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CHARLES WILLIAM PEACH (1800-1886)

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 18 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHARLES WILLIAM PEACH (1800-1886)  ,
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British naturalist and geologist, was born on the 3oth of September 1800 at Wansford in Northamptonshire; his
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father at the time was a saddler and harness-maker, and afterwards became an innkeeper farming about 8o acres of
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land . He received an elementary
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education at Wansford and at Folkingham in
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Lincolnshire; and assisted for several years in the
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inn and
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farm . In 1824 he was appointed
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riding officer in the Revenue Coast-guard at Weybourn in Norfolk . Sea-weeds and other marine organisms now attracted his attention, and these he zealously collected . His duties during the next few years led him to remove successively to Sheringham, Hasboro (Happisburgh), Cromer and Cley, all in Norfolk . In the course of his rambles he met the Rev . James Layton, curate at Catfield, who lent him books and assisted in laying the
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foundations of accurate knowledge . About the
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year 1830 he was transferred to Charmouth in Dorset, thence to
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Beer, and
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Paignton in Devon, and to Gorran Haven near Mevagissey in
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Cornwall . Here he continued to pursue his zoological studies 4 This is an amended edition of that of 1899 . ' This was practically a re-enactment of that of 1899 . ' This has since been done to a large extent by the
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Conference of
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London (1908-1909) . See BLOCKADE, CONTRABAND, INTERNATIONAL LAW PEACE .

and supplied many specimens to G .

Johnston, who was then preparing his
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History of the British Zoophytes (1838) . It was here too that he first found fossils in some of the older rocks previously regarded as unfossiliferous—the
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discovery of which proved the presence of
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Bala Beds (Ordovician or
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Lower
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Silurian) in the neighbourhood of Gorran Haven . In 1841 he read a paper before the British Association at Plymouth " On the Fossil Organic Remains found on the south-east coast of Cornwall," and in 1843 he brought before the Royal
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Geological Society of Cornwall an account of his discovery of fish remains in the Devonian slates near Polperro . Peach was transferred for a time to Fowey; and in 1849 to Scotland, first to
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Peterhead and then to
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Wick (1853), where he made acquaintance with Robert Dick of
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Thurso . He collected the old red
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Sandstone fishes; and during a sojourn at Durness he first found fossils in the
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Cambrian
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limestone (18J4) . Peach retired from the government service in 1861, and died at
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Edinburgh on the 28th of
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February 1886 .
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Biographical
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notice, with portrait, in S . Smiles's Robert Dick, Baker, of Thurso, Geologist and Botanist (1878) .

End of Article: CHARLES WILLIAM PEACH (1800-1886)
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