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Joseph Hume

Joseph Hume FRS (22 January 1777 – 20 February 1855) was a Scottish surgeon and Radical MP.[1]

Joseph Hume, 1854
Joseph Hume by Alexander Handyside Ritchie, 1830

Early life edit

He was born the son of a shipmaster James Hume in Montrose, Angus, who died shortly. He attended Montrose Academy, where he knew the older James Mill; and from 1790 was apprenticed to a local surgeon-apothecary, John Bale.[2][3]

Medical career edit

Hume studied medicine at the University of Aberdeen and then the University of Edinburgh. He had as patron David Scott MP. Before he qualified, he saw wartime service as surgeon-mate on the hoy HMS Hawke; and then was on the East Indiaman Hope for 18 months.[2][4]

In 1799 Hume sailed to India, nominated to the Bengal service by Jacob Bosanquet of the British East India Company.[2] He worked his passage as medical officer on the Houghton.[5] Once there, he was commissioned as a surgeon to the 7th Sepoy Regiment. Gaining fluency in Hindustani and Persian, he worked also as an interpreter and on commissariat.[2]

On the eve of the Second Anglo-Maratha War, Hume came to the attention of Lord Lake with a method to recover damp gunpowder.[2] On the outbreak of war, he was with General Peregrine Powell who marched from Allahabad into Bundelkhand. He took on again a variety of roles during the campaign.[5]

Return to the United Kingdom edit

In 1808, Hume resigned from the army and returned to the United Kingdom with a fortune of about £40,000. Between 1808 and 1811, he travelled around England and Europe.

In 1818 Hume was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, being, according to his nomination, "well versed in various branches of Useful knowledge and particularly in Chemistry, in various branches of oriental literature and Antiquities".[6]

Political career edit

Weymouth edit

In 1812, Hume obtained through Spencer Perceval a seat in Parliament for Weymouth, Dorset, England, vacant by the death of Sir John Johnstone, 6th Baronet. He was allowed it by Masterton Ure, was elected unopposed and voted as a Tory supporter of the Perceval administration.[4] The parliament was dissolved for the 1812 United Kingdom general election. Ure refused to support Hume further, in fact being overruled by the Duke of Cumberland and Viscount Newark. Hume stood nonetheless in the four-member constituency, and received just two votes.[7] He had toed the line in some matters, but on the expulsion of Benjamin Walsh and the Luddite legislation he had shown independence unacceptable to the Duke.[4] Hume kicked up a fuss and took legal action, and was paid off with £1,000, supposedly to cover election expenses.[7][2]

This brief Tory period did bring Hume an association with the Duke of Kent and Strathearn, a patron of Joseph Lancaster.[8][9] John Cam Hobhouse relayed an anecdote told by John Conroy of the Duke's household, in which Hume advised the Duke to limit the Duchess to one horse-chaise.[10] In 1833, Hume provided Alexander Burnes with an introduction to his daughter Princess Victoria.[11]

Hiatus and route to radicalism edit

In connection with the financial troubles of Joseph Lancaster, Hume met Francis Place in 1813, through Joseph Fox.[12] It was Place who brought Hume into the group of political radicals with whom he from then on was associated.[13]

Hume renewed his friendship with James Mill: they both and Place were interested in the school project of a West London Lancasterian Association floated in 1813.[14][15] The project took a turn for the worse in 1814, when Francis Burdett intervened and imposed on it his associate Thomas Evans and Arthur Thistlewood, pushing out Place who then abandoned politics for four years.[16] By the next decade Hume was identified with the group of followers of Mill and Jeremy Bentham known as the Philosophical Radicals, with organ the Westminster Review.[17]

At this period Hume also aimed to become a director of the East India Company, a position he described in an 1813 speech as an "arduous and most respectable office". He lobbied the company's shareholders, and in so doing met Maria Burnley, whom he married in 1815.[2][18]

Aberdeen Burghs edit

When Hume was returned to Parliament once more in 1818, as member for the Aberdeen Burghs, Borders, Scotland, it was with the support of William Maule. He stood there on a radical platform of his own devising.[4]

In 1823 Hume contested the election of James Duff, 4th Earl Fife as rector of Marischal College in Aberdeen; in 1824 and 1825 he himself was elected. He revived the long-disused rectorial court in 1825, but offended the electorate of students by the use he made of it. He lost out in 1826 and 1827 to James McGrigor, but was re-elected in 1828. There was a Royal Commission on the Scottish universities in 1826, and Hume claimed he had prompted it.[19][20][21]

In Aberdeen's local politics, Hume was at odds with a largely Tory town council, but had supporters including Alexander Bannerman. His chances there dropped when he failed to support a road bill before parliament.[22] Faced in 1829 with a serious challenge from Sir James Carnegie, 5th Baronet, with a Brechin base, Hume decided to change seat.[23]

 
Joseph Hume in middle age, engraving

Later seats edit

In March 1830, with Henry Hunt and Daniel O'Connell, Hume set up the London-based Metropolitan Political Union, with a platform that included manhood suffrage and the secret ballot. He was elected that year for Middlesex, England.[24] He produced a County Rates Bill, and aimed to re-organise local government.[25] He came under attack, however, by 1837, as a moderate "Whig-Radical" too close to the Melbourne ministry.[26]

Hume later represented Kilkenny, Ireland (1837); and then, from 1842, for the rest of his life Montrose Burghs.

Hume as politician edit

Hume was a relentless, individualistic campaigner over a wide range of causes. Élie Halévy (English translation) characterised him in terms of "pigheadedness", with a "heavy mind"; and he was always a "dull yet dogged orator".[27][2]

During much of the Liverpool ministry, Hume could be called "the leader of the parliamentary Radicals", with emphasis on public finance.[28] Initially his group could be called (by Viscount Castlereagh) "Creevey, Hume ... and two or three others" who sifted through details; it was nicknamed "The Mountain", from the Montagnards in France of the 1790s.[29] Joseph Nightingale credited Hume's attritional tactics with the resignations of Lord Ellenborough and Nicholas Vansittart.[30][31]

A close ally, in parliament from 1826, was Henry Warburton.[32] The retrenchment issue gained Hume praise from William Cobbett, and his criticism of the ultra-Protestant line on Ireland also drew support.[33] Opposing the Canning administration in 1827, however, Henry Brougham wrote to Sir Robert Wilson that the Whigs "shall have no connection with Hume & Co. and the Benthamites", while expecting their votes 90% of the time.[34]

Hume often annoyed colleagues on the same side of the argument. He only with difficulty gained the trust of Francis Place, who took many years to come round to James Mill's view of his character.[12] His attitude affected coalition-building. Alexander Somerville wrote about the formation in 1830 of the Grey ministry:

We one and all thought it wrong that Joseph Hume should not be a member of the new government. We were ignorant of party connections and differences,—ignorant of the atomic nature of some politicians, of the gregarious nature of others.[35]

Around 1831, "Hume, Warburton and others" formed a recognisable group, still known as "The Mountain".[32] After the Reform Act 1832, there were new radical MPs, but parliamentary voting support for the radicals reached a peak of 40, apart from specific issues on further electoral reform. Hume had become an "old parliamentary radical", Cobbett a "national radical".[36] At the period of the 1835 Lichfield House Compact, Hume's plan to unite the parliamentary radicals with Daniel O'Connell's followers proved divisive.[37] In 1836–7 he was behind the Constitutional newspaper, aiming to appeal to militant radicals.[38]

Hume was an early supporter of the London Working Men's Association.[39]

Hume's campaigns edit

Public finances edit

 
A Humebugging attempt to Dissect a Naval Estimate, 1822

Hume made a habit of challenging and bringing to a vote every item of public expenditure. In 1820, he secured the appointment of a committee to report on the expense of collecting tax revenue. He helped to abolish the sinking fund. It was he who caused the word "retrenchment" to be added to the Radical programme "peace and reform." The groat coin or four pence was re-introduced in 1836 during the reign of William IV at the suggestion of Hume. Popularly known as the 'joey', named after Hume's Christian name, it was introduced to ease transactions on the London buses, the fare being four pence or one groat. As the last groats were struck in 1888 the nickname became passed over to the silver threepences struck after that date until 1941 (the last year of production for British use).

Labour organisation edit

The Combination Act 1799 and its sequel Combination Act 1800 were repealed by the Combination of Workmen Act 1824, promoted by Hume and other radicals, in line with Benthamite principles on industrial harmony. Hume had packed a parliamentary committee on the issue, to support his artisan associate Francis Place. There was an immediate surge in disputes. The Combinations of Workmen Act 1825 backed by William Huskisson then removed the legal right to strike, which remained the situation until the 1870s.[40][41]

Hume brought about the repeal of the laws prohibiting the export of machinery, and of the act preventing workmen from going abroad.

Military edit

Hume protested against the use of flogging in the army, giving evidence to a parliamentary committee in 1835 based on his time as army surgeon in India.[42] He thought the inducement of a proportion of army commissions should be reserved for soldiers drawn from the ranks, an idea strongly opposed by the Duke of Wellington on social grounds.[43]

He also campaigned against the impressment of sailors, and imprisonment for debt.

Burnley Hall and death edit

 
The grave of Joseph Hume, Kensal Green Cemetery

Hume in 1824 bought the Somerton estate in Norfolk, north of Great Yarmouth, from the heirs of Sir Philip Stephens, 1st Baronet, and named the house there Burnley Hall from his wife's name before marriage.[44] It became his seat. He died there in 1855 and is buried to the north-east of the main chapel in Kensal Green Cemetery in London next to his good friend William Williams.

Works edit

  • A blank verse translation of The Inferno (1812)
  • Letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer (1812), suggested that Luddism could be addressed by free trade and organisation principles applied to framework knitting.[4]
  • The Substance of the Speech of Joseph Hume ...: Delivered at an Adjourned General Court of the Proprietors of East India Stock, Held in the India House, on the 19th of January, 1813 (1813)[45]
  • The Speech of Mr. Joseph Hume, at the East-India House, on the 6th of October, 1813 (1813)[46]
  • A Plan for a New General System of Weights (1816)[4]
  • Economy and Retrenchment. Speech of Joseph Hume in the House of Commons, Wednesday, the 27th of June, 1821, on Economy and Retrenchment (1822)[47]
  • The Celebrated Letter of Joseph Hume ... to W. L. Mackenzie ... Mayor of Toronto (1834)[48]
  • Speech of Mr. Hume, in the Debate on the Motion of the Marquis of Chandos, on the 10th of March, 1835, for the Total Repeal of the Malt Tax (1835)[49]
  • On the Corn Laws and the Claims of the Agriculturists to Relief from Taxation : Speech of Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P., on the Motion of the Marquess of Chandos, in the House of Commons on Wednesday, April 27, 1836 (1836)[50]
  • On the Bank of England; and the State of the Currency (1839).[51] There was a reply that year on the financing of the Slave Compensation Act 1837 by the economist Richard Page (1773–1841) ("Daniel Hardcastle").[52][53]
  • Debate on Sugar Duties: speech of Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P., in the House of Commons, on the 13th May, 1841, on the motion of Lord John Russell (1841)[54]
  • Letter from Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P., et al. (1853)[55]

Family edit

Hume married in 1815 Maria Burnley, the daughter of Hardin Burnley, an American merchant and East India Company director, and sister of William Hardin Burnley. They had three sons and four daughters: the children included Allan Octavian Hume and Mary Catherine Hume-Rothery.[2][56][57]

  • Joseph Huntley Hume, eldest son, died in 1871 aged 52.[58]
  • Maria Burnley (died 1885), married in 1843 Charles Gubbins (died 1866) of the East India Company civil service. He was the son of Major-General Joseph Gubbins and his wife Charlotte Bathoe. Charles having adopted his mother's surname during the 1860s, she is often known as Maria Burnley Bathoe. She contributed 5,000 quotations to the New English Dictionary.[59][60][61][62][63]
  • Eleanor, third daughter, married John Stratford Rodney, son of John Rodney, as his second wife.[64]
  • Charlotte Isabella married in 1848 her first cousin George Balfour, whose mother Susan was sister to Joseph Hume.[65]

Legacy edit

 
Statue of Hume, in the High Street of Montrose, at its intersection with Hume Street

A memorial of Hume was published by his son Joseph Hume (London, 1855). A subscription fund established a Joseph Hume Scholarship, in jurisprudence and political economy, at University College London.[66] As of 2021 it is still awarded.[67] Hume bequeahed his working library of approximately 5000 pamphlets to University College London in 1855.[68]

According to the History of the Silver Coinage of England by Edward Hawkins, a groat was known as a "Joey". It was "so called from Joseph Hume, M.P., who strongly recommended the coinage for the sake of paying short cab-fares, etc."[69]

Radical commemoration edit

 
The Political Martyrs Monument, Edinburgh

In 1837 Hume initiated a plan for a memorial to the Scottish Political Martyrs, victims of the Pitt administration's policy of the 1790s.[70] It was supported by Peter Mackenzie, a radical journalist in Glasgow. He had already set up a memorial for John Baird and Andrew Hardie, two weavers executed in the 1820 Radical War.[71] On 21 August 1844, 3000 gathered to see Hume lay the monument's foundation stone at the Old Calton Cemetery, Edinburgh.

In February 1852, a second monument to the Scottish Political Martyrs, again initiated by Hume, was unveiled at Nunhead Cemetery, London.[72]

References edit

  1. ^ Ronald K. Huch, Paul R. Ziegler 1985 Joseph Hume, the People's M.P.: DIANE Publishing. ISBN 0-87169-163-9
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Chancellor, V. E. "Hume, Joseph (1777–1855)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/14148. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Huch, Ronald K.; Ziegler, Paul R. (1985). Joseph Hume, the People's M.P. American Philosophical Society. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-87169-163-7.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Hume, Joseph (1777-1855), of 38 York Place, Portman Square, Mdx. and Burnley Hall, Norf., History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  5. ^ a b Huch, Ronald K.; Ziegler, Paul R. (1985). Joseph Hume, the People's M.P. American Philosophical Society. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-87169-163-7.
  6. ^ . Royal Society. Archived from the original on 26 September 2021. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  7. ^ a b "Weymouth and Melcombe Regis 1790-1820, History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  8. ^ Huch, Ronald K.; Ziegler, Paul R. (1985). Joseph Hume, the People's M.P. American Philosophical Society. p. 10 and note 31. ISBN 978-0-87169-163-7.
  9. ^ Cave, Edward (1855). The Gentleman's Magazine: Or, Monthly Intelligencer: Volume the first [-fifth], for the year 1731 [-1735] ... Printed and sold at St John's Gate [by Edward Cave]; by F. Jefferies in Ludgate-Street. p. 450.
  10. ^ Hobhouse, John Cam (3 November 2011). Recollections of a Long Life. Cambridge University Press. p. 314. ISBN 978-1-108-03401-2.
  11. ^ Murray, Craig (20 October 2016). Sikunder Burnes: Master of the Great Game. Birlinn. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-85790-251-1.
  12. ^ a b Huch, Ronald K.; Ziegler, Paul R. (1985). Joseph Hume, the People's M.P. American Philosophical Society. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-87169-163-7.
  13. ^ Mazlish, Bruce (1 January 1988). James and John Stuart Mill: Father and Son in the Nineteenth Century. Transaction Publishers. p. 93. ISBN 978-1-4128-2679-2.
  14. ^ Sheppard, Francis Henry Wollaston (1971). London, 1808-1870: The Infernal Wen. University of California Press. p. 217. ISBN 978-0-520-01847-1.
  15. ^ Bain, Alexander (1882). James Mill: A Biography. Longmans, Green, and Company. p. 86.
  16. ^ Prothero, Iorwerth (14 October 2013). Artisans and Politics in Early Nineteenth-Century London (Routledge Revivals): John Gast and his Times. Routledge. p. 172. ISBN 978-1-136-16386-9.
  17. ^ Mander, William J. (February 2014). The Oxford Handbook of British Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century. OUP Oxford. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-19-959447-4.
  18. ^ Bowen, H. V. (22 December 2005). The Business of Empire: The East India Company and Imperial Britain, 1756–1833. Cambridge University Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-1-139-44788-1.
  19. ^ Bulloch, John Malcolm (1890). The lord rectors of the universities of Aberdeen. D. Wyllie & son. pp. 53–54.
  20. ^ Rait, Robert S. (1898). "Joseph Hume and an Academic Rebellion". The Scottish Antiquary, or, Northern Notes and Queries. 13 (49): 24–26. ISSN 2042-0013. JSTOR 25516883.
  21. ^ Hont, Istvan; Ignatieff, Michael (30 January 1986). Wealth and Virtue: The Shaping of Political Economy in the Scottish Enlightenment. Cambridge University Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-1-316-58318-0.
  22. ^ Fraser, W. Hamish; Lee, Clive Howard (2000). Aberdeen, 1800-2000: A New History. Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-86232-108-3.
  23. ^ Huch, Ronald K.; Ziegler, Paul R. (1985). Joseph Hume, the People's M.P. American Philosophical Society. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-87169-163-7.
  24. ^ "Middlesex (1820-1832), History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  25. ^ Mullins, Edward (1836). A Treatise on the Magistracy of England, and the origin and expenditure of county rates ... To which is subjoined a full abstract of Mr Hume's bill to authorize the rate-payers in every county in England and Wales to elect a council and auditors of accounts. Second edition.
  26. ^ Weinstein, Benjamin (2011). Liberalism and Local Government in Early Victorian London. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. pp. 62–63. ISBN 978-0-86193-312-9.
  27. ^ Halévy, Elie (1972). The Growth of Philosophic Radicalism. A. M. Kelley. p. 309. ISBN 978-0-678-08005-4.
  28. ^ Skottowe, Britiffe Constable (1887). A Short History of Parliament. Harper. p. 251.
  29. ^ Bew, John (2012). Castlereagh: A Life. Oxford University Press. p. 511. ISBN 978-0-19-993159-0.
  30. ^ Bew, John (2012). Castlereagh: A Life. Oxford University Press. p. 532. ISBN 978-0-19-993159-0.
  31. ^ Nightingale, Joseph (1822). A calm and dispassionate view of the life and administration of the late Marquis of Londonderry, etc.
  32. ^ a b "Warburton, Henry (1784-1858), of 45 Cadogan Place, Mdx., History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  33. ^ Huch, Ronald K.; Ziegler, Paul R. (1985). Joseph Hume, the People's M.P. American Philosophical Society. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-87169-163-7.
  34. ^ Aspinall, Arthur (2005). Lord Brougham and the Whig Party. History Press Limited. p. 221. ISBN 978-1-84588-033-0.
  35. ^ Somerville, Alexander (1848). The Autobiography of a Working Man. C. Gilpin. p. 143.
  36. ^ Briggs, Asa (17 June 2014). The Age of Improvement, 1783-1867. Routledge. p. 234. ISBN 978-1-317-87854-4.
  37. ^ Graham, A. H. (1961). "The Lichfield House Compact, 1835". Irish Historical Studies. 12 (47): 220. doi:10.1017/S0021121400027711. ISSN 0021-1214. JSTOR 30006440. S2CID 163777165.
  38. ^ Huch, Ronald K.; Ziegler, Paul R. (1985). Joseph Hume, the People's M.P. 97: American Philosophical Society. ISBN 978-0-87169-163-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  39. ^ Hovell, Mark (1966). The Chartist Movement. Manchester University Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-7190-0088-1.
  40. ^ Woodward, Ernest Llewellyn (1962). The Age of Reform, 1815-1870. Clarendon Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-19-821711-4.
  41. ^ Epstein, Richard A. (15 October 2013). Contract - Freedom and Restraint: Liberty, Property, and the Law. Routledge. pp. 118–119. ISBN 978-1-135-69958-1.
  42. ^ Commons, Great Britain Parliament House of (1836). Parliamentary Papers. H.M. Stationery Office. p. 56.
  43. ^ Dinwiddy, J. R. (1 July 1992). Radicalism and Reform in Britain, 1780-1850. A&C Black. p. 140. ISBN 978-0-8264-3453-1.
  44. ^ Palmer, Charles John (1874). The Perlustration of Great Yarmouth, with Gorleston and Southtown. G. Nall. p. 11 note.
  45. ^ Hume, Joseph (1813). The Substance of the Speech of Joseph Hume ...: Delivered at an Adjourned General Court of the Proprietors of East India Stock, Held in the India House, on the 19th of January, 1813. J. Stockdale.
  46. ^ Hume, Joseph (1813). The Speech of Mr. Joseph Hume, at the East-India House, on the 6th of October, 1813: Upon the Motion for an Increase of the Salaries of the Directors of the Company from the Sum of £300 Per Annum to £1000, and of the Chairman and Deputy, from £500 to £1500. Printed at Cox and Baylis.
  47. ^ Hume, Joseph (1822). Economy and Retrenchment. Speech of Joseph Hume in the House of Commons, Wednesday, the 27th of June, 1821, on Economy and Retrenchment. James Ridgway.
  48. ^ Hume, Joseph (1834). The Celebrated Letter of Joseph Hume ... to W. L. Mackenzie ... Mayor of Toronto, Declaratory of a Design to Free These Provinces from the ... Domination of the Mother Country: with the Comments of the Press of Upper Canada on the ... Tendency of that Letter, Etc.
  49. ^ Hume, Joseph (1835). Speech of Mr. Hume, in the Debate on the Motion of the Marquis of Chandos, on the 10th of March, 1835, for the Total Repeal of the Malt Tax. From the Mirror of Parliament, Revised, with Notes Explanatory. Committee for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge amongst the people.
  50. ^ Hume, Joseph (1836). On the Corn Laws and the Claims of the Agriculturists to Relief from Taxation : Speech of Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P., on the Motion of the Marquess of Chandos, in the House of Commons on Wednesday, April 27, 1836. proprietor of "The Mirror of Parliament", 3, Abingdon-Street, Westminster.
  51. ^ Hume, Joseph (1839). On the Bank of England; and the State of the Currency: The Speech of Joseph Hume ... in the House of Commons, on the 8th of July, 1839, on a Motion for "Enquiry Into the Pecuniary Transactions of the Bank of England, Since the Resumption of Cash Payments in 1821.".
  52. ^ Page, Richard (1839). A Critical Examination of the Twelve Resolutions of Mr. Joseph Hume: Respecting the Loan of Fifteen Millions for Slave Compensation: Also, a Review of the Financial Operations of the British Government Since 1794 ... P. Richardson.
  53. ^ Cobden, Richard (22 November 2007). The Letters of Richard Cobden. Vol. I: 1815-1847. OUP Oxford. p. 187 note 11. ISBN 978-0-19-921195-1.
  54. ^ Hume, Joseph (1841). Debate on Sugar Duties: speech of Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P., in the House of Commons, on the 13th May, 1841, on the motion of Lord John Russell : ways and means, corn laws, sugar duties, etc.
  55. ^ Hume, Joseph (1853). Letter from Joseph Hume, Esq., M.P. John Sullivan, Esq., Samuel Gaselee, Esq. Alderman David Salomons, and Other Proprietors of East India Stock, to the Directors of the East India Company, Forwarding a Memorial on Behalf of the Distressed Family of the Ex-Rajah of Sattara, Detained Prisoners at Benares, with the Court's Reply.
  56. ^ Cudjoe, Selwyn R. "Burnley, William Hardin (1780–1850)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/109518. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  57. ^ Moulton, Edward C. "Hume, Allan Octavian (1829–1912)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34049. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  58. ^ "Arbroath". Arbroath Guide. 28 January 1871. p. 2.
  59. ^ "Biographical Information". Oxford English Dictionary.
  60. ^ "Gubbins, Charles – Persons of Indian Studies by Prof. Dr. Klaus Karttunen". 23 October 2020.
  61. ^ Burke, Bernard; Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1 January 1912). A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Ireland. Dalcassian Publishing Company. p. 283.
  62. ^ Darwin, Charles (5 January 2017). Darwin and Women: A Selection of Letters. Cambridge University Press. p. 335. ISBN 978-1-108-13869-7.
  63. ^ Russell, Lindsay Rose (30 April 2018). Women and Dictionary-Making: Gender, Genre, and English Language Lexicography. Cambridge University Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-1-316-95354-9.
  64. ^ Edmund, Lodge (1845). The Peerage of the British Empire as at present existing. To which is added the baronetage. p. 450.
  65. ^ Peers, Douglas M. "Balfour, Edward Green (1813–1889)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1184. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  66. ^ London, University College (1895). Calendar. p. 180.
  67. ^ "MPhil/PhD fees and scholarships". UCL Faculty of Laws. 14 October 2020.
  68. ^ UCL (23 August 2018). "Hume Tracts". Library Services. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  69. ^ E. Cobham Brewer (1898) Dictionary of Phrase and Fable.
  70. ^ Christina Bewley. Muir of Huntershill/ Oxford University Press. 1981. ISBN 0-19-211768-8
  71. ^ Pentland, Gordon (6 October 2015). The Spirit of the Union: Popular Politics in Scotland. Routledge. p. 132. ISBN 978-1-317-31654-1.
  72. ^ Wally MacFarlane. "The Scottish Martyrs", a pamphlet published by the Friends of Nunhead Cemetery.

External links edit

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Charles Adams
Richard Steward
Sir John Lowther Johnstone, Bt
Sir John Murray, Bt
Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis
1812–1812
With: Charles Adams
Richard Steward
Sir John Murray, Bt
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Aberdeen Burghs
18181830
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Middlesex
18301837
With: George Byng
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Kilkenny City
18371841
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Montrose Burghs
1842–1855
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by Rector of Marischal College, Aberdeen
1824–1825
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Preceded by Rector of Marischal College, Aberdeen
1828–1829
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joseph, hume, january, 1777, february, 1855, scottish, surgeon, radical, 1854, alexander, handyside, ritchie, 1830, contents, early, life, medical, career, return, united, kingdom, political, career, weymouth, hiatus, route, radicalism, aberdeen, burghs, later. Joseph Hume FRS 22 January 1777 20 February 1855 was a Scottish surgeon and Radical MP 1 Joseph Hume 1854 Joseph Hume by Alexander Handyside Ritchie 1830 Contents 1 Early life 2 Medical career 3 Return to the United Kingdom 4 Political career 4 1 Weymouth 4 2 Hiatus and route to radicalism 4 3 Aberdeen Burghs 4 4 Later seats 5 Hume as politician 6 Hume s campaigns 6 1 Public finances 6 2 Labour organisation 6 3 Military 7 Burnley Hall and death 8 Works 9 Family 10 Legacy 10 1 Radical commemoration 11 References 12 External linksEarly life editHe was born the son of a shipmaster James Hume in Montrose Angus who died shortly He attended Montrose Academy where he knew the older James Mill and from 1790 was apprenticed to a local surgeon apothecary John Bale 2 3 Medical career editHume studied medicine at the University of Aberdeen and then the University of Edinburgh He had as patron David Scott MP Before he qualified he saw wartime service as surgeon mate on the hoy HMS Hawke and then was on the East Indiaman Hope for 18 months 2 4 In 1799 Hume sailed to India nominated to the Bengal service by Jacob Bosanquet of the British East India Company 2 He worked his passage as medical officer on the Houghton 5 Once there he was commissioned as a surgeon to the 7th Sepoy Regiment Gaining fluency in Hindustani and Persian he worked also as an interpreter and on commissariat 2 On the eve of the Second Anglo Maratha War Hume came to the attention of Lord Lake with a method to recover damp gunpowder 2 On the outbreak of war he was with General Peregrine Powell who marched from Allahabad into Bundelkhand He took on again a variety of roles during the campaign 5 Return to the United Kingdom editIn 1808 Hume resigned from the army and returned to the United Kingdom with a fortune of about 40 000 Between 1808 and 1811 he travelled around England and Europe In 1818 Hume was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society being according to his nomination well versed in various branches of Useful knowledge and particularly in Chemistry in various branches of oriental literature and Antiquities 6 Political career editWeymouth edit In 1812 Hume obtained through Spencer Perceval a seat in Parliament for Weymouth Dorset England vacant by the death of Sir John Johnstone 6th Baronet He was allowed it by Masterton Ure was elected unopposed and voted as a Tory supporter of the Perceval administration 4 The parliament was dissolved for the 1812 United Kingdom general election Ure refused to support Hume further in fact being overruled by the Duke of Cumberland and Viscount Newark Hume stood nonetheless in the four member constituency and received just two votes 7 He had toed the line in some matters but on the expulsion of Benjamin Walsh and the Luddite legislation he had shown independence unacceptable to the Duke 4 Hume kicked up a fuss and took legal action and was paid off with 1 000 supposedly to cover election expenses 7 2 This brief Tory period did bring Hume an association with the Duke of Kent and Strathearn a patron of Joseph Lancaster 8 9 John Cam Hobhouse relayed an anecdote told by John Conroy of the Duke s household in which Hume advised the Duke to limit the Duchess to one horse chaise 10 In 1833 Hume provided Alexander Burnes with an introduction to his daughter Princess Victoria 11 Hiatus and route to radicalism edit In connection with the financial troubles of Joseph Lancaster Hume met Francis Place in 1813 through Joseph Fox 12 It was Place who brought Hume into the group of political radicals with whom he from then on was associated 13 Hume renewed his friendship with James Mill they both and Place were interested in the school project of a West London Lancasterian Association floated in 1813 14 15 The project took a turn for the worse in 1814 when Francis Burdett intervened and imposed on it his associate Thomas Evans and Arthur Thistlewood pushing out Place who then abandoned politics for four years 16 By the next decade Hume was identified with the group of followers of Mill and Jeremy Bentham known as the Philosophical Radicals with organ the Westminster Review 17 At this period Hume also aimed to become a director of the East India Company a position he described in an 1813 speech as an arduous and most respectable office He lobbied the company s shareholders and in so doing met Maria Burnley whom he married in 1815 2 18 Aberdeen Burghs edit When Hume was returned to Parliament once more in 1818 as member for the Aberdeen Burghs Borders Scotland it was with the support of William Maule He stood there on a radical platform of his own devising 4 In 1823 Hume contested the election of James Duff 4th Earl Fife as rector of Marischal College in Aberdeen in 1824 and 1825 he himself was elected He revived the long disused rectorial court in 1825 but offended the electorate of students by the use he made of it He lost out in 1826 and 1827 to James McGrigor but was re elected in 1828 There was a Royal Commission on the Scottish universities in 1826 and Hume claimed he had prompted it 19 20 21 In Aberdeen s local politics Hume was at odds with a largely Tory town council but had supporters including Alexander Bannerman His chances there dropped when he failed to support a road bill before parliament 22 Faced in 1829 with a serious challenge from Sir James Carnegie 5th Baronet with a Brechin base Hume decided to change seat 23 nbsp Joseph Hume in middle age engraving Later seats edit In March 1830 with Henry Hunt and Daniel O Connell Hume set up the London based Metropolitan Political Union with a platform that included manhood suffrage and the secret ballot He was elected that year for Middlesex England 24 He produced a County Rates Bill and aimed to re organise local government 25 He came under attack however by 1837 as a moderate Whig Radical too close to the Melbourne ministry 26 Hume later represented Kilkenny Ireland 1837 and then from 1842 for the rest of his life Montrose Burghs Hume as politician editHume was a relentless individualistic campaigner over a wide range of causes Elie Halevy English translation characterised him in terms of pigheadedness with a heavy mind and he was always a dull yet dogged orator 27 2 During much of the Liverpool ministry Hume could be called the leader of the parliamentary Radicals with emphasis on public finance 28 Initially his group could be called by Viscount Castlereagh Creevey Hume and two or three others who sifted through details it was nicknamed The Mountain from the Montagnards in France of the 1790s 29 Joseph Nightingale credited Hume s attritional tactics with the resignations of Lord Ellenborough and Nicholas Vansittart 30 31 A close ally in parliament from 1826 was Henry Warburton 32 The retrenchment issue gained Hume praise from William Cobbett and his criticism of the ultra Protestant line on Ireland also drew support 33 Opposing the Canning administration in 1827 however Henry Brougham wrote to Sir Robert Wilson that the Whigs shall have no connection with Hume amp Co and the Benthamites while expecting their votes 90 of the time 34 Hume often annoyed colleagues on the same side of the argument He only with difficulty gained the trust of Francis Place who took many years to come round to James Mill s view of his character 12 His attitude affected coalition building Alexander Somerville wrote about the formation in 1830 of the Grey ministry We one and all thought it wrong that Joseph Hume should not be a member of the new government We were ignorant of party connections and differences ignorant of the atomic nature of some politicians of the gregarious nature of others 35 Around 1831 Hume Warburton and others formed a recognisable group still known as The Mountain 32 After the Reform Act 1832 there were new radical MPs but parliamentary voting support for the radicals reached a peak of 40 apart from specific issues on further electoral reform Hume had become an old parliamentary radical Cobbett a national radical 36 At the period of the 1835 Lichfield House Compact Hume s plan to unite the parliamentary radicals with Daniel O Connell s followers proved divisive 37 In 1836 7 he was behind the Constitutional newspaper aiming to appeal to militant radicals 38 Hume was an early supporter of the London Working Men s Association 39 Hume s campaigns editPublic finances edit nbsp A Humebugging attempt to Dissect a Naval Estimate 1822 Hume made a habit of challenging and bringing to a vote every item of public expenditure In 1820 he secured the appointment of a committee to report on the expense of collecting tax revenue He helped to abolish the sinking fund It was he who caused the word retrenchment to be added to the Radical programme peace and reform The groat coin or four pence was re introduced in 1836 during the reign of William IV at the suggestion of Hume Popularly known as the joey named after Hume s Christian name it was introduced to ease transactions on the London buses the fare being four pence or one groat As the last groats were struck in 1888 the nickname became passed over to the silver threepences struck after that date until 1941 the last year of production for British use Labour organisation edit The Combination Act 1799 and its sequel Combination Act 1800 were repealed by the Combination of Workmen Act 1824 promoted by Hume and other radicals in line with Benthamite principles on industrial harmony Hume had packed a parliamentary committee on the issue to support his artisan associate Francis Place There was an immediate surge in disputes The Combinations of Workmen Act 1825 backed by William Huskisson then removed the legal right to strike which remained the situation until the 1870s 40 41 Hume brought about the repeal of the laws prohibiting the export of machinery and of the act preventing workmen from going abroad Military edit Hume protested against the use of flogging in the army giving evidence to a parliamentary committee in 1835 based on his time as army surgeon in India 42 He thought the inducement of a proportion of army commissions should be reserved for soldiers drawn from the ranks an idea strongly opposed by the Duke of Wellington on social grounds 43 He also campaigned against the impressment of sailors and imprisonment for debt Burnley Hall and death edit nbsp The grave of Joseph Hume Kensal Green Cemetery Hume in 1824 bought the Somerton estate in Norfolk north of Great Yarmouth from the heirs of Sir Philip Stephens 1st Baronet and named the house there Burnley Hall from his wife s name before marriage 44 It became his seat He died there in 1855 and is buried to the north east of the main chapel in Kensal Green Cemetery in London next to his good friend William Williams Works editA blank verse translation of The Inferno 1812 Letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer 1812 suggested that Luddism could be addressed by free trade and organisation principles applied to framework knitting 4 The Substance of the Speech of Joseph Hume Delivered at an Adjourned General Court of the Proprietors of East India Stock Held in the India House on the 19th of January 1813 1813 45 The Speech of Mr Joseph Hume at the East India House on the 6th of October 1813 1813 46 A Plan for a New General System of Weights 1816 4 Economy and Retrenchment Speech of Joseph Hume in the House of Commons Wednesday the 27th of June 1821 on Economy and Retrenchment 1822 47 The Celebrated Letter of Joseph Hume to W L Mackenzie Mayor of Toronto 1834 48 Speech of Mr Hume in the Debate on the Motion of the Marquis of Chandos on the 10th of March 1835 for the Total Repeal of the Malt Tax 1835 49 On the Corn Laws and the Claims of the Agriculturists to Relief from Taxation Speech of Joseph Hume Esq M P on the Motion of the Marquess of Chandos in the House of Commons on Wednesday April 27 1836 1836 50 On the Bank of England and the State of the Currency 1839 51 There was a reply that year on the financing of the Slave Compensation Act 1837 by the economist Richard Page 1773 1841 Daniel Hardcastle 52 53 Debate on Sugar Duties speech of Joseph Hume Esq M P in the House of Commons on the 13th May 1841 on the motion of Lord John Russell 1841 54 Letter from Joseph Hume Esq M P et al 1853 55 Family editHume married in 1815 Maria Burnley the daughter of Hardin Burnley an American merchant and East India Company director and sister of William Hardin Burnley They had three sons and four daughters the children included Allan Octavian Hume and Mary Catherine Hume Rothery 2 56 57 Joseph Huntley Hume eldest son died in 1871 aged 52 58 Maria Burnley died 1885 married in 1843 Charles Gubbins died 1866 of the East India Company civil service He was the son of Major General Joseph Gubbins and his wife Charlotte Bathoe Charles having adopted his mother s surname during the 1860s she is often known as Maria Burnley Bathoe She contributed 5 000 quotations to the New English Dictionary 59 60 61 62 63 Eleanor third daughter married John Stratford Rodney son of John Rodney as his second wife 64 Charlotte Isabella married in 1848 her first cousin George Balfour whose mother Susan was sister to Joseph Hume 65 Legacy edit nbsp Statue of Hume in the High Street of Montrose at its intersection with Hume Street A memorial of Hume was published by his son Joseph Hume London 1855 A subscription fund established a Joseph Hume Scholarship in jurisprudence and political economy at University College London 66 As of 2021 update it is still awarded 67 Hume bequeahed his working library of approximately 5000 pamphlets to University College London in 1855 68 According to the History of the Silver Coinage of England by Edward Hawkins a groat was known as a Joey It was so called from Joseph Hume M P who strongly recommended the coinage for the sake of paying short cab fares etc 69 Radical commemoration edit Further information Political Martyrs Monument nbsp The Political Martyrs Monument Edinburgh In 1837 Hume initiated a plan for a memorial to the Scottish Political Martyrs victims of the Pitt administration s policy of the 1790s 70 It was supported by Peter Mackenzie a radical journalist in Glasgow He had already set up a memorial for John Baird and Andrew Hardie two weavers executed in the 1820 Radical War 71 On 21 August 1844 3000 gathered to see Hume lay the monument s foundation stone at the Old Calton Cemetery Edinburgh In February 1852 a second monument to the Scottish Political Martyrs again initiated by Hume was unveiled at Nunhead Cemetery London 72 References edit Ronald K Huch Paul R Ziegler 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P DIANE Publishing ISBN 0 87169 163 9 a b c d e f g h i Chancellor V E Hume Joseph 1777 1855 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14148 Subscription or UK public library membership required Huch Ronald K Ziegler Paul R 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P American Philosophical Society p 3 ISBN 978 0 87169 163 7 a b c d e f Hume Joseph 1777 1855 of 38 York Place Portman Square Mdx and Burnley Hall Norf History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org a b Huch Ronald K Ziegler Paul R 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P American Philosophical Society p 4 ISBN 978 0 87169 163 7 Fellow details Royal Society Archived from the original on 26 September 2021 Retrieved 4 March 2017 a b Weymouth and Melcombe Regis 1790 1820 History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org Huch Ronald K Ziegler Paul R 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P American Philosophical Society p 10 and note 31 ISBN 978 0 87169 163 7 Cave Edward 1855 The Gentleman s Magazine Or Monthly Intelligencer Volume the first fifth for the year 1731 1735 Printed and sold at St John s Gate by Edward Cave by F Jefferies in Ludgate Street p 450 Hobhouse John Cam 3 November 2011 Recollections of a Long Life Cambridge University Press p 314 ISBN 978 1 108 03401 2 Murray Craig 20 October 2016 Sikunder Burnes Master of the Great Game Birlinn p 137 ISBN 978 0 85790 251 1 a b Huch Ronald K Ziegler Paul R 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P American Philosophical Society p 9 ISBN 978 0 87169 163 7 Mazlish Bruce 1 January 1988 James and John Stuart Mill Father and Son in the Nineteenth Century Transaction Publishers p 93 ISBN 978 1 4128 2679 2 Sheppard Francis Henry Wollaston 1971 London 1808 1870 The Infernal Wen University of California Press p 217 ISBN 978 0 520 01847 1 Bain Alexander 1882 James Mill A Biography Longmans Green and Company p 86 Prothero Iorwerth 14 October 2013 Artisans and Politics in Early Nineteenth Century London Routledge Revivals John Gast and his Times Routledge p 172 ISBN 978 1 136 16386 9 Mander William J February 2014 The Oxford Handbook of British Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century OUP Oxford p 12 ISBN 978 0 19 959447 4 Bowen H V 22 December 2005 The Business of Empire The East India Company and Imperial Britain 1756 1833 Cambridge University Press p 119 ISBN 978 1 139 44788 1 Bulloch John Malcolm 1890 The lord rectors of the universities of Aberdeen D Wyllie amp son pp 53 54 Rait Robert S 1898 Joseph Hume and an Academic Rebellion The Scottish Antiquary or Northern Notes and Queries 13 49 24 26 ISSN 2042 0013 JSTOR 25516883 Hont Istvan Ignatieff Michael 30 January 1986 Wealth and Virtue The Shaping of Political Economy in the Scottish Enlightenment Cambridge University Press p 107 ISBN 978 1 316 58318 0 Fraser W Hamish Lee Clive Howard 2000 Aberdeen 1800 2000 A New History Dundurn ISBN 978 1 86232 108 3 Huch Ronald K Ziegler Paul R 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P American Philosophical Society p 61 ISBN 978 0 87169 163 7 Middlesex 1820 1832 History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org Mullins Edward 1836 A Treatise on the Magistracy of England and the origin and expenditure of county rates To which is subjoined a full abstract of Mr Hume s bill to authorize the rate payers in every county in England and Wales to elect a council and auditors of accounts Second edition Weinstein Benjamin 2011 Liberalism and Local Government in Early Victorian London Boydell amp Brewer Ltd pp 62 63 ISBN 978 0 86193 312 9 Halevy Elie 1972 The Growth of Philosophic Radicalism A M Kelley p 309 ISBN 978 0 678 08005 4 Skottowe Britiffe Constable 1887 A Short History of Parliament Harper p 251 Bew John 2012 Castlereagh A Life Oxford University Press p 511 ISBN 978 0 19 993159 0 Bew John 2012 Castlereagh A Life Oxford University Press p 532 ISBN 978 0 19 993159 0 Nightingale Joseph 1822 A calm and dispassionate view of the life and administration of the late Marquis of Londonderry etc a b Warburton Henry 1784 1858 of 45 Cadogan Place Mdx History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org Huch Ronald K Ziegler Paul R 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P American Philosophical Society p 34 ISBN 978 0 87169 163 7 Aspinall Arthur 2005 Lord Brougham and the Whig Party History Press Limited p 221 ISBN 978 1 84588 033 0 Somerville Alexander 1848 The Autobiography of a Working Man C Gilpin p 143 Briggs Asa 17 June 2014 The Age of Improvement 1783 1867 Routledge p 234 ISBN 978 1 317 87854 4 Graham A H 1961 The Lichfield House Compact 1835 Irish Historical Studies 12 47 220 doi 10 1017 S0021121400027711 ISSN 0021 1214 JSTOR 30006440 S2CID 163777165 Huch Ronald K Ziegler Paul R 1985 Joseph Hume the People s M P 97 American Philosophical Society ISBN 978 0 87169 163 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Hovell Mark 1966 The Chartist Movement Manchester University Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 7190 0088 1 Woodward Ernest Llewellyn 1962 The Age of Reform 1815 1870 Clarendon Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 19 821711 4 Epstein Richard A 15 October 2013 Contract Freedom and Restraint Liberty Property and the Law Routledge pp 118 119 ISBN 978 1 135 69958 1 Commons Great Britain Parliament House of 1836 Parliamentary Papers H M Stationery Office p 56 Dinwiddy J R 1 July 1992 Radicalism and Reform in Britain 1780 1850 A amp C Black p 140 ISBN 978 0 8264 3453 1 Palmer Charles John 1874 The Perlustration of Great Yarmouth with Gorleston and Southtown G Nall p 11 note Hume Joseph 1813 The Substance of the Speech of Joseph Hume Delivered at an Adjourned General Court of the Proprietors of East India Stock Held in the India House on the 19th of January 1813 J Stockdale Hume Joseph 1813 The Speech of Mr Joseph Hume at the East India House on the 6th of October 1813 Upon the Motion for an Increase of the Salaries of the Directors of the Company from the Sum of 300 Per Annum to 1000 and of the Chairman and Deputy from 500 to 1500 Printed at Cox and Baylis Hume Joseph 1822 Economy and Retrenchment Speech of Joseph Hume in the House of Commons Wednesday the 27th of June 1821 on Economy and Retrenchment James Ridgway Hume Joseph 1834 The Celebrated Letter of Joseph Hume to W L Mackenzie Mayor of Toronto Declaratory of a Design to Free These Provinces from the Domination of the Mother Country with the Comments of the Press of Upper Canada on the Tendency of that Letter Etc Hume Joseph 1835 Speech of Mr Hume in the Debate on the Motion of the Marquis of Chandos on the 10th of March 1835 for the Total Repeal of the Malt Tax From the Mirror of Parliament Revised with Notes Explanatory Committee for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge amongst the people Hume Joseph 1836 On the Corn Laws and the Claims of the Agriculturists to Relief from Taxation Speech of Joseph Hume Esq M P on the Motion of the Marquess of Chandos in the House of Commons on Wednesday April 27 1836 proprietor of The Mirror of Parliament 3 Abingdon Street Westminster Hume Joseph 1839 On the Bank of England and the State of the Currency The Speech of Joseph Hume in the House of Commons on the 8th of July 1839 on a Motion for Enquiry Into the Pecuniary Transactions of the Bank of England Since the Resumption of Cash Payments in 1821 Page Richard 1839 A Critical Examination of the Twelve Resolutions of Mr Joseph Hume Respecting the Loan of Fifteen Millions for Slave Compensation Also a Review of the Financial Operations of the British Government Since 1794 P Richardson Cobden Richard 22 November 2007 The Letters of Richard Cobden Vol I 1815 1847 OUP Oxford p 187 note 11 ISBN 978 0 19 921195 1 Hume Joseph 1841 Debate on Sugar Duties speech of Joseph Hume Esq M P in the House of Commons on the 13th May 1841 on the motion of Lord John Russell ways and means corn laws sugar duties etc Hume Joseph 1853 Letter from Joseph Hume Esq M P John Sullivan Esq Samuel Gaselee Esq Alderman David Salomons and Other Proprietors of East India Stock to the Directors of the East India Company Forwarding a Memorial on Behalf of the Distressed Family of the Ex Rajah of Sattara Detained Prisoners at Benares with the Court s Reply Cudjoe Selwyn R Burnley William Hardin 1780 1850 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 109518 Subscription or UK public library membership required Moulton Edward C Hume Allan Octavian 1829 1912 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 34049 Subscription or UK public library membership required Arbroath Arbroath Guide 28 January 1871 p 2 Biographical Information Oxford English Dictionary Gubbins Charles Persons of Indian Studies by Prof Dr Klaus Karttunen 23 October 2020 Burke Bernard Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1 January 1912 A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Ireland Dalcassian Publishing Company p 283 Darwin Charles 5 January 2017 Darwin and Women A Selection of Letters Cambridge University Press p 335 ISBN 978 1 108 13869 7 Russell Lindsay Rose 30 April 2018 Women and Dictionary Making Gender Genre and English Language Lexicography Cambridge University Press p 154 ISBN 978 1 316 95354 9 Edmund Lodge 1845 The Peerage of the British Empire as at present existing To which is added the baronetage p 450 Peers Douglas M Balfour Edward Green 1813 1889 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1184 Subscription or UK public library membership required London University College 1895 Calendar p 180 MPhil PhD fees and scholarships UCL Faculty of Laws 14 October 2020 UCL 23 August 2018 Hume Tracts Library Services Retrieved 12 October 2022 E Cobham Brewer 1898 Dictionary of Phrase and Fable Christina Bewley Muir of Huntershill Oxford University Press 1981 ISBN 0 19 211768 8 Pentland Gordon 6 October 2015 The Spirit of the Union Popular Politics in Scotland Routledge p 132 ISBN 978 1 317 31654 1 Wally MacFarlane The Scottish Martyrs a pamphlet published by the Friends of Nunhead Cemetery External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joseph Hume Hume Tracts at University College London Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Joseph Hume Bio to 1832 at History of Parliament Online Parliament of the United Kingdom Preceded byCharles AdamsRichard StewardSir John Lowther Johnstone BtSir John Murray Bt Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis1812 1812 With Charles AdamsRichard StewardSir John Murray Bt Succeeded bySir John Murray BtThomas WallaceJohn BroadhurstHenry Trail Preceded byJames Farquhar Member of Parliament for Aberdeen Burghs1818 1830 Succeeded bySir James Carnegie Bt Preceded byGeorge ByngSamuel Charles Whitbread Member of Parliament for Middlesex1830 1837 With George Byng Succeeded byGeorge ByngThomas Wood Preceded byDaniel O Connell Member of Parliament for Kilkenny City1837 1841 Succeeded byJohn O Connell Preceded byPatrick Chalmers Member of Parliament for Montrose Burghs1842 1855 Succeeded byWilliam Edward Baxter Academic offices Preceded byThe 4th Earl Fife Rector of Marischal College Aberdeen1824 1825 Succeeded bySir James McGrigor Preceded bySir James McGrigor Rector of Marischal College Aberdeen1828 1829 Succeeded by Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Hume amp oldid 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