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WILLIAM RATHBONE GREG (1809–1881)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 555 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM RATHBONE GREG (1809–1881)  ,
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English essayist, the son of a merchant, was born at Manchester in 1809 . He was educated at the university of
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Edinburgh and for a time managed a mill of his
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father's at Bury, and in 1832 began business on his own account . He entered with ardour into the struggle for
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free trade, and obtained in 1842 the prize offered by the Anti-Corn Law
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League for the best essay on " Agriculture and the Corn
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Laws." He was too much occupied with
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political, economical and theological speculations to give undivided attention to his business, which he gave up in 185o to devote himself to writing . His Creed of Christendom was published in 1851, and in 1852 he contributed no less than twelve articles to four leading quarterlies . Disraeli praised him;
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Sir George Cornewall Lewis bestowed a Commissionership of Customs upon him in 1856; and in 1864 he was made
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Comptroller of the
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Stationery Office . Besides contributions to
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periodicals he produced several volumes of essays on political and social philosophy . The general spirit of these is indicated by the titles of two of the best known, The Enigmas of
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Life (1872) and Rocks Ahead (1874) . They represent a reaction from the high hopes of the author's youth, when wise legislation was assumed to be a remedy for every public
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ill . Greg was a man of deep moral earnestness of character and was interested in many philanthropic
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works . He died at
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Wimbledon on the i5ih of November 1881 . His
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brother, ROBERT HYDE GREG (1795-1875), was an economist and
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antiquary of some distinction . Another brother,
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SAMUEL, GREG (1804–1876), became well known in
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Lancashire by his philanthropic efforts on behalf of the working-
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people .

PERCY GREG (1836–1889), son of William Rathbone Greg, also wrote, like his father, on politics, but his views were violently reactionary, His
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History of the
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United States to the Reconstruction of the Union (1887) is a polemic rather than a history .

End of Article: WILLIAM RATHBONE GREG (1809–1881)
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