Online Encyclopedia

HUGH MILLER (1802–1856)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 464 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
HUGH MILLER (1802–1856)  , Scottish geologist and man of letters, was born in humble circumstances at Cromarty, on the loth of
See also:
October 1802; his
See also:
father,
See also:
Hugh Miller, a seaman, was drowned when he was but five years old . His
See also:
primary
See also:
education was acquired at a dame's school and afterwards at the parish school, and at the age of six he had learned that " the
See also:
art of
See also:
reading is the art of finding stories in books." At the age of twelve he began to write verses . Two of his
See also:
mother's brothers, James and " Sandy " Wright, hard-working men at Cromarty, offered to assist him to enter the
See also:
ministry, but he felt no call to the sacred office, and from 182o to 1822 he was apprenticed to a stone-mason . During the next few years he obtained employment as a journeyman mason in
See also:
Edinburgh,
See also:
Inverness and various other parts of Scotland . The writing of verses occupied his leisure hours, and in 1826 he sent to the Scotsman an " Ode on
See also:
Greece " which was refused . It was not until 1829 that he met with his first success in the publication of Poems written in the Leisure Hours of a Journeyman Mason . These were printed and issued from the office of the Inverness Courier . Miller now turned his attention to
See also:
prose and contributed many essays to the Inverness Courier . As remarked by
See also:
Sir A . Geikie, " These made so favourable an impression that they were soon afterwards reprinted separately . They marked the advent of a writer gifted with no ordinary powers of narration and with the command of a pure,
See also:
nervous and masculine style." At the age of
See also:
thirty-two he was still a stone-mason, but in the latter
See also:
part of 1834 he was offered a
See also:
post as accountant in the Commercial
See also:
Bank of Scotland, and was almost immediately transferred to the Cromarty branch . His prose writings had now attracted much
See also:
notice, and he next issued in 1835 Scenes and Legends of the North of Scotland, or the traditional
See also:
history of Cromarty, in which he introduced some memoranda on the geology .

This

See also:
work met with a cordial reception . Miller, while still a stone-mason, had observed the abundant fossils in the
See also:
Jurassic shales on the shores of Ethie, but it was not until 183o that he first obtained remains of fossil fishes in the Old Red
See also:
Sandstone . These for many years he collected and studied as far as he could, and in 1837 some of his specimens were brought to the notice of R . I . Murchison and Professor Agassiz . In the following
See also:
year he was in communication with Murchison and his career as a geologist was definitely opened . In 1837 Miller married
See also:
Lydia Falconer Frazer (1811?—1876), a lady of good position and
See also:
great natural ability, whom he had met six years previously . He set up his household in Cromarty, on a
See also:
salary of sixty pounds a year, aided by the small sums he then earned by
See also:
literary work; and his wife took a few pupils . Mrs Miller eventually became well known under the pseudonym of Mrs Harriet
See also:
Myrtle as author of the Ocean Child (1857) and other story-books for children . Soon after his
See also:
marriage, Miller became greatly stirred by the
See also:
internal dissensions in the Church of Scotland, of which he was a staunch member, and he published two
See also:
pamphlets which brought him to the notice of some of the prominent members of the liberal church party . In 1839 he went by invitation to Edinburgh to edit a new Whig newspaper, the Witness, which was intended to support the views of those who after the disruption in 1843 formed the
See also:
Free Church . The paper rapidly attained a large circulation; and this was no doubt largely due to his own literary and scientific essays .

In 1840 he contributed a

series of articles on The Old Red Sandstone, and these were reprinted in
See also:
book form in the following year . The charm of this work was widely appreciated, as was also the natural sagacity shown in the descriptions and restorations of some of the fossil fishes . His Footprints of the Creator was published in 1849, and My
See also:
Schools and Schoolmasters in 1854 . He was engaged on the final proofs of his Testimony of the Rocks on the day of his
See also:
death . During the last year of his
See also:
life he suffered from inflammation of the lungs; and the strain of
See also:
ill-
See also:
health proving too severe, he died by his own hand in Edinburgh on the 23rd of December 1856 . By request of his wife, The Cruise of the Betsey, with Rambles of a Geologist (1858) previously printed only in the Witness newspaper was published under the editorship of the Rev . W . S . Symonds . In memory of Hugh Miller a monument was erected by public subscription in 1860 at Cromarty; and the cottage in which he was born was acquired at a later period by his son Hugh . In it have been placed part of his library, a set of the Witness newspaper, some letters addressed to him, and a number of
See also:
geological specimens, including many referred to in his Old Red Sandstone . On the 22nd of August 1902 the centenary of his birth was celebrated at Cromarty, and was attended by scientific representatives from all parts of the
See also:
world .

His

elder son, Hugh Miller (1850-1896), passed through the Royal School of Mines and joined the Geological Survey in England in 1873; afterwards he was transferred to Scotland and surveyed the country around Cromarty and other parts of Ross-
See also:
shire and Sutherlandshire . He was author of Landscape Geology, 1891 . See The Life and Letters of Hugh Miller, by Peter Bayne (2 vols., 1871) ; Hugh Miller; his work and influence, address by Sir A . Geikie, at the centenary celebration . (H . B .

End of Article: HUGH MILLER (1802–1856)
[back]
MILLENNIUM (a pseudo-Latin word formed on the analo...
[next]
JOAQUIN MILLER (CINCINNATUS HEINE) (1841- )

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.