "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_fa_, James THOMSON (1786-1849), son of a small farmer in co. Down;
+commenced the study of mathematics on his own initiative; became
+Professor of Mathematics at Belfast, 1815, then at University of
+Glasgow, 1832; also a good classical scholar and astronomer; wrote
+the authorized mathematical text-books of the Commissioners of
+National Education in Ireland.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, James THOMSON (1822-1892), F.R.S., Hon. LL.D., Glasgow and
+Dublin, Professor of Civil Engineering, first at Queen's Coll.,
+Belfast, 1857-1873, then at Glasgow, 1873-1889. Invented the "vortex
+water-wheel," 1850; numerous memoirs on physical
+investigations.--["Dict. N. Biog.," and "Ency. Brit."]
+
+_bro_, John THOMSON, died young, having contracted hospital fever
+during medical study at Glasgow. Considered as able as his brothers.
+
+_si son_, James Thomson BOTTOMLEY, F.R.S. (q.v.).
+
+_si son_, George KING, actuary and mathematician; author of many
+original papers, and of an authoritative work on actuarial subjects.
+
+
+
+Sir John Isaac #THORNYCROFT# (b. 1843), LL.D., F.R.S.,
+ Vice-President of Inst. of Naval Architecture, etc.; founded
+ shipbuilding works at Chiswick, 1866; introduced improvements in
+ naval architecture and marine engineering, which have promoted
+ high speeds at sea.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, John FRANCIS (1780-1861), sculptor, pupil of Chantrey;
+exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1820-1856; his works include busts of
+Miss Horatio Nelson, Queen Victoria, Prince Albert, and the Duke of
+Wellington.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Thomas THORNYCROFT (1815-1885), sculptor; executed the group of
+Commerce on the Albert Memorial, and other statues.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_me_, Mary THORNYCROFT (1814-1895), sculptor.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_bro_, William Hamo THORNYCROFT (b. 1850), R.A., sculptor. His
+works include national monument to General Gordon in Trafalgar Square
+and in Melbourne; John Bright in Rochdale; Lord Granville in Houses
+of Parliament; and very many others.--["Who's Who."]
+
+
+
+Charles Sissmore #TOMES# (b. 1846), F.R.S., late lecturer on dental
+ anatomy at Dental Hosp. of London; Crown nominee on General
+ Medical Council, 1898, etc.; author of a "Manual of Dental
+ Anatomy, Human and Comparative," and of many memoirs on
+ odontology in "Phil. Trans.," etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa_, Sir John TOMES (1815-1895), F.R.S., dental surgeon; invented
+dental forceps; memoirs on histology of bone and teeth; delivered
+lectures at Middlesex Hosp., which marked new era in dentistry;
+induced Royal Coll. of Surgeons to grant license in dental surgery;
+one of the chief founders of the Odontological Soc., 1856, and of the
+Dental Hosp., 1858; secured passing of Dentists Act, 1878; wrote
+well-known treatise on "Dental Surgery," and other works.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Robert Fisher TOMES (1824-1904), authority on insectivora
+and chiroptera; edited Bell's "British Quadrupeds"; wrote natural
+history sections for his own and neighbouring county histories.
+
+_me bro_, George SIBLEY, C.E.I., went out to India as a civil
+engineer, and without influence rose to be chief engineer of the East
+Indian Railways, and did much important work in bridge-building.
+
+
+
+James William Helenus #TRAIL# (b. 1851), F.R.S., Regius Professor
+ of Botany, University of Aberdeen, since 1877; naturalist of an
+ exploring expedition in N. Brazil, 1873-1875; has been largely
+ occupied in the administrative work of the University and of
+ other educational bodies in N. Scotland; has published numerous
+ botanical and zoological papers in scientific journals.--["Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa_, Samuel TRAIL, LL.D., D.D. (both hon.), obtained Hutton
+Scholarship in Aberdeen as the most distinguished graduate of his
+year, 1825; Professor of Systematic Theology, University of Aberdeen,
+1867; Moderator of Church of Scotland, 1874.
+
+_me bro_, Hercules SCOTT, LL.D., Professor of Moral Philosophy in the
+King's Coll. and University, Old Aberdeen, 1820-1860; said to have
+taken a large part in the administration of the University.
+
+_bro_, John Arbuthnot TRAIL, LL.D., Writer to the Signet in
+Edinburgh; prominent in administration connected with the University
+of Edinburgh, the Church of Scotland, and other public bodies.
+
+_me si son_, David BROWN, General; formerly Commissioner of Lower
+Burmah.
+
+
+
+John #VENN# (b. 1834), D.Sc., F.R.S., Fellow of Caius Coll.,
+ Cambridge; President, 1903; for many years lecturer on Moral
+ Philosophy at Cambridge; author of many works on logic, and of "A
+ Biographical History of Gonville and Caius Coll."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, John VENN (1759-1813), scientific and mechanical interests;
+one of the first to adopt vaccination, applying it to his own
+children, and recommending it in the parish of Clapham, where he was
+rector in 1800; the principal founder of the Church Missionary Soc.,
+1798, the rules of which he sketched out much as they are still
+retained.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Henry VENN (1796-1873), Wrangler and Fellow of Queens' Coll.,
+Cambridge; for many years secretary and practically manager of the
+Church Missionary Soc., the income of which increased under his
+guidance to over £100,000 per annum; vicar of Drypool, 1827, and of
+St. John's, Holloway, London, 1834-1846.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, John VENN (1802-1890), Wrangler and Fellow of Queens'
+Coll., Cambridge; much practical skill and success in philanthropic
+schemes in his parish of St. Peter's at Hereford; he started a steam
+corn-mill, which was so successful that it led to many other
+developments in the way of aiding the industrious--e.g., a loan
+department, which, by 1848, had advanced some £18,000 to various poor
+and struggling persons, and an extensive experimental garden for
+teaching garden allotment and small farm work, etc.
+
+_fa si son_, Sir James Fitzjames STEPHEN (1829-1894), distinguished
+judge; in earlier life journalist, essayist, and reviewer; then Legal
+Member of the Council of the Governor-General of India; author of
+legal works.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa si son_, Sir Leslie STEPHEN (1832-1904), K.C.B., Litt.D., at one
+time famous as a mountaineer; eminent literary editor and critic;
+President of the Ethical Soc.; editor of the earlier volumes of the
+"Dictionary of National Biography"; author of many works, including a
+biography of his brother.
+
+_fa fa fa_, Henry VENN (1725-1797), an evangelical divine, a man of
+remarkable energy and force of character; Fellow of Queens' Coll.,
+Cambridge, 1749-1757; curate of Clapham, 1754; vicar of Huddersfield,
+1759; rector of Yelling, 1771-1797; author of the "Complete Duty of
+Man."--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa fa fa_, Richard VENN (1691-1740), a learned divine; rector of
+St. Antholin's, London, 1725-1739. He acquired some prominence
+by publicly objecting to the appointment of Dr. Rundle, a
+latitudinarian, to the bishopric of Gloucester, on the ground of
+unorthodox views.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa si da_, Emelia BATTEN, afterwards Mrs. Russell Gurney;
+distinguished by her artistic taste and accomplishments; author of
+"Dante's Pilgrims' Progress."--["Letters," with a brief biography, by
+Ellen Gurney, 1902.]
+
+_me fa bro_, Daniel SYKES (1766-1832), F.R.S., Fellow of Trinity
+Coll., Cambridge; Recorder and M.P. for Hull; prominent as an early
+supporter of the Reform Movement.
+
+_me fa fa_, Joseph SYKES (1723-1805), large and successful merchant
+in Hull, where he was the principal founder of the trade in Swedish
+iron; Mayor and Sheriff of Hull, and D.L. of the E. Riding.
+
+For further particulars of the Venn family, see "Venn Family Annals,"
+by Dr. John Venn (Macmillan and Co., 1904).
+
+
+
+Robert #WARINGTON# (b. 1838), F.R.S., Examiner in Agricultural
+ Science to the Board of Education since 1894; Professor of Rural
+ Economy, Oxford, 1894-1897; author of twenty-six papers in the
+ "Transactions" of the Chemical Soc., "The Chemistry of the Farm"
+ (seventeenth edition), "Lectures on the Rothamsted Experiments,"
+ and "Lectures on the Physical Properties of the Soil."--["Who's
+ Who."]
+
+_fa_, Robert WARINGTON (1807-1867), F.R.S., chemist, pharmacist, and
+naturalist; founded in 1841, and was for ten years secretary of the
+Chemical Soc.; originator of the Aquarium; the author of many papers
+on chemical and natural history subjects.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me fa_, George JACKSON (1792-1861), medical practitioner and
+inventor; Society of Arts medal for improvements in an apparatus for
+obtaining light; invented a dividing machine for ruling micrometers,
+which is still in use; introduced several improvements into the
+microscope; and was President of the Royal Microscopical Soc.
+
+_bro_, George WARINGTON, B.A., first-class Natural Science Tripos,
+Cambridge; died at the age of thirty-three, but had already made a
+considerable reputation as an author, critic, teacher, and speaker.
+
+_fa si son_, John BROWN, C.M.G.; engineer-in-chief to Cape Government
+railways.
+
+
+
+General Sir Charles #WARREN# (b. 1840), K.C.B., G.C.M.G., R.E.,
+ F.R.S. Conducted excavations at Jerusalem, and reconnaissance of
+ Palestine for the Pal. Expl. Fund, 1867-1870; Administrator and
+ Commander-in-Chief, Griqualand West; commanded troops Northern
+ Border Expedition, 1879; Bechuanaland Expedition, 1884-1885;
+ Suakim, 1886; Commissioner Metropolitan Police, 1886-1888;
+ commanded troops Straits Settlements, 1889-1894;
+ Lieutenant-General in command of 5th Div. South African Field
+ Force, 1899-1900. Author of works concerning the archæology of
+ Jerusalem; also of "On Veldt in the Seventies," and of "The
+ Ancient Cubit and Our Weights and Measures."--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, John WARREN (1767-1838), Dean of Bangor, N.W.
+
+_fa fa bro_, Frederick WARREN (1775-1848), Vice-Admiral; defeated
+Danish gunboat flotilla in the Belt, 1809; Commander-in-Chief
+at the Cape, 1831-1834; Admiral-Superintendent at Plymouth,
+1837-1841.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa fa bro_, Pelham WARREN (1778-1835), M.D., F.R.S., Physician at
+St. George's Hosp.; Harveian orator, 1826; Physician to the
+King.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Sir Charles WARREN (1798-1866), K.C.B., Major-General; served
+in India, 1840-1848; in China, 1841-1844; in the Crimea,
+1854-1856.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, John WARREN (1796-1852), F.R.S., mathematician; Fellow and
+Tutor of Jesus Coll., Cambridge; Chancellor of Bangor.--["Dict. N.
+Biog."]
+
+_son_, Richard WARREN (b. 1876), first-class honours, Natural
+Science, Oxford; scholarship in Anatomy and Physiology, London Hosp.;
+Radcliffe Travelling Fellow, Oxford; house physician, house surgeon,
+and senior resident accoucheur, London Hosp.
+
+_fa fa fa_, Richard WARREN (1731-1797), M.D., F.R.S., Fellow of Jesus
+Coll., Cambridge; Physician to George III., and to George, Prince of
+Wales.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+
+
+Bertram Coghill Alan #WINDLE# (b. 1858), F.R.S., President of
+ Queen's Coll., Cork; M.D., D.Sc., Dublin; late Dean of the
+ Medical Faculty and Professor of Anatomy and Anthropology,
+ University of Birmingham; author of scientific papers, books on
+ anatomy, anthropology, and literature, "Tyson's Pygmies of the
+ Ancients," "Life in Early Britain," etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me bro_, Colonel Kendal COGHILL (b. 1832), C.B., served in Burmah,
+1853-1855; Adjutant of 2nd European Bengal Fusiliers during Indian
+Mutiny, 1857-1858; commanded 19th Hussars in Egyptian Campaign,
+1882.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me fa_, Admiral Sir J. COGHILL.
+
+_me me fa_, Charles Kendal BUSHE (1767-1843), Solicitor-General
+for Ireland, 1805-1822; Chief Justice of King's Bench, 1822-1841.
+--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_me bro son_, Seymour Coghill Hort BUSHE (b. 1853), K.C., Senior
+Moderator and Berkeley gold medallist; gold medallist in oratory,
+Dublin; Senior Crown Prosecutor for County and City of Dublin,
+1901.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_me si son_, Herbert Wilson GREENE, well-known fellow and lecturer,
+Magdalen Coll., Oxford; author of version of "Rubayat" of Omar
+Khayum, etc.
+
+_me si son_, Boyle SOMERVILLE, Commander, R.N., author of papers on
+the ethnology of the Polynesian race in the "Anthropological
+Journal."
+
+_me si da_, Edith Oenone SOMERVILLE, M.F.H., author of
+"Reminiscences of an Irish R.M.," "All on the Irish Shore," and other
+novels.
+
+
+
+Horace Bolingbroke #WOODWARD# (b. 1848), F.R.S., Assistant Director
+ Geological Survey of England and Wales; author of "Geology of
+ England and Wales," and other works.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_fa fa_, Samuel WOODWARD (1790-1838), geologist and antiquary; clerk
+in Gurney's Bank, Norwich, 1820-1838; studied history and archæology;
+formed collection of fossils and antiquities, and published works
+relating to Norfolk.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa_, Samuel Pickworth WOODWARD (1821-1865), Professor of Geology
+and Natural History at Royal Agricultural Coll., Cirencester, 1845;
+first-class assistant in department of geology and mineralogy,
+British Museum, 1848-1865; author of "Manual of the Mollusca"
+(1851-1856).--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Bernard Bolingbroke WOODWARD (1816-1869), librarian in
+ordinary to Queen Victoria at Windsor.--["Dict. N. Biog."]
+
+_fa bro_, Henry WOODWARD (b. 1832), LL.D., F.R.S., President of
+Palæontographical Soc. since 1896; Vice-President of Royal
+Microscopical Soc.; late Keeper Geological Department, British Museum
+(Natural History); author of many works on palæontology, zoology,
+etc.--["Who's Who."]
+
+_bro_, Bernard Henry WOODWARD, Director of Museum at Perth, W.
+Australia.
+
+_bro_, Herbert Willoughby WOODWARD, Archdeacon of Magila, Zanzibar.
+
+_fa bro son_, Harry Page WOODWARD (b. 1858), Government Geologist
+for W. Australia, 1887-1895.
+
+_fa bro son_, Martin Fountain WOODWARD, Demonstrator of Biology,
+Royal Coll. of Science (obituary in "Nature").
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+32 NOTEWORTHY FATHERS OF 38 F.R.S.
+
+(TAKEN FROM THE PRINTED LIST OF 66 FAMILIES, AND CLASSIFIED BY
+OCCUPATIONS)
+
+
+ASTRONOMY.
+
+Sir J.W. #LUBBOCK#, F.R.S., Treasurer and Vice-President of the Royal
+Soc.
+
+ _son_, Lord AVEBURY, F.R.S. (Lubbock).
+
+Third Earl of #ROSSE#, President Royal Soc. (1800-1867), constructor
+of the great reflecting telescope.
+
+ _son_, fourth Earl of ROSSE, F.R.S.
+
+ _son_, C.A. PARSONS, F.R.S.
+
+
+GEOLOGY.
+
+Professor #BALL#, Dublin (1802-1857).
+
+ _son_, Sir Robert BALL, F.R.S.
+
+ _son_, Valentine BALL, F.R.S.
+
+Sir J. #EVANS#, F.R.S., President of Geological and many other
+societies; Treasurer of the Royal Soc. for many years.
+
+ _son_, Arthur EVANS, F.R.S.
+
+#GODWIN-AUSTEN#, F.R.S. (1808-1884).
+
+ _son_, H.H. GODWIN-AUSTEN, F.R.S.
+
+Professor #WOODWARD#, Cirencester (1821-1865).
+
+ _son_, H.B. WOODWARD, F.R.S.
+
+
+PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS.
+
+J.J. #LISTER#, F.R.S. (----), optical investigator.
+
+ _son_, Lord LISTER, O.M., President Royal Soc.
+
+ _son_, Arthur LISTER, F.R.S.
+
+Lord #RAYLEIGH#, F.R.S., O.M.
+
+ _son_, Hon. R. STRUTT, F.R.S.
+
+Professor James #THOMSON#, Belfast (1786-1849).
+
+ _son_, Lord KELVIN, O.M., President Royal Soc.
+
+ _son_, James THOMSON, F.R.S.
+
+
+CHEMISTRY.
+
+R. #WARINGTON#, F.R.S. (1807-1867), ten years Secretary of the
+Chemical Soc.
+
+ _son_, Robert WARINGTON, F.R.S.
+
+ENGINEER.
+
+W. #PETRIE#, inventor of various apparatus for electric and chemical
+industries.
+
+ _son_, W.M. FLINDERS-PETRIE, F.R.S.
+
+
+BIOLOGY.
+
+Charles #DARWIN#, F.R.S. (1809-1865), the great naturalist.
+
+ _son_, Professor G. DARWIN, F.R.S.
+
+ _son_, Francis DARWIN, F.R.S.
+
+ _son_, Horace DARWIN, F.R.S.
+
+Edwin #LANKESTER#, F.R.S. (1814-1874), Professor of Natural History,
+New Coll., London.
+
+ _son_, E. Ray LANKESTER, F.R.S.
+
+
+BOTANY.
+
+Sir William #HOOKER#, F.R.S. (1758-1865), Director of Kew Gardens.
+
+ _son_, Sir Joseph HOOKER, F.R.S.
+
+
+MEDICINE.
+
+W.A.F. #BROWNE#, F.R.S.E. (----), First Commissioner in Lunacy for
+Scotland.
+
+ _son_, Sir J. Crichton BROWNE, F.R.S.
+
+Sir J. #TOMES#, F.R.S., eminent in dental surgery.
+
+ _son_, C.S. TOMES, F.R.S.
+
+
+DIVINITY.
+
+J. #BROWN# (1784-1858), Professor of Exegetics, Secession Coll., and
+after in the United Presbyterian Coll.
+
+ _son_, A. Crum BROWN, F.R.S.
+
+J.E. #KEMPE#, late Rector of St. James, Piccadilly; Hon. Chaplain to
+the King.
+
+ _son_, A.B. KEMPE, F.R.S.
+
+J.G. #MIALL#, Chairman of the Congregational Union.
+
+ _son_, L.C. MIALL, F.R.S.
+
+
+S. #TRAIL# (----), Professor Systematic Theology, University,
+Aberdeen.
+
+ _son_, J.W.H. TRAIL, F.R.S.
+
+H. #VENN# (1796-1873), for many years Secretary and practically
+manager of the Church Missionary Soc.
+
+ _son_, J. VENN, F.R.S.
+
+
+PHILOSOPHY.
+
+C.A. #BRANDIS#, Professor of Philosophy at Bonn.
+
+ _son_, Sir D. BRANDIS, F.R.S.
+
+
+LAW.
+
+P.A. #PICKERING#, Q.C., Judge Passage Court, Attorney-General, County
+Palatine.
+
+ _son_, P.S.U. PICKERING, F.R.S.
+
+
+PUBLIC SERVICES.
+
+E. #STRACHEY# (1774-1832), Chief Examiner of Correspondence at India
+House (Secretary's work, writing despatches).
+
+ _son_, Sir Richard STRACHEY, F.R.S.
+
+
+HISTORIANS AND BIOGRAPHERS.
+
+J. #GRANT DUFF# (1789-1858), "History of the Mahrattas," written
+after a brief but brilliant career in India.
+
+ _son_, Sir Mountstuart GRANT DUFF, F.R.S.
+
+Sir Francis #PALGRAVE# (1788-1861), "Rise and Progress of the English
+Commonwealth."
+
+ _son_, R.H.I. PALGRAVE, F.R.S.
+
+Henry #ROSCOE#, biographer.
+
+ _son_, Sir H.E. ROSCOE, F.R.S.
+
+Henry #STEBBING#, D.D., F.R.S. (1799-1883), "Continuation to Hume and
+Smollet's History," "Lives of the Italian Poets," etc.
+
+ _son_, T.R.R. STEBBING, F.R.S.
+
+
+PAINTERS.
+
+Robert #HERDMAN# (1829-1888), portrait and historical painter.
+
+ _son_, W.A. HERDMAN, F.R.S.
+
+J. Calcott #HORSLEY#, R.A.
+
+ _son_, Sir Victor A.H. HORSLEY, F.R.S.
+
+
+SCULPTOR.
+
+T. #THORNYCROFT# (1815-1885).
+
+ _son_, Sir J.I. THORNYCROFT, F.R.S.
+
+
+ARCHITECT.
+
+Sir G. Gilbert #SCOTT#, R.A. (1811-1878), President Royal Institute
+British Architects, Professor of Architecture.
+
+ _son_, Dukinfield H. SCOTT, F.R.S.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SUMMARY OF THE OCCUPATIONS OF THE 32 FATHERS
+
+11 | PHYSICAL SCIENCE: Astronomy, 2; geology, 4;
+ | physics and mathematics, 3; chemistry, 1;
+ | engineer, 1.
+ |
+5 | BIOLOGY: Biology, 2; botany, 1; medicine, 2.
+ |
+6 | DIVINITY AND PHILOSOPHY: Divinity, 5; philosophy, 1.
+ |
+2 | LAW AND PUBLIC SERVICE: Law, 1; public service, 1.
+ |
+4 | HISTORIANS: Historians, 4.
+ |
+4 | ARTISTS: Painters, 2; sculptor, 1; architect, 1.
+---|
+32 |
+
+I gather from this that about 21 of the 38 sons have followed the
+same pursuits as their parents, and that the remaining 17 have
+followed different ones; but the distinction is not always clear, so
+other persons may form slightly different estimates. Anyhow, it
+appears that the two characteristics of (1) general ability and (2) a
+passion for a particular pursuit are transmitted more or less
+independently.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ABILITY, HIGHEST ORDER OF, xiv How far can noteworthiness be
+ accepted as a statistical measure of, xxi; nature of, xxi;
+ relation between this and environment in producing noteworthiness,
+ xxi-xxv
+
+Abercromby, Sir Ralph, 30
+ Sir Robert, 30
+
+Abraham, Harry, 48
+ Joseph, 47
+
+Abstention in replying to circular, suggested reasons for, xxxiv
+
+Abydos, kings of earliest dynasties at, 53
+
+Abyssinian Expedition, 5, 44
+
+Accident, definition of, xx
+
+Achromatic microscope, 40
+
+"Adam Smith, Life of," 13
+
+Adelaide, South Australia, 6
+
+Ainslie, Sir Whitelaw, 28
+
+Airy, Sir George B., 59
+
+Albert, bust of Prince, 70
+ Memorial, 70
+
+"Alert," 44
+
+Alexandria, defeat of French at, 30
+
+Allardice, Robert Barclay, 22
+
+"All on the Irish Shore," 78
+
+Ancestry, direct, xxxii
+
+"Ancient Cubit and our Weights and Measures," 76
+
+"Ankylostomiasis in Mines," 28
+
+"Antiseptic Treatment in Surgery," 39
+
+Ashburton, first Baron, 4
+
+"Ashburton Treaty," 4
+
+"Arabia, A Year's Journey through Eastern and Central," 52
+
+Archæology, British School of, at Athens, 7
+
+Arctic Voyages, 42-44
+
+Arkwright, Sir Richard, 3
+
+Artistic Temperament and Bohemianism, xv
+
+"Athenæum," 62
+
+Augusta, H.M. Empress, 9
+
+Austen, Sir Henry E, 26
+ Robert, 26
+
+Autotype process, 47
+
+Avebury, Lord, 41, 80
+
+
+Balfour, Andrew, 11
+ Isaac Bayley, 11
+ John Hutton, 11
+ Right Hon. A.J., 1
+ Professor F.M., 1
+ Right Hon. Gerald, 1
+
+Balfour-Browne, John Hutton, 11
+
+Ball, Sir Charles B., 3
+ Sir Robert S., 2, 80
+ Robert, 2, 80
+ Valentine, 3, 80
+
+Bangor, Dean of, 76
+
+Barclay, Capt., of Ury, 22
+
+Barnard, Frederick, 56
+ George, 56
+ Harold L., 56
+
+Baring Brothers and Co., 4
+ Alexander, 4
+ Charles, 4
+ Evelyn, 4
+ Sir Francis, 3
+ Francis Thornhill, 4
+ Thomas, 4
+ Thomas George, 3
+
+Baring-Gould, Rev. S., 5
+
+Bass, George, 53
+
+Batten, Emelia, 74
+ George, 65
+
+Bateson, xlii
+
+"_Beagle_, Voyage of," 18
+
+"Beduins, With the," 33
+
+Belper, Lord, 24
+
+Bell's "British Quadrupeds," 71
+
+Bentham, Samuel, 24
+
+Berlin waterworks, 24
+
+Bernard, Charles B., Bishop of Tuam, 61
+
+Bewick, 37
+
+"Biography, Dictionary of National," xiv
+
+Blanford, H.F., 6
+ William, 5
+ W.T., 5
+
+Blood, Professor W. Bindon, 62
+ General Sir Bindon, 62
+
+Bohemianism and artistic temperament, xv
+
+Bonamy Price, Professor, xvi
+
+Booth, Right Hon. Charles, 6, 57
+ Henry, 6
+ James, 6
+ Thomas, 6
+
+Bosanquet, Bernard, 7
+ C.B.P., 7
+ Vice-Admiral Day Hort, 7
+ Sir John Bernard, 7
+ Robert C., 7
+ R.H.M., 7
+
+"Botanic Garden," 17
+
+Bottomley, James Thomson, 8, 69
+
+Bramwell, Lord, 36
+ Sir Frederick, 36
+
+Brandis, C.A., 9, 83
+ Sir Dietrich, 8, 83
+ Joachim D., 9
+ Johannes, 9
+
+Bray, Anna Eliza, 38
+
+Brewster, Sir David, 11
+
+Bright, statue of John, 70
+
+Britons, Ancient, 20
+
+Brodrick, Charles, Archbishop of Cashel, 60
+ George C. (Warden of Merton), 61
+ Right Hon. William St. J., 61
+ W.J., seventh Viscount Midleton, 61
+
+Brodrick Scott, Charles, 61
+
+Brothers, average number of, for any person, xxxi
+
+Brown, Professor A. Crum, 9, 82
+ General David, 72
+ John, of Haddington (1722-1787), 9
+ John, of Whitburn (1754-1832), 10
+ John, of Biggor (1784-1858), 10, 82
+ John, M.D., 10
+ John (engineer), 75
+
+Browne, Sir J. Crichton, 11, 82
+ W.A.F., 11, 82
+
+Brunel, Isambard, 35
+
+Buller, Sir Arthur, 65
+ Charles, 65
+ Isabella B., 64
+
+Burdon, Sir Thomas, 12
+
+Burdon-Sanderson, Sir John S., 12, 29
+ Richard, 12
+
+Burke's "Peerage," xix
+
+Burrows, Professor R.M., 68
+
+Bushe, Charles Kendal, 78
+ Seymour Coghill Hort, 78
+
+
+Calcott, Sir Augustus Wall, 35
+ John Wall, 35
+
+Cambrian Pottery Works, 46
+
+Camperdown, Earl of, 30
+ Viscount Duncan of, 30
+
+"Canadian Men and Women of the Time," 58
+
+Candidates for Fellowship of Royal Society, number of, xi
+
+Caricaturists on women who study hard, xv
+
+Cashel, Archbishop of, 60
+
+Cecil, family of, 2
+
+"Celebes, Naturalist in North," 32
+
+Celebrity, reasons why men who have attained to the highest, fail to
+ leave worthy successors, if any, xv
+
+Cerebration, unconscious, xviii
+
+Ceylon pearl fisheries, 31
+
+Chance, xx
+
+Chantrey, 70
+
+"Challenger Reports," 49, 62
+
+Charity Organization Society, 7
+
+"Charles R. Darwin, Life and Letters of," 18, 19
+Chree, Alex. B., 14
+ Charles, D.D., 14
+ Charles, F.R.S., 13
+ Jessie S., 14
+ William, 14
+
+Christchurch, New Zealand, Archdeacon of, 60
+
+Church, Professor A.H., 15
+ Rev. A.J., 15
+ H.F., 15
+
+"Church Architecture, History of English," 60
+
+Church Missionary Society, 72, 73
+
+Cinchona-bearing trees, 44
+
+Circular sent to Fellows of Royal Society, ix, xxviii
+
+Clive, Lord, 64
+
+Clogher, Bishop of, 43
+
+Cochrane, Lord, 49
+
+Coghill, Admiral Sir J., 78
+ Colonel Kendal, 77
+
+Cohen, Meyer (Sir F. Palgrave), 51
+
+Coke, Elizabeth, 54
+ Thomas W., 54
+
+Collaterals, xxxii
+
+"Colliery Explosions, Cause of Death in," 28
+
+Colonial Office, 59
+
+COMPARISON OF RESULTS WITH AND WITHOUT MARKS IN THE SIXTY-FIVE
+ FAMILIES, xxxvii
+
+Compton, Henry, 48
+
+CONCLUSIONS, xxxix
+
+Constituents, incongruous, in highest order of mind, xv
+
+Constitutional disease, proneness of particular families to, x
+
+"Contracts, Specific Performance of," 21
+
+Conversation, rapid, xviii
+
+Coomassie, relief of, 44
+
+Copeman, A.C., 16
+ Edward, 16
+ Peter, 16
+ S.M., 15
+Copyright Act, 50
+
+Cork, Bishop of, 43
+
+Correlation, negative, between constituents of highest order of
+ mind, xv
+
+Cotterill, Arthur, 17
+ Henry (Senior Wrangler), 17
+ Professor J.H., 16
+ Joseph M. (surgeon), 17
+ Joseph M., D.D., 17
+ Rev. Thomas, 16
+ Thomas (mathematician), 17
+
+Counties in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, number required
+ to provide one F.R.S. annually, xii
+
+Cousins, first, of F.R.S., xl
+
+Crewe, first Earl of, 50
+
+Crewe-Milnes, R.O.A., first Earl of, 50
+
+Crete, 20
+
+Cromer, first Earl, 4
+
+Crompton, Charles, 6, 57
+ Henry, 6, 57
+
+"Cromwell, Oliver, the Protector," 52
+
+Crum, Alexander, 10
+ Walter, 10
+
+Cuneiform writing, 47
+
+
+Dalton, 24
+
+Danish gunboat flotilla, defeat of, in the Belt, 76
+
+Daphnæ, Greek settlements at, 53
+
+Darjeeling, 26
+
+Darwin, Charles (medical student), 18
+ Charles R. (author of "Origin of Species," etc.), 18, 23, 81
+ Erasmus (author of "Zoonomia," etc.), 17, 23
+ Erasmus (grandson of the author of "Zoonomia") 18
+ Professor Francis, 19, 81
+ Professor G.H. (now Sir George), 17, 81
+ Horace, 19, 81
+ Major Leonard, 19
+ Robert W., 18
+
+Davy, Sir Humphry, 56
+
+Degrees of eminence in "noteworthy" persons, xxxv
+ of remoteness of kinship, xxviii
+De la Rue, 33
+
+Delane, 62
+
+Denmark, Queen of, 9
+
+"Dental Anatomy, Manual of," 70
+
+"Dental Surgery," 71
+
+Dentists Act, 71
+
+Descendants, direct, xxxii
+
+De Vries, xlii
+
+Devonshire, geology of, 26
+
+De Winter, Admiral, 30
+
+Dickens, illustrations to, 56
+
+Dickinson, John, F.R.S., 20
+ John, 21
+
+"Dictionary of National Biography," xiv
+
+Dillwyn, Lewis Weston, 46
+
+Diminution of frequency of noteworthiness with increase of distance
+ of kinship, xxxix
+
+Dundas and Wilson, 8
+ Sir David, 8
+ David, 8
+ George, 8
+ John, 8
+ Lord, 8
+ Ralph, 7
+
+Duff, _vide_ Grant Duff
+
+Duncan, Adam, Viscount Duncan of Camperdown, 30
+
+Durham, Bishop of, 4
+ Lord, 65
+
+
+"Ecce Homo," 15
+
+Eccentricity in families of able scientific men, xvi
+
+"Economist," 51
+
+Edgeworth, R.L., 24
+
+"Edinburgh Encyclopædia," 11
+
+"Education, Memoirs on," 13
+
+Egerton, Right Hon. Sir Edwin, 45
+Egypt, 4
+
+Elias, Ney, 26
+
+Eldon, first Earl of, 13, 30
+
+"Electrical Testing, Handbook of," 38
+
+"Electrical Review," 38
+
+Eminence, degrees of, in "noteworthy" persons, xxxv
+
+"Encyclopædia Britannica," xiv
+
+Energy as a factor in success, xviii
+
+"England and Normandy, History of," 51
+ Number of counties of, xii
+
+"English Men of Science," xiii
+
+"Environment," xx
+ Nature of, xxi; relation between this and ability in producing
+ noteworthiness, xxi-xxv
+
+"Etymological Dictionary," 19
+
+Eugenics, vii, xli, 22
+
+Evans, Anne, 20
+ Arthur Benoni, 20
+ Arthur J., 20, 80
+ Sir John, 20, 80
+ Lewis, 20
+ Sebastian, 20
+
+Excursion trains, 33
+
+Exhibition buildings in Hyde Park, 24
+
+Expectations of noteworthiness, xxxix
+
+Express trains, 33
+
+
+Faraday, Michael, 56
+
+"Farm, The Chemistry of the," 75
+
+Farrer, Lord Herschell, 13
+
+Fathers of F.R.S., xl
+
+"Fauna of the Deep Sea," 32
+
+F.R.S., reasons for selecting, as subject for inquiry, xiii;
+ circulars sent to, xxviii; number of replies sent to circulars,
+ xxix
+
+Fellowship of Royal Society, distinction of, xi; material value of,
+ xi; number of candidates for, xi
+"Ferrier, Life of," 29
+
+Fertile relatives, number of in each degree, xxxii
+
+Fertility, connection between, and severe mental strain, xv
+
+Finger-prints, identification by, 22
+
+Fisher, Sir George, 67
+
+Fitzgerald, Professor G. Francis, 63
+ Professor Maurice, 63
+
+Fletcher, Harriet, 57
+ Maria, 57
+
+Fleury, Rev. Charles M., 43
+ Ven. George L., 43
+
+Flinders, Matthew, 53
+
+Foljambe, Right Hon. Francis, 44
+
+Forbes, David, Biography of, 25
+
+Foster, Anthony, 42
+ Sir Augustus J., 43
+ Ebenezer, 27
+ John, Baron Oriel, 42
+ John Leslie, 43
+ John William, M.P., 42
+ Vere H.L., 43
+ William, D.D., 43
+
+"Fossil Botany, Studies in," 59
+
+"Foundations of Belief," 1
+
+"_Fox_, The Voyage of the," 42
+
+Fox, Sir Charles, 24
+
+France, Geology of, 26
+
+Francis, John, 70
+
+Franco-German War, 9
+
+"Franklin, The Fate of Sir John," 42
+
+Fry, Edmund, 21
+ Right Hon. Sir Edward, 21
+ Francis, 21
+ Joseph, 21
+ Joseph Storrs, 21
+ J.S. and Co., 21
+ Right Hon. Lewis, 21
+
+
+Galton, Sir Douglas, 23
+ Francis, 19, 22
+ Samuel, 22
+
+Geikie, Sir A., 24
+ Cunningham, 25
+ James, 25
+ James Stewart, 25
+ Walter, 25
+ Walter Bayne, 25
+
+"Genius, Hereditary," xiv, xvii
+
+Genius, definition of, xvii; heredity of, xvii
+
+"Genera Plantarum," 34
+
+"Geography, Lectures on," 64
+
+"Geology of England and Wales," 78
+
+Gloucester and Bristol, C. Baring, Bishop of, 4
+
+Godwin, Major-General Sir Thomas H., 26
+
+Godwin-Austen, Harold, 26
+ Lieutenant-Colonel H.H., 26, 80
+ Maria E., 26
+ R.A.C., 26, 80
+
+"Gonville and Caius Coll., A Biographical History of," 72
+
+"Golden Treasury," 51
+
+Gordon, statue of General, 70
+
+Gotch, Professor F., 27
+ Fredrick W., 27
+ Thomas Cooper, 27
+
+Grant, Jane Maria, 66
+ Sir J.P. (Indian Judge), 66
+ Sir J.P. (Indian and Colonial Governor), 66
+
+Grant Duff, Adrian, 28
+ Arthur C., 28
+ Evelyn M., 28
+ James, 28, 83
+ Right Hon. Sir M.E., 27, 83
+
+Granville, statue of Lord, 70
+
+Greene, H.W., 78
+
+Grey, second Earl, 5
+ Hon. Lady, 4
+ Charles, 5
+ Sir George, 5
+
+Griffin, Vice-Admiral William, 62
+
+Gurney, Ellen, 74
+ Mrs. Russell, 74
+
+Haden, Dr. Charles T., 35
+ Sir F. Seymour, 35
+ Dr. Thomas, 35
+
+Hague, Court of International Arbitration at the, 21
+
+Haldane, Alex. Chinnery, 29
+ Daniel R., 29
+ Elizabeth Sanderson, 13, 29
+ James A., 29
+ Lieutenant-Colonel J.A.L., 29
+ J.S., 13, 28
+ Robert, 29
+ Right Hon. R.B., 13, 29
+
+Halkett, General, 37
+
+"Harmony, Textbook of," 35
+
+Hartmann, Julius von, 9
+
+"Harvesting Ants," 46
+
+"Hastings and the Rohilla War," 65
+
+Hastings, Warren, 44
+
+Hausmann, Friedrich, 9
+
+"Heather Hills, My," 25
+
+"Hebrew Politics in the Time of Sargon and Sennacherib," 65
+
+Hegel's "History of Philosophy," 29
+
+"Heine, Heinrich, Songs and Lyrics by," 25
+
+Hellicar, Ames, 3
+
+Herbert Hospital at Woolwich, 23
+
+"Hereditary Genius," xiv, xvii, xlii
+
+Herdman, J.C. (senior), 31
+ J.C. (junior), 31
+ Robert, 31, 84
+ Sophia, 31
+ William, 31
+ Professor W.A., 30, 84
+
+Herschell, first Lord, 13
+
+Hewett, Bertram H.M., 27
+
+"Hibbert Journal," 40
+
+Hickson, Professor S.J., 31
+ W.E., 32
+
+HIGHEST ORDER OF ABILITY, xiv
+
+"Highland Lady, Memoirs of a," 66
+
+Hill, Arthur, 32
+ Edward B.L., 33
+ Edwin, 33
+ G. Birkbeck, 32
+ Sir John E.G., 33
+ Professor Leonard, 32
+ Matthew Davenport, 33
+ Norman, 33
+ Sir Rowland, 33
+ Thomas W., 33
+
+"Hindoostan, Materia Medica of," 28
+
+Hodgkin, maiden name of Lady Fry, 22
+
+Hogarth, 37
+
+Homan, Mrs. Ruth, 32
+
+Home Office, 59
+
+Hooker, Sir Joseph D., 34, 82
+ Sir William J., 34, 82
+
+Horsley, Charles E., 35
+ John Callcott, 35, 84
+ Sir V., 27, 34, 84
+ William, 34
+
+Houghton, Lord, 50
+
+"Huia, The," 38
+
+
+Ignorance concerning noteworthiness of kinsmen in distant degree,
+ xxxviii
+
+Imaginative power near to lunacy, xv
+
+"Immortality, Ode to," xvi
+
+Incongruous constituents in highest order of mind, xv
+
+"India," 65
+
+"India, Finances and Public Works of," 64
+
+India Office, 59
+
+Indian Meteorological Department, 6
+
+"Industrial Conciliation," 7
+
+Intensity of any specified quality in each or any degree of kinship,
+ how measured, xxix
+
+"Internal Motion of Gases," 62
+
+Ireland, number of counties of, xii
+"Italian Poets, Lives of," 62
+
+
+Jackson, George, 75
+
+Jenkinson, Sir Edward, 5
+
+Jevons, W. Stanley, 57
+
+Jerusalem, archæology of, 76
+
+Johnstone, Professor Robert, 10
+
+Joly, Henry Edward, 36
+ Jasper Robert, 37
+ John, 36
+ Rev. John P., 36
+ Mary, 37
+
+"Journal of Hygiene," 13, 28
+
+
+Kashmir, 26, 27
+
+"Kempe and Kemp Families, A History of the," 38
+
+Kempe, Alfred Bray, 37, 82
+ Alfred John, 37
+ Edward, 38
+ Harry Robert, 38
+ John Arrow, 38
+ John E., 37, 82
+
+Kelvin, Lord, 68
+
+Khartoum, Battle of, 46
+
+Kilmore, Bishop of, 43
+
+"King Alfred," 57
+
+King, George, 69
+
+KINSFOLK, NOTEWORTHY, NUMBER OF IN EACH DEGREE, xxxiii
+ NUMBER OF IN EACH DEGREE, xxviii
+ NUMBER OF IN 100 FAMILIES, WHO SURVIVED CHILDHOOD, xxx
+ of each person, difficulty of obtaining number of, x; reasons for
+ difficulty, x
+
+KINSMEN, NUMBER OF NOTEWORTHY, RECORDED IN 207 RETURNS, xl
+
+KINSHIP, NOMENCLATURE OF, xxvi
+
+Kirkpatrick, Lieutenant-General, 64
+
+Knossos, Palace of, 20
+
+Koptos, prehistoric Egyptian at, 53
+
+Kynaston, Professor Herbert, 67
+
+Labouchere, Henry, 4
+
+Lamarck, 17
+
+Lancaster, Joseph, 24
+
+Lankester, Edwin, 38, 81
+ E. Forbes, 39
+ Professor E. Ray, 38, 81
+ Fay, 39
+ Nina, 39
+ Phebe, 39
+ S. Rushton, 39
+
+Larmor, Dr., 63
+
+"Lay Texts," 66
+
+Leicester, Earl of, 54
+
+"Leo X.," 57
+
+"Life in Early Britain," 77
+
+Liverpool Cathedral, 60
+
+Lister, Lord, 39, 81
+ Arthur, 40, 81
+ Arthur H., 40
+ Gulielma, 40
+ J.J. (biologist), 40
+ J.J. (optical investigator), 40, 81
+
+Llewelyn, John Dillwyn, 46
+
+Lodge, Alfred, 41
+ Eleanor C., 41
+ George E., 41
+ Sir Oliver, 40
+ Richard, 40
+ Robert J., 40
+
+Lombroso, xvi
+
+"London, Life and Labour of People of," 6
+
+"Lorenzo de' Medici, Life of," 57
+
+Lubbock, Edgar, 42
+ Sir John, 41, 80
+ Right Hon. Sir John, 41
+ Sir John William, 41, 80
+ Sir Neville, 42
+
+Lunacy and imaginative power, xvi
+
+Lusi, Frederick, Comte de (soldier), 37
+ Frederick, Comte de (statesman), 36
+ Spiridion, Comte de, 37
+
+
+Macaulay, 24
+
+McClintock, Alfred H., 43
+ Sir Francis L., 42
+ H.F., 43
+ John, Lord Rathdonell, 43
+ J.W.L., 43
+ Patience, 42
+ R.S., 44
+
+Macdowall, Hay, 7
+
+Mackenzie, Charles, 48
+ Sir Morell, 48
+ Sir Stephen, 48
+
+"Mahrattas, History of the," 28
+
+Manor, Lord, 8
+
+Mariner's compass, 69
+
+Markham, Admiral Sir Albert, 44
+ Sir Clements R., 44
+ Lieutenant-General Sir Edwin, 44
+ George, 45
+ Admiral John, 45
+ William (Archbishop of York), 45
+ William, 44
+
+Marks applied to degree of noteworthiness, xxxvi
+
+Maskelyne, M.H.N. Story, 45
+ Nevil, 45
+
+Masterman, J. Story, 46
+
+Material on which book is based, ix
+
+Melbourne, Lord, 4
+
+Meldola, David, 47
+ Raphael F.R.S., 47
+ Raphael (High Rabbi), 47
+
+"Mentone, Flora of," 46
+
+Merit, standard of, xiii
+
+"Merton Coll., Memorials of," 61
+
+Miall, Edward, 48
+ Rev. J.G., 48, 82
+ Lewis C., 48, 82
+ Stephen, 48
+
+Micrometers, machine for ruling, 75
+
+Miers, Edward J., 49
+ Francis Charles, 49
+ Professor H.A., 49
+ John, 49
+
+"Middle Ages, Close of," 41
+
+Midleton, seventh Viscount, 61
+
+Mill, 24
+ James, 64
+
+Milner, Right Hon. Sir Frederick, 44
+
+Milnes, R. Monckton, Lord Houghton, 50
+ R. Pemberton, 50
+ R.S., 49
+
+"Mineralogy," 49
+
+"Modern Science," restriction to term as used on title-page, xiii
+
+Moggridge, Traherne, 46
+
+"Mollusca, Manual of," 79
+
+"Monumental Effigies of Great Britain," 38
+
+"Moon and Stars, Memoirs of Heat of," 52
+
+Moore, Thomas, 24; "Life and Letters of," 24
+
+Morgan, M.E. de, 55
+
+"Mosses, British," 21
+
+Murchison, Sir R., Biography of, 25
+
+"Musical Grammar," 35
+
+"Mycetozoa," 21
+ Monograph on, 40
+
+
+Naqada, prehistoric Egyptians at, 53
+
+"National Biography, Dictionary of," xiv
+
+"Nature," xxxi, xxxii
+
+Naucratis, Greek settlements at, 53
+
+Nautical Almanac, 45
+
+Nebulæ, discovery of, 52
+
+Nelson, bust of Miss Horatio, 70
+
+Newton, Professor Alfred, 49
+ A.W., 50
+ Sir Edward, 50
+ F.J., 50
+ Lieutenant-General H.P., 50
+ R. Milnes, 50
+ William, 49
+ General W.S., 50
+
+New York, tunnel under river in, 27
+
+NOMENCLATURE OF KINSHIP, xxvi
+
+"Nonconformist," 48
+
+Northbrook, first Baron, 4
+ first Earl of, 3
+
+Norwich, Roman Catholic Cathedral at, 60
+
+NOTEWORTHY KINSFOLK, NUMBER OF IN EACH DEGREE, xxxiii
+
+Noteworthy, use of term in present work, xiii, xiv
+
+NOTEWORTHIES, PROPORTION OF TO THE GENERALITY, xviii
+
+NOTEWORTHINESS, xi
+ MARKED AND UNMARKED DEGREES OF, xxxv
+ AS A MEASURE OF ABILITY, xx
+
+Noteworthiness as achieved, xix; statistically the outcome of ability
+ and environment, xxi; in women, xxxiii; diminution of frequency of,
+ with increase of distance of kinship, xxxix; expectation of, xxxix
+
+NUMBER OF KINSFOLK IN EACH DEGREE, xxviii
+ OF KINSFOLK IN 100 FAMILIES WHO SURVIVED CHILDHOOD, xxx
+ OF NOTEWORTHY KINSFOLK IN EACH DEGREE, xxxiii
+ NUMBER OF NOTEWORTHY KINSMEN RECORDED IN 207 RETURNS, xl
+
+
+"Ode to Immortality," xvi
+
+Oriel, Lord, 42
+
+"Origin of Species," 18
+
+Otho, King, 9
+
+Owen, Robert, 24
+
+
+Palestine, Reconnaissance of, 76
+
+Palgrave, Elizabeth (née Dawson Turner), 51
+ Sir Francis, 51, 83
+ Francis Turner, 51
+ Sir Reginald F.D., 52
+ R.H.I., 51, 83
+ W. Giffard, 52
+
+Parliamentary representatives, methods for electing, xxxv
+
+Parsons, Charles A., 52, 80
+ Lawrence, fourth Earl of Rosse, 52, 80
+ William, third Earl of Rosse, 52, 80
+
+Peacock, 64
+Peel, Sir Robert's, Cabinet, 4
+
+"Penelope," 39
+
+Penny postage, 33
+
+Percy anecdotes, 37
+
+Persian Boundary Commission, 5
+
+Petrie, Anne Flinders, 53
+ Martin, 53
+ Matthew, 53
+ William, 53, 81
+ Professor W.M. Flinders, 53, 81
+
+"Philobiblon Society," 50
+
+Pickering, Anne Maria, 54
+ Edward Hayes, 54
+ Percival, 55
+ Percival Andrée, 54, 83
+ P.S.U., 54, 83
+
+Piel seafish hatchery, 31
+
+Pine, William, 21
+
+Place, Francis, 49
+
+"Platæa and Olympia," 54
+
+Plowden, Sir Henry Meredith, 66
+ Sir Trevor Chichele, 66
+
+Plymouth, 4
+
+"Poets on Poets," 66
+
+"Political Economy, Dictionary of," 51
+
+Political life, factors conducive to noteworthiness in, xxi
+
+"Political Studies," 61
+
+Polynesian race, 78
+
+Pope, Samuel, 39
+
+Port Erin Biological Station, 31
+
+Positivist Community, 7
+
+Price, Professor Bonamy, xvi
+
+PROPORTION OF NOTEWORTHIES TO THE GENERALITY, xviii
+
+Prussia, Queen of, 9
+
+Punakha, 26
+
+"Punch," 56
+
+
+"Q.J.M.S.," 39
+
+
+Radium, 68
+
+Ramsay, Sir Andrew C., 55
+ Sir William, 55
+ William, 55
+
+Rathdonell, Lord, 43
+
+Rayleigh, third Baron, 68, 81
+ Lady, 2
+
+Reform Bill, 5
+ Movement, 74
+
+Reid, Clement, 56
+ Margery A., 56
+
+"Reminiscences of an Irish R.M." 78
+
+Remoteness of kinship, degrees of, xxviii
+
+Repute, built up by repeated testings of intelligence, energy, and
+ character, xix
+
+"Richelieu," 41
+
+"Rise and Progress of English Commonwealth," 51
+
+Robarts, Lubbock and Co., 41
+
+Robertson, Robert, 55
+
+Roscoe, Henry, 57, 83
+ Sir Henry E., 7, 56, 83
+ Robert, 57
+ Thomas, 57
+ William, 57
+ W. Caldwell, 57
+ William Stanley, 57
+
+Rosse, third Earl of, 52, 80
+ fourth Earl of, 52, 80
+
+"Rothamsted Experiments, Lectures on the," 75
+
+Routh, Dr. Amand J. McC., 59
+ Dr. C.H.F., 58
+ Edward J., 58
+ Sir Randolph I., 58
+
+Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation, 41, 42
+
+Royal Institution, Francis Galton's lecture before, in 1864, xiii
+
+"Royal Society's Year Book," xiii, xxviii
+Russell, Lord John, 5
+
+"Rubayat" of Omar Khayum, 78
+
+
+Salisbury, third Marquis of, 2
+
+Sanderson, Sir James, 12
+
+Sattara State, 28
+
+Schimmelpenninck, 22
+
+Scholastic successes, a doubtful indication of future performance, xxxiv
+
+Scotland, number of counties of, xii
+
+Scott, Charles Brodrick, 61
+ Charles William, 61
+ Dukinfield Henry, 59, 84
+ Edward Ashley, 61
+ General Edward William, 61
+ Ven. Edwin A., Archdeacon of Christchurch, New Zealand, 60
+ Professor Hercules, 72
+ George Digby, 61
+ Sir George Gilbert, 59, 84
+ George Gilbert, 60
+ Giles Gilbert, 60
+ Henry George, 60
+ James George, Archdeacon of Dublin, 61
+ James Smyth, 61
+ John, Lord Eldon, 13, 30
+ Sir John, 33
+ John Pendred, 60
+ Ven. Melville H., Archdeacon of Stafford, 60
+ Robert Henry, 60
+ Canon Thomas, 60
+ Thomas (Biblical commentator), 59
+ Thomas (of Queen's College, Cambridge), 59
+ William, Lord Stowell, 13, 30
+
+"Scottish Character and Scenery, Etchings Illustrative of," 25
+
+Secret history of family, importance of, x
+
+Seeley, Sir John R., 15
+
+Sex of one child no clue of importance to that of any other child in
+ same family, xxxi
+
+Sibley, George, 71
+
+Sidgwick, Mrs. Henry, 1
+
+Simpson, Alfred, 5
+
+Siphon recorder, 68
+
+Sisters, average number of, for any person, xxxi
+
+Social rank, effects of, in producing noteworthiness, xxi
+ world, vastness of, xvii
+
+"Soil, Physical Properties of the," 75
+
+Sola, Abram de, 47
+
+Somerville, Comm. Boyle, 78
+ E.O., 78
+
+"Sound, Theory of," 68
+
+Smyth, H. Warington, 46
+ Major N. Maskelyne, 46
+
+Specific kinship, forms of, xxvi; abbreviation for, xxvi
+
+"Spectator," 65
+
+Spencer, Lord, 5
+
+Spencer Stanhope, A.M.W., 54
+ John, 54
+ John R., 55
+ Sir Walter, 55
+
+Sports, xlii
+
+Stafford, Archdeacon of, 60
+
+Standard of merit used, xiii
+
+Stanhope, John Spencer, 54
+
+Stanley, Lord, 43
+
+Stebbing, Rev. Henry, 62, 83
+ Rev. T.R.R., 62, 83
+ William, 62
+
+Stephen, Sir James Fitzjames, 73
+ Sir Leslie, 73
+
+Stephenson, 6
+
+Stewart-Wilson, Charles, 10
+
+Stirling, Anna M.D.W., 55
+
+Stoney, Bindon Blood, 63
+ Gerald, 63
+ G. Johnstone, 62
+
+Story, A.M.R., 45
+
+Stothard, Charles A., 38
+
+Stowell, first Baron, 13, 30
+
+Strachey, Sir Arthur, 65
+ Edward, 64
+ Sir Edward, 65, 83
+ George, 65
+ Giles Lytton, 66
+ Colonel Henry, 65
+ Sir Henry (first Bart.), 64
+ Sir Henry (second Bart.), 64
+ Sir John, 64
+ Joan Pernel, 66
+ John, F.R.S. (geologist), 65
+ John, Archdeacon of Suffolk, 65
+ John, St. Loe, 65
+ J. Beaumont, 66
+ Marjorie Colvile, 67
+ Oliver, 66
+ Lieut.-General Sir Richard, 63, 83
+ Richard, 64
+
+Strahan, Aubrey, 67
+ Charles, 67
+ George, 67
+
+Strain, severe mental, connection between this and fertility, xv
+
+Stratification, theory of, 65
+
+"Structural Botany, Introduction to," 59
+
+Strutt, Edward, Baron Belper, 24
+ Hon. E.G., 68
+ Jedediah, 23
+ Joseph, 25
+ William, 24
+
+Strutt, John W., Lord Rayleigh, 68, 81
+ Hon. Robert J., 68, 81
+
+"Student's Modern Europe," 41
+
+Success in obtaining Fellowships of Royal Society, xii; how achieved,
+ xviii, xix; factors producing, xx
+
+"Sun and Stars, Physical Constitution of," 62
+
+Surnames as affecting knowledge of distant kinsmen, xxxviii
+
+Sykes, Daniel, 74
+ Joseph, 74
+
+Symonds, John Addington, 65
+
+
+TABLES:
+ I. Combinations of Ability and Environment, xxiii
+ II. Ability Independent of Environment, xxiv
+ III. Ability Correlated with Environment, xxv
+ IV. Abbreviations, xxvii
+ V. Number of kinsfolk in One Hundred Families who survived
+ Childhood, xxx
+ VI. Comparison of Results with and without Marks in the Sixty-five
+ Families, xxxvii
+ VII. Number of Noteworthy Kinsmen recorded in 207 Returns, xl
+
+"Tales for Children," 57
+
+Talbot, C.R.M., 46
+ W.H.F., 46
+
+Talbotype process, 47
+
+Taschereau, Cardinal E.A., 58
+ Hon. H.E., 58
+ Hon. J.T., 58
+ Hon. Sir Henri T., 58
+
+Taunton, first Baron, 4
+
+Telescope, reflecting, at Parsonstown, 52
+
+Thames Plate Glass Company, 5
+
+Thebes, Israelite War at, 53
+
+Thoms, William, 25
+
+Thomson, Professor James (civil engineer), 8, 69, 81
+ Professor James (mathematician), 8, 69, 81
+ John, 69
+ William, Lord Kelvin, 68, 81
+
+"Thornliebank Co.," 11
+
+Thornycroft, Mary, 70
+ Sir John I., 70, 84
+ Thomas, 70, 84
+ W. Hamo, 70
+
+"Time and Faith," 32
+
+"Times," 61, 62
+
+Tippoo Sultan, reduction of, 30
+
+Tomes, Charles S., 70, 82
+ Sir John, 71, 82
+ Robert Fisher, 71
+
+Trail, John Arbuthnot, 72
+ Professor James W.H., 71, 82
+ Samuel, 71, 82
+
+Transportation, Bill abolishing, 5
+
+"Trapdoor Spiders," 46
+
+"Tribune," 50
+
+Tuam, Bishop of, 61
+
+"Tyson's Pygmies of the Ancients," 77
+
+
+Unconscious brain-work, abnormally developed powers of genius, xvii
+
+Vatcher, Marion, 39
+ Rev. Sydney, 39
+
+"Veldt in the Seventies, On the," 76
+
+"Venn, Family Annals," 74
+
+Venn, Henry (1725-1797), 73
+ Henry (1796-1873), 73, 82
+ John (1759-1813), 72
+ John (1802-1890), 73
+ John (b. 1834), 72, 82
+ Richard, 74
+
+Vicars, Major-General Edward, 68
+
+Victoria, bust of, 70
+
+"Vittoria Colonna, Life of," 57
+
+"Vortex water-wheel," 69
+
+
+Wales, number of counties of, xii
+
+Warington, George, 75
+ Robert, 75, 81
+ Professor Robert, 75, 81
+
+Warren, Major-General Sir Charles (1798-1866), 76
+ General Sir Charles (b. 1840), 76
+ Vice-Admiral Frederick, 76
+ John (Dean of Bangor), 76
+ John (mathematician), 77
+ Dr. Pelham, 76
+ Dr. Richard (1731-1797), 77
+ Dr. Richard (b. 1876), 77
+
+Waterford, Archdeacon of, 43
+
+Waterloo, Battle of, 58
+
+Waterlow, Sir Ernest, 32
+ Sir Sydney H., 32
+
+Wealth, effects of, in producing noteworthiness, xxi
+
+Wedgwood, Hensleigh, 19
+ Josiah, 18, 19
+ Julia, 19
+ Thomas, 18
+
+Wellesley, 64
+
+Wellington, bust of Duke of, 70
+
+Wells, Dean of, 61
+
+"Westminster Review," 32
+
+Wheler, Edward G., 23
+Whitbread, maiden name of the Hon. Lady Grey, 4
+
+"Who's Who," xii, xiv
+
+"Wild Flowers Worth Notice," 39
+
+Willcocks, Sir G., 44
+
+Windle, Professor B.C.A., 77
+
+Women who study hard, characteristics of, xv; noteworthiness in, xxxiii
+
+Woodward, Bernard Bolingbroke, 79
+ Bernard Henry, 79
+ Henry, 79
+ H.B., 78, 81
+ H.P., 79
+ H.W., 79
+ M.F., 79
+ Samuel, 78
+ Samuel Pickworth, 79, 81
+
+Wordsworth, xvi
+
+Work, possibility of extension of, ix; object of, ix
+
+
+Yarkand, 26
+
+York, Archbishop of, 45
+ Dean of, 45
+
+
+"Zoonomia," 17
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD
+
+
+
+THE CHEMISTRY OF PROTEIDS. By S.B. SCHRYVER, D.Sc., Lecturer in
+Physiological Chemistry to University College, London. With Diagrams.
+Demy 8vo.
+
+
+HUMAN BLOOD. An Introduction to the Normal and Pathological
+Morphology of Human Blood. Eight Lectures delivered in the
+Pathological Laboratory of the University of London. By G.A.
+BUCKMASTER, M.A., D.M. (Oxford), Lecturer on Physiology in St.
+George's Hospital Medical School. With Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 10s.
+6d. net.
+
+
+THE TREATMENT OF SOME ACUTE VISCERAL INFLAMMATIONS; and other Papers.
+By DAVID B. LEES, M.A., M.D. Cantab., F.R.C.P. Lond., formerly
+Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge; Senior Physician to the
+Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street; Physician to St.
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+
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