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Francis Wollaston (astronomer)

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(Redirected from Francis Wollaston (priest and astronomer)) British astronomer and priest
Francis Wollaston
Born(1731-11-23)23 November 1731
London, UK
Died31 October 1815(1815-10-31) (aged 83)
Scientific career
FieldsAstronomy

Francis Wollaston (23 November 1731 in London – 31 October 1815) was a British astronomer and Church of England priest. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1769.

Life

Wollaston's Transit Instrument for determining the position of celestial objects as they pass the meridian

Wollaston was the son of Francis Wollaston (1694–1774) and his wife Mary Fauquier. He was educated privately and at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, where he graduated LL.B. in 1754. Though admitted to Lincoln's Inn in 1750, Wollaston was never called to the bar, but became a clergyman. Ordained deacon in 1754 and priest in 1755, he became Rector of Dengie in 1758. From 1761 to 1769 he was Rector and Vicar of East Dereham, and from 1769 to 1815 Rector of Chislehurst.

Wollaston wrote a rare privately printed autobiography The Secret History of a Private Man. In it, he explains that his pursuit of astronomy was intended to separate him at a "distance from the misrepresentations of narrow minded biggots." He had a private observatory with a triplet telescope by Peter Dollond. He was buried at Chislehurst.

He achieved some distinction as an astronomer, becoming a member of the Royal Society in 1769 and later serving on its council. He also produced a catalogue of stars and nebulae in 1789, which was used by many including his friend William Herschel.

Beliefs

Wollaston was suspected of unorthodox beliefs, perhaps Unitarianism, a denial of the Trinity. His actual belief, which he kept secret, was much more distinctive. It was that "the Archangel Michael had created mankind and was subsequently incarnated as Jesus".

Family

He married Althea Hyde, daughter of John Hyde, in 1758 and they had many children:

  • Mary Hyde Wollaston (1760–1843), married, in 1803, William Panchen, vicar of St Mary and St Benedict, Huntingdon
  • Althea Hyde Wollaston (1760–1785), married Thomas Heberden (1754–1843), a priest and canon of Exeter Cathedral
  • Francis John Hyde Wollaston (1762–1823), philosopher
  • Charlotte Hyde Wollaston (1763–1835)
  • Katherine Hyde Wollaston (1764–1844), conchologist
  • George Hyde Wollaston (1765–1841)
  • William Hyde Wollaston (1766–1828), physiologist, chemist, and physicist
  • Henrietta Hyde Wollaston (1767–1840)
  • Anna Hyde Wollaston (1769–1828), unmarried
  • Frederick Hyde Wollaston (1770–1839?; went to America in 1796)
  • Louisa Hyde Wollaston (1771–1772)
  • Charles Hyde Wollaston (1772–1850)
  • Henry Hyde Wollaston (1774), died in infancy
  • Amelia Hyde Wollaston (1775–1860)
  • Henry Septimus Hyde Wollaston (1776–1867), married Maria Anna Blanckenhagen, the daughter of a well-known merchant family originating from the Baltic.
  • Sophia Hyde Wollaston (1777–1810), unmarried
  • Louisa Decima Hyde Wollaston (1778–1854), married James Leonard Jackson, a priest from Dorsetshire
  • unknown child
  • unknown child

References

  1. Wollaston, Francis (1793). "A description of a transit circle, for determining the place of celestial objects as they pass the meridian". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 83: 133–153. doi:10.1098/rstl.1793.0013. S2CID 186211323.
  2. ^ "Wollaston, Francis (WLSN748F)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. ^ Heavenly Heresies – the Reverend Francis Wollaston. Astronomy Now, October 2012, page 16
  • Clifford J. Cunningham, The First Asteroid, 2001

External links

Wollaston family tree
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William Wollaston
priest, master and scholar
(1659–1724)
Catherine Charlton
(1670–1720)
John Francis Fauquier
bank director
(1672–1726)
Elizabeth Chamberlayne
(1676–1748)
Francis Wollaston
scientist
(1694–1774)
Mary Fauquier
(1702–1773)
Francis Fauquier
governor
(1703–1768)
Elizabeth Fauquier
(1706–1764)
William Wollaston
MP
(1693–1764)
William Wollaston
army colonel and MP
(1731–1797)
Frederick Wollaston
(1735–1801)
Priscilla Ottley
(1740–1819)
William Heberden
physician
(1710–1801)
Mary Wollaston
(1730–1813)
Francis Wollaston
priest and astronomer
(1731–1815)
Althea Hyde
(1738–1798)
Charlton Wollaston
physician
(1733–1764)
George Wollaston
priest
(1738–1826)
Thomas Heberden
priest
(1754–1843)
Althea Hyde Wollaston
(1760–1785)
Francis John Hyde Wollaston
natural philosophy professor
(1762–1823)
George Hyde Wollaston
(1765–1841)
Mary Anne Luard
(1774–1817)
William Hyde Wollaston
chemist and physicist
(1766–1828)
Henry John Wollaston
(1770–1833)
Louisa Symons
(1784–1833)
Alexander Luard Wollaston
(1805–1874)
Susannah Charlotte Morris
(1807–1894)
Henrietta Wollaston
(1807–1873)
George Pollock
army field-marshal and baronet
(1786– 1872)
Frances Buchanan
(1786–1827)
Henry Septimus Hyde Wollaston
(1776–1867)
Mary Ann Blanckenhagen
(1778–1805)
Julia Adye Catharine Buchanan
(1816–1910)
George Buchanan Wollaston
architect and botanist
(1814–1899)
Charles Buchanan Wollaston
priest
(1816–1887)
Eleanor Reynolds
(1824–1891)
Thomas Vernon Wollaston
entomologist and malacologist
(1822–1878)
Henry Francis Wollaston
(1803–1876)
Elizabeth Rumsey Naylor
(1816–1879)
George Hyde Wollaston
(1844–1926)
Sarah Constance Richmond
(1847–1931)
Stanley George Buchanan Wollaston
(1848–1923)
Caroline Elizabeth Harper
(1854–1898)
Charles Henry Reynolds Wollaston
footballer
(1849–1926)
Arthur Naylor Wollaston
civil servant and author
(1842–1922)
Caroline Marianne Woods
(1844–1902)
Alexander Richmond Wollaston
surgeon and explorer
(1875–1930)
Herbert Arthur Buchanan Wollaston
navy rear-admiral
(1878–1975)
Margaret Ermyntrude Buchanan Wollaston
(1885–1944)
Charles Earle Raven
theology professor
(1885—1964)
Gerald Woods Wollaston
herald
(1874–1957)
John Earle Raven
philosopher
(1914–1980)
Notes: Source: Wollaston Family Tree
Family tree of the Wollaston family
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