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Henry Francis Pelham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry Francis Pelham
19th President of Trinity College Oxford
In office
1897–1907
Preceded byHenry George Woods
Succeeded byHerbert Edward Douglas Blakiston
Personal details
Born(1846-10-10)10 October 1846
Bergh Apton, Norfolk
Died13 February 1907(1907-02-13) (aged 60)
Oxford
Parents
Alma materTrinity College, Oxford

Henry Francis Pelham, FSA, FBA (10 September 1846 in Bergh Apton, Norfolk – 13 February 1907) was an English scholar and historian. He was Camden Professor of Ancient History at the University of Oxford from 1889 to 1907, and was also President of Trinity College, Oxford, from 1897 to 1907.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Copley, Boy with a Squirrel
  • The Taking Of Pelham One-Two-Three | Soundtrack Suite (David Shire)
  • Un Homme Et Une Femme | Soundtrack Suite (Francis Lai)

Transcription

(piano playing) Beth: So imagine wanting to be an artist but you live in a city where there are virtually no artists, no art schools, no art museums, no galleries and no one who wants to buy serious paintings. This is precisely the situation that John Singleton Copley found himself in in Boston in the 1760's. Steven: We're looking at a portrait of Copley's half-brother. This is Henry Pelham and the painting is called Boy with Flying Squirrel. So for somebody who was largely self taught, the painting is pretty remarkable. My gaze goes first to his face, that wonderful red curtain gathers my attention and frames that face so beautifully. But when I'm done there, my eye runs down his shoulder, down his arm to his hand and just look at the precision with which those fingertips are rendered and they so beautifully and loosely hold that gold chain. My eye then runs down, of course, to the squirrel. It's wonderfully cute, he's nibbling on a little nut which then links up to the area where his dark coat on his back meet with the light coat of his belly. Which mirrors the edge of the sitter's cuff and then on the cuff, on one side you have the light catching and then on the near side you have that area in shadow. It just plays beautifully, alternating against itself. Beth: So while this is a portrait of Copley's half-brother, it's also a kind of demonstration piece. By 1765, when Copley painted this, he was a well-regarded professional portrait painter in Boston but he wanted to be more. Copley also knew that portrait painting was actually at the bottom of the hierarchy of subjects created by the academies in Europe. The highest paintings being paintings of religion and mythology and history, portraiture and still life being the lowest. But it was portraits that people wanted in the new American cities. Steven: Right, so the merchant class in Boston, the wealthy elite, had begun to really recognize the value of portraying themselves. But Copley wanted to push beyond that. Copley knew that in Europe painting was more. And so this painting was actually made, as you said, as a demonstration piece to see if he could hold his own with the European academies. Beth: So he had this packed up in someone's luggage who was going off to London and there it was actually pretty well received by Benjamin West, an American painter who was living in London who was very successful, and by Sir Joshua Reynolds who was president of the Royal Academy in England. So the first thing we might notice is that we're not looking at the front of the figure's face, we're looking at him from the side. So we think Copley did this because he wanted to show that he could paint not just portraits but also genre paintings or scenes of everyday life. I think Copley was also really showing off what he could do with foreshortening which is really a very difficult thing to do. If you look at the sitter's right hand, it's just perfectly foreshortened. As is the corner of the table. When this painting goes to England, Sir Joshua Reynolds does praise it, but he says, "Before too long you better come to London and get some real training "here before your manner and taste are corrupted or fixed by working "in this little way in Boston." Which I think gives us a sense of the way that England loomed as this important artistic presence. Copley felt that the situation in Boston was so inhospitable to artists that he said, "Artists were treated like shoemakers." Steven: So Copley's clearly aware of the limitations of Boston, limitations of the colonies. Beth: He's aware that portraiture, which is what he does, is a low form of art but he's also I think in a way very practical. He knows that this is what people want and he's able to do it masterfully and beautifully but there is, I think, a lingering sense that he's not painting the grand history and religious and mythological paintings of the European tradition and maybe can't compete on that level. Steven: So we have this beautiful, ambitious painting that situates John Singleton Copley in this very specific historical moment. (piano playing)

Early life

He was grandson of Thomas Pelham, 2nd Earl of Chichester, and eldest of the five children of John Thomas Pelham, bishop of Norwich, and Henrietta, second daughter of Thomas William Tatton of Wythenshawe Hall, Cheshire. Of his three brothers, John Barrington became vicar of Thundridge in 1908, and Sidney archdeacon of Norfolk in 1901.

Pelham was born on 19 September 1846 at Bergh Apton, then his father's parish. Entering Harrow in May 1860, he moved rapidly up the school, and left in December 1864. Next year he won an open classical scholarship at Trinity College, Oxford, matriculating on 22 April 1865; he came into residence in October.

Academic career

Title page of the 1895 edition of Pelham's Outlines of Roman History

At Oxford he took 'first classes' in honour classical moderations and in literæ humaniores, was elected a fellow of Exeter College in 1869, and graduated B.A. in the same year. In 1870, he won the chancellor's English essay prize with a dissertation on the reciprocal influence of national character and national language.

He worked continuously as classical tutor and lecturer at Exeter College from 1870 to 1889. He was elected by his college proctor of the university in 1879. Losing his fellowship on his marriage in 1873, he was re-elected in 1882, under the statutes of the second university commission.[1]

From school onwards his principal subject was ancient and more particularly Roman history. He soon began to publish articles on this theme (first in Journal of Philology, 1876), while his lectures, which (under the system then growing up) were open to members of other colleges besides Exeter, attracted increasingly large audiences; he also planned, with the Clarendon Press, a detailed History of the Roman Empire, which he was not destined to carry out.

In 1887, he succeeded W. W. Capes as 'common fund reader' in ancient history, and in 1889 he became Camden Professor of Ancient History in succession to George Rawlinson, a post to which a fellowship at Brasenose College is attached. As professor he developed the lectures and teaching which he had been giving as college tutor and reader, and attracted even larger audiences.[1]

But his research work was stopped by an attack of cataract in both eyes (1890), and though a few specimen paragraphs of his projected History were set up in type in 1888, he completed in manuscript only three and a half chapters, covering the years B.C. 35-15, and he never resumed the work after 1890; his other research, too, was hereafter limited to detached points in Roman imperial history.

On the other hand, he joined actively in administrative work, for which his strong personality and his clear sense fitted him at least as well as for research; he served on many Oxford boards, was a member of the Hebdomadal Council from 1879 to 1905, aided semi-academic educational movements (he was a founder of the women's college Somerville Hall), and in 1897 accepted the presidency of his old college. Trinity.

He was elected honorary fellow of Exeter in 1895, was an original fellow of the British Academy in 1902 and received the hon. degree of LL.D. at Aberdeen in 1906. He became F.S.A. in 1890 [1] and was on the governing body of Abingdon School until 1895.[2]

Family and personal life

On 30 July 1873, he married Laura Priscilla Buxton, third daughter of Sir Edward Buxton, 2nd Baronet, and granddaughter of Sir Fowell Buxton, 1st Baronet. They had three sons and two daughters:[1][3]

  • Sir Edward Henry Pelham KCB (1876–1949), civil servant
  • Arthur John Pelham (24 December 1878 – 11 August 1883), died in childhood
  • Rt Rev Herbert Pelham (1881–1944), Bishop of Barrow-in-Furness
  • Catherine Harriet Pelham (8 September 1885 – 20 November 1894), died in childhood
  • Laura Grace Pelham (20 September 1888 – 18 April 1980) married David Francis Bickmore DSO (1891– 1918), son of Rev Francis Askew Bickmore

He died in the president's lodgings at Trinity on 12 February 1907, and was buried in St Sepulchre's Cemetery.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Haverfield 1912.
  2. ^ "School Notes" (PDF). The Abingdonian.
  3. ^ Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003). Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knighthood (107 ed.). Burke's Peerage & Gentry. p. 772. ISBN 0-9711966-2-1.

References

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by President of Trinity College, Oxford
1897–1907
Succeeded by
This page was last edited on 29 June 2023, at 21:40
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