Online Encyclopedia

BART SIR WILLIAM MOLESWORTH

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 661 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BART
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SIR WILLIAM MOLESWORTH
  . (1810-1855),
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English politician, son of the 7th
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baronet, was born in
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London on the 23rd of May 181o, and in 1823 succeeded to the baronetcy . At Cambridge he fought a duel with his tutor, and for some time studied abroad . On the passing of the Reform Act of 1832 he was returned to parliament for the eastern division of'
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Cornwall, to support the
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ministry of Lord Grey . Through Charles Buller he made the acquaintance of Grote and James Mill, and in
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April 1835 he founded, in conjunction with Roebuck, the London Review, as an
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organ of the " Philosophic Radicals." After the publication of two volumes he
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purchased the Westminster Review, and for some time the
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united magazines were edited by him and J . S . Mill . From 1837 to 1841
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Sir William Moles-worth sat for Leeds, and acquired considerable influence in the House of
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Commons by his speeches and by his tact in presiding over the select committee on transportation . But his Radical-ism made little impression either on the house or on his constituency . From 1841 to 1845 he had no seat in parliament, occupying his leisure time in editing the
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works in Latin and English of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury, a recreation which cost him no less than £6000 . In 1845 he was returned for
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Southwark, and retained that seat until his
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death . On his return to parliament he devoted
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special attention to the condition of the colonies, and was the ardent champion of their self-government .

In

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January 1853 Lord Aberdeen included him in the
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cabinet as first
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commissioner of works, the chief
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work by which his name was brought into prominence at this time being the construction of the new Westminster
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Bridge; he also was the first to open
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Kew Gardens on Sundays . In
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July 1855 he was made colonial secretary, but he died on the 22nd of
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October . Molesworth was for many years a
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great friend of Mr and Mrs Grote, and Mrs Grote's privately printed work on The Philosophical Radicals (1866) contains an account of his
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life . He married in 1844, but had no children, and the baronetcy passed to a cousin . His
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sister (d . 1910) married Richard Ford, famous for his Handbook of Spain . A Life by Mrs Fawcett was published in 1903 . A full
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pedigree of the Molesworth
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family is printed in Sir John Maclean's Trigg Minor, vol. i . ; the titles of his speeches and works may be found in the Bibl . Cornubiensis, vol. i. and iii .

End of Article: BART SIR WILLIAM MOLESWORTH
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