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William Scoresby

William Scoresby FRS FRSE (5 October 1789 – 21 March 1857) was an English whaler, Arctic explorer, scientist and clergyman.

William Scoresby
Born(1789-10-05)5 October 1789
Died21 March 1857(1857-03-21) (aged 67)
Alma mater
Known forArctic exploration

Early years edit

Scoresby was born in the village of Cropton near Pickering 26 miles (42 km) south-west of Whitby in Yorkshire. His father, William Scoresby (1760–1829), made a fortune in the Arctic whale fishery and was also the inventor of the barrel crow's nest. The son made his first voyage with his father at the age of eleven, but then returned to school, where he remained until 1803.[1]

After this he became his father's constant companion, and accompanied him as chief officer of the whaler Resolution when on 25 May 1806, he succeeded in reaching 81°30' N. lat. (19° E. long), for twenty-one years the highest northern latitude attained in the eastern hemisphere. During the following winter, Scoresby attended the natural philosophy and chemistry classes at Edinburgh University, and again in 1809.[1]

Scientist edit

In his voyage of 1807, Scoresby began the study of the meteorology and natural history of the polar regions. Earlier results included his original observations on snow and crystals; and in 1809 Robert Jameson brought certain Arctic papers of his before the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh, which at once elected him to its membership.[1]

In 1811, Scoresby's father resigned to him the command of the Resolution. In the same year he married the daughter of a Whitby shipbroker. In his voyage of 1813, he established for the first time the fact that the polar ocean has a warmer temperature at considerable depths than it has on the surface, and each subsequent voyage in search of whales found him no less eager of fresh additions to scientific knowledge. His letters of this period to Sir Joseph Banks, whose acquaintance he had made a few years earlier, no doubt gave the first impulse to the search for the North-West Passage which followed.[1] On 29 June 1816, commanding the Esk on his fifteenth whaling voyage from Whitby, Scoresby encountered grave problems when ice damaged his ship. With the aid of his brother-in-law's crew on board the John, and after agreeing to surrendering much of their catch, the Esk was repaired, of which Scoresby recounted in his 1820 book The Northern Whale-Fishery.[2]

In 1819, Scoresby was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Robert Jameson, John Playfair and Sir G S Mackenzie. About the same time he communicated a paper to the Royal Society of London: "On the Anomaly in the Variation of the Magnetic Needle". In 1820, he published An Account of the Arctic Regions and Northern Whale Fishery, in which he gathers up the results of his own observations, as well as those of previous navigators.[1]

In 1820 and 1821 he commanded Fame on whale hunting voyages to the Greenland whale fishery. In 1821 he was accompanied on the Baffin (1820) of Liverpool to Greenland by George Manby, who wished to test a new type of harpoon for whaling, based on the same principles as his Manby mortar. Manby published his account in 1822 as Journal of a Voyage to Greenland, containing observations on the flora and fauna of the Arctic regions as well as the practice of whale hunting.[3]

In his voyage of 1822 to Greenland, Scoresby surveyed and charted with remarkable accuracy 400 miles of the east coast, between 69° 30' and 72° 30', thus contributing to the first real and important geographic knowledge of East Greenland. This, however, proved to be the last of his Arctic voyages. On his return, he learnt of his wife's death, and this event, with other influences acting upon his naturally pious spirit, decided him to enter the church.[1]

Scoresby's Journal of a Voyage to the Northern Whale Fishery, including Researches and Discoveries on the Eastern Coast of Greenland (1823), appeared at Edinburgh. In 1824, the Royal Society elected him a fellow, and in 1827, he became an honorary corresponding member of the Paris Academy of Sciences.[1][4]

From the first, Scoresby worked as an active member and official of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, and he contributed especially to the knowledge of terrestrial magnetism. Of his sixty papers in the Royal Society list, many relate to this department of research. However, his observations extended into many other departments, including researches on optics[1] and, with James Joule, comparing electromagnetic (chemical), thermal (coal/steam), and organic (horse) power sources.[5]

To obtain additional data for his theories on magnetism, he made a voyage to Australia in 1856 on board the ill-fated iron-hulled Royal Charter, the results of which appeared in a posthumous publication: Journal of a Voyage to Australia for Magnetical Research, edited by Archibald Smith (1859). He made two visits to America, in 1844 and 1848; on his return home from the latter visit he made observations on the height of Atlantic waves, the results of which were given to the British Association. He interested himself much in social questions, especially the improvement of the condition of factory operatives.[1]

In 1850, Scoresby published a work urging the prosecution of the search for the Franklin expedition and giving the results of his own experience in Arctic navigation.[1]

Clerical career edit

Scoresby began divinity studies at Queens' College, Cambridge,[6] enrolling under the ten-year divinity statute and thus becoming a ten-year man, and also became the curate of Bessingby, Yorkshire.[7] In 1834 he received his bachelor's degree in Divinity (BD) from Cambridge University, and in 1839, was awarded an honorary doctorate, Doctor of Divinity (DD).[4] Clerical duties at Bessingby, and later at Liverpool, Exeter and Bradford, co-existed with his interest in science. He published numerous works and papers of a religious character.

From 1839 to 1846 Scoresby was vicar of Bradford, Yorkshire, a "large, industrial, dissenting parish", also described as an "ever-expanding, raucous, restless industrial conurbation", 15 miles (24 km) across.[8][9] The appointment to Bradford had been in the hands of the Simeon Trust, since Charles Simeon's death in 1836.[10] His predecessor Henry Heap (died 1839), had let the administration slide.[11] There were 13 Bradford curates, counting incumbent perpetual curates, who included Patrick Brontë and William Morgan (1782–1858). There were new churches, such as St James's built by John Wood, and one at Wibsey under construction by the Hardy family, ironmasters.[12]

Scoresby addressed matters in hand, but succeeded only in generating contentious issues. On finance, he took on Wood in 1840, over surplice fees in his new church, and was opposed by Wood's "factory movement" allies and others. St James's was closed for a period, and Wood moved away to the south.[13] Scoresby believed in smaller catchment districts for churches;[9] he clashed with Morgan over this issue. He tried unsuccessfully to divide the parish in 1843.[11] Suffering a breakdown in health, Scoresby resigned as vicar in 1846, after a tour in the US to look at industrial conditions. He took no further permanent clerical posts.[8]

Personal edit

Scoresby married three times. After his third marriage (1849), he built a villa at Torquay,[1] where he was appointed honorary lecturer at the Parish church of St Mary Magdalene, Upton.

He died in Torquay on 21 March 1857. He is buried in the churchyard at Upton and commemorated by a memorial which is decorated with mariner's compass and dividers, and a Bible.[14] He is also memorialised on the family grave in Whitby. His sister Arabella Scoresby was mother to the physician Robert Edmund Scoresby-Jackson FRSE.[15]

Legacy edit

A number of places have been named after him, including:

References in literature edit

Herman Melville's main character Ishmael quotes Scoresby in the Cetology chapter of Moby-Dick: "'No branch of Zoology is so much involved as that which is entitled Cetology,' says Captain Scoresby, A.D. 1820."[18]

Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy features a character named Lee Scoresby, an intrepid explorer, old Arctic hand, and balloon aeronaut. Pullman has stated that the character was named after William Scoresby and Lee Van Cleef.[19]

Scoresby is named in H. P. Lovecraft's science fiction-horror novella, At the Mountains of Madness,[20] as having observed and drawn "some of the wilder forms" of arctic mirages.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Scoresby, William". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 409.
  2. ^ Mowat, Farley (1973). Ordeal by ice; the search for the Northwest Passage. Of Whales and Ice. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart Ltd. pp. 173–181. OCLC 1391959.
  3. ^ Manby, George William (1822). Journal of a Voyage to Greenland . G. and W. B. Whittaker – via Wikisource.
  4. ^ a b Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
  5. ^ "Experiments and Observations on the Mechanical Powers of Electro-Magnetism, Steam, and Horses". Phil.Mag.xxviii.3rd Series. 1846.
  6. ^ "Eminent Alumni - Queens' College". queens.cam.ac.uk.
  7. ^ Kverndal, Roald (1986). Seamen's Missions: Their Origin and Early Growth. William Carey Library. p. 288. ISBN 0-87808-440-1.
  8. ^ a b Baigent, Elizabeth. "Scoresby, William, junior". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/24854. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  9. ^ a b Morris, Richard (2018). Yorkshire: A lyrical history of England's greatest county. Orion. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-297-60944-5.
  10. ^ Taylor, Stephen (1999). From Cranmer to Davidson: A Church of England Miscellany. Boydell & Brewer. p. 266 note 27. ISBN 978-0-85115-742-9.
  11. ^ a b Koditschek, Theodore (1990). Class Formation and Urban Industrial Society: Bradford, 1750-1850. Cambridge University Press. p. 254 note 10. ISBN 978-0-521-32771-8.
  12. ^ Gill, John Clifford (1963). Parson Bull of Byerley. S. P. C. K. pp. 128–31.
  13. ^ Ward, J. T. (2015). The Factory Movement, 1830-1855. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 214. ISBN 978-1-349-81759-7. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  14. ^ Information from Memorial, Upton Parish Church
  15. ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
  16. ^ "Scoresby Sund" (in Russian). Great Soviet Encyclopedia.
  17. ^ William Scoresby Archipelago, Australian Antarctic Data Centre Gazetteer. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
  18. ^ Melville, Herman (1851). Moby-Dick or The Whale. Read Books. p. 164. ISBN 1-4097-6485-0.
  19. ^ Pullman, Philip. . Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  20. ^ Lovecraft, H.P. (1936). At the mountains of madness. Analog Science Fiction and Fact(Astounding Stories). p. periodical issued between February–April 1936.

Further reading edit

External links edit

william, scoresby, other, uses, disambiguation, frse, october, 1789, march, 1857, english, whaler, arctic, explorer, scientist, clergyman, frseborn, 1789, october, 1789cropton, yorkshire, englanddied21, march, 1857, 1857, aged, torquay, devon, englandalma, mat. For other uses see William Scoresby disambiguation William Scoresby FRS FRSE 5 October 1789 21 March 1857 was an English whaler Arctic explorer scientist and clergyman William ScoresbyFRS FRSEBorn 1789 10 05 5 October 1789Cropton Yorkshire EnglandDied21 March 1857 1857 03 21 aged 67 Torquay Devon EnglandAlma materQueens College CambridgeEdinburgh UniversityKnown forArctic exploration Contents 1 Early years 2 Scientist 3 Clerical career 4 Personal 5 Legacy 6 References in literature 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly years editScoresby was born in the village of Cropton near Pickering 26 miles 42 km south west of Whitby in Yorkshire His father William Scoresby 1760 1829 made a fortune in the Arctic whale fishery and was also the inventor of the barrel crow s nest The son made his first voyage with his father at the age of eleven but then returned to school where he remained until 1803 1 After this he became his father s constant companion and accompanied him as chief officer of the whaler Resolution when on 25 May 1806 he succeeded in reaching 81 30 N lat 19 E long for twenty one years the highest northern latitude attained in the eastern hemisphere During the following winter Scoresby attended the natural philosophy and chemistry classes at Edinburgh University and again in 1809 1 Scientist editIn his voyage of 1807 Scoresby began the study of the meteorology and natural history of the polar regions Earlier results included his original observations on snow and crystals and in 1809 Robert Jameson brought certain Arctic papers of his before the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh which at once elected him to its membership 1 In 1811 Scoresby s father resigned to him the command of the Resolution In the same year he married the daughter of a Whitby shipbroker In his voyage of 1813 he established for the first time the fact that the polar ocean has a warmer temperature at considerable depths than it has on the surface and each subsequent voyage in search of whales found him no less eager of fresh additions to scientific knowledge His letters of this period to Sir Joseph Banks whose acquaintance he had made a few years earlier no doubt gave the first impulse to the search for the North West Passage which followed 1 On 29 June 1816 commanding the Esk on his fifteenth whaling voyage from Whitby Scoresby encountered grave problems when ice damaged his ship With the aid of his brother in law s crew on board the John and after agreeing to surrendering much of their catch the Esk was repaired of which Scoresby recounted in his 1820 book The Northern Whale Fishery 2 In 1819 Scoresby was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh His proposers were Robert Jameson John Playfair and Sir G S Mackenzie About the same time he communicated a paper to the Royal Society of London On the Anomaly in the Variation of the Magnetic Needle In 1820 he published An Account of the Arctic Regions and Northern Whale Fishery in which he gathers up the results of his own observations as well as those of previous navigators 1 In 1820 and 1821 he commanded Fame on whale hunting voyages to the Greenland whale fishery In 1821 he was accompanied on the Baffin 1820 of Liverpool to Greenland by George Manby who wished to test a new type of harpoon for whaling based on the same principles as his Manby mortar Manby published his account in 1822 as Journal of a Voyage to Greenland containing observations on the flora and fauna of the Arctic regions as well as the practice of whale hunting 3 In his voyage of 1822 to Greenland Scoresby surveyed and charted with remarkable accuracy 400 miles of the east coast between 69 30 and 72 30 thus contributing to the first real and important geographic knowledge of East Greenland This however proved to be the last of his Arctic voyages On his return he learnt of his wife s death and this event with other influences acting upon his naturally pious spirit decided him to enter the church 1 Scoresby s Journal of a Voyage to the Northern Whale Fishery including Researches and Discoveries on the Eastern Coast of Greenland 1823 appeared at Edinburgh In 1824 the Royal Society elected him a fellow and in 1827 he became an honorary corresponding member of the Paris Academy of Sciences 1 4 From the first Scoresby worked as an active member and official of the British Association for the Advancement of Science and he contributed especially to the knowledge of terrestrial magnetism Of his sixty papers in the Royal Society list many relate to this department of research However his observations extended into many other departments including researches on optics 1 and with James Joule comparing electromagnetic chemical thermal coal steam and organic horse power sources 5 To obtain additional data for his theories on magnetism he made a voyage to Australia in 1856 on board the ill fated iron hulled Royal Charter the results of which appeared in a posthumous publication Journal of a Voyage to Australia for Magnetical Research edited by Archibald Smith 1859 He made two visits to America in 1844 and 1848 on his return home from the latter visit he made observations on the height of Atlantic waves the results of which were given to the British Association He interested himself much in social questions especially the improvement of the condition of factory operatives 1 In 1850 Scoresby published a work urging the prosecution of the search for the Franklin expedition and giving the results of his own experience in Arctic navigation 1 Clerical career editScoresby began divinity studies at Queens College Cambridge 6 enrolling under the ten year divinity statute and thus becoming a ten year man and also became the curate of Bessingby Yorkshire 7 In 1834 he received his bachelor s degree in Divinity BD from Cambridge University and in 1839 was awarded an honorary doctorate Doctor of Divinity DD 4 Clerical duties at Bessingby and later at Liverpool Exeter and Bradford co existed with his interest in science He published numerous works and papers of a religious character From 1839 to 1846 Scoresby was vicar of Bradford Yorkshire a large industrial dissenting parish also described as an ever expanding raucous restless industrial conurbation 15 miles 24 km across 8 9 The appointment to Bradford had been in the hands of the Simeon Trust since Charles Simeon s death in 1836 10 His predecessor Henry Heap died 1839 had let the administration slide 11 There were 13 Bradford curates counting incumbent perpetual curates who included Patrick Bronte and William Morgan 1782 1858 There were new churches such as St James s built by John Wood and one at Wibsey under construction by the Hardy family ironmasters 12 Scoresby addressed matters in hand but succeeded only in generating contentious issues On finance he took on Wood in 1840 over surplice fees in his new church and was opposed by Wood s factory movement allies and others St James s was closed for a period and Wood moved away to the south 13 Scoresby believed in smaller catchment districts for churches 9 he clashed with Morgan over this issue He tried unsuccessfully to divide the parish in 1843 11 Suffering a breakdown in health Scoresby resigned as vicar in 1846 after a tour in the US to look at industrial conditions He took no further permanent clerical posts 8 Personal editScoresby married three times After his third marriage 1849 he built a villa at Torquay 1 where he was appointed honorary lecturer at the Parish church of St Mary Magdalene Upton He died in Torquay on 21 March 1857 He is buried in the churchyard at Upton and commemorated by a memorial which is decorated with mariner s compass and dividers and a Bible 14 He is also memorialised on the family grave in Whitby His sister Arabella Scoresby was mother to the physician Robert Edmund Scoresby Jackson FRSE 15 Legacy editA number of places have been named after him including the Lunar crater Scoresby Scoresbysund now Ittoqqortoormiit on the east coast of Greenland the Scoresby Sund fjord system 16 the Melbourne suburb of Scoresby Victoria in Australia which is 25 km southeast of the CBD RRS William Scoresby an early twentieth century research vessel in the employ of the British scientific organisation Discovery Investigations William Scoresby Bay and the William Scoresby Archipelago off the Antarctic coast are named after RRS William Scoresby 17 Scoresby Land in Greenland Cape Scoresby 66 34 S 162 45 E 66 567 S 162 75 E 66 567 162 75 bluff marking the north end of Borradaile Island Scoresbyoya which means Scoresby Island in English A small island of 6 km2 north of Nordaustlandet Svalbard Norway References in literature editHerman Melville s main character Ishmael quotes Scoresby in the Cetology chapter of Moby Dick No branch of Zoology is so much involved as that which is entitled Cetology says Captain Scoresby A D 1820 18 Philip Pullman s His Dark Materials trilogy features a character named Lee Scoresby an intrepid explorer old Arctic hand and balloon aeronaut Pullman has stated that the character was named after William Scoresby and Lee Van Cleef 19 Scoresby is named in H P Lovecraft s science fiction horror novella At the Mountains of Madness 20 as having observed and drawn some of the wilder forms of arctic mirages References edit a b c d e f g h i j k nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Scoresby William Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 409 Mowat Farley 1973 Ordeal by ice the search for the Northwest Passage Of Whales and Ice Toronto McClelland and Stewart Ltd pp 173 181 OCLC 1391959 Manby George William 1822 Journal of a Voyage to Greenland G and W B Whittaker via Wikisource a b Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Experiments and Observations on the Mechanical Powers of Electro Magnetism Steam and Horses Phil Mag xxviii 3rd Series 1846 Eminent Alumni Queens College queens cam ac uk Kverndal Roald 1986 Seamen s Missions Their Origin and Early Growth William Carey Library p 288 ISBN 0 87808 440 1 a b Baigent Elizabeth Scoresby William junior Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 24854 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Morris Richard 2018 Yorkshire A lyrical history of England s greatest county Orion p 61 ISBN 978 0 297 60944 5 Taylor Stephen 1999 From Cranmer to Davidson A Church of England Miscellany Boydell amp Brewer p 266 note 27 ISBN 978 0 85115 742 9 a b Koditschek Theodore 1990 Class Formation and Urban Industrial Society Bradford 1750 1850 Cambridge University Press p 254 note 10 ISBN 978 0 521 32771 8 Gill John Clifford 1963 Parson Bull of Byerley S P C K pp 128 31 Ward J T 2015 The Factory Movement 1830 1855 Palgrave Macmillan UK p 214 ISBN 978 1 349 81759 7 Retrieved 24 July 2020 Information from Memorial Upton Parish Church Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Scoresby Sund in Russian Great Soviet Encyclopedia William Scoresby Archipelago Australian Antarctic Data Centre Gazetteer Retrieved 26 January 2023 Melville Herman 1851 Moby Dick or The Whale Read Books p 164 ISBN 1 4097 6485 0 Pullman Philip Philip Pullman Archived from the original on 8 October 2011 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Lovecraft H P 1936 At the mountains of madness Analog Science Fiction and Fact Astounding Stories p periodical issued between February April 1936 Further reading editLife by his nephew Robert Edmund Scoresby Jackson 1861 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Scoresby Works by William Scoresby at Biodiversity Heritage Library nbsp Works by William Scoresby at Open Library nbsp Works by William Scoresby at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William Scoresby at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Scoresby amp oldid 1217392105, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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