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HUGH EDWIN STRICKLAND (1811—1853)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 1024 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HUGH EDWIN STRICKLAND (1811—1853)  ,
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English naturalist and geologist, was born at Righton, in the East
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Riding of York-
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shire, on the 2nd of March 1811, and was grandson of
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Sir George Strickland, Bart . As a lad he acquired a taste for natural
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history which dominated his
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life . He received his early
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education from private tutors and in 1829 entered Oriel College, Oxford . He attended the anatomical lectures of Dr John Kidd and the
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geological lectures of Dr W . Buckland and he became greatly interested both in zoology and geology . He graduated B.A. in 1831, and proceeded to M.A. in the following
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year . Returning to his home at Cracombe House, near
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Tewkesbury, he began to study the geology of the Vale of
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Evesham, communicating papers to the Geological Society of
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London (1833—1834) . He also gave much attention to
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ornithology . Becoming acquainted with Murchison he was introduced to William John Hamilton (1805—1867) and accompanied him in 1835 in a journey through
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Asia Minor, the Thracian Bosporus and the Island of Zante . Mr Hamilton afterwards published the results of this journey and of a subsequent excursion by himself to Armenia in Researches in Asia Minor,
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Pontus and Armenia (1842): After his return in 1836 Strickland brought before the Geological Society several papers on the geology of the districts he had visited in
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southern
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Europe and Asia . He also described in detail the drift deposits in the counties of Worcester and Warwick,
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drawing particular attention to the fluviatile deposits of Cropthorne in which remains of hippopotamus, &c., were found . With Murchison he read before the Geological Society an important paper " On the Upper Formations of the New Red
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Sandstone
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System in Gloucestershire, Worcestershire and
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Warwickshire" (Trans .

Geol .

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Soc., 1840) . In other papers he described the Bristol Bone-bed near Tewkesbury and the Ludlow Bone-bed of Woolhope . He was author likewise of ornithological
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memoirs communicated to the Zoological Society, the Annals and
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Magazine of Natural History and the
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British Association . He also drew up the report, in 1842, of a committee appointed by the British Association to consider the rules of zoological nomenclature . He was one of the founders of the Ray Society suggested in 1843 and established in 1844, the
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object being the publication of
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works on natural history which could not be undertaken by scientific societies or by publishers . For this society Strickland corrected, enlarged and edited the MS. of Agassiz for the Bibliographia Zoologiae et GeOlogiae (1848) . In 1845 he edited with J . Buckman a second and enlarged edition of Murchison's Outline of the Geology of the neighbourhood of
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Cheltenham . In 1846 he settled at Oxford, and two years later he issued in conjunction with Dr A . G . Melville a
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work on The Dodo and its kindred .

In 1850 he was appointed

deputy reader in geology at Oxford during the illness of Buckland, and in 1852 he was elected F.R.S . In the following year, after attending the meeting of the British Association at Hull, he went to examine the cuttings on the Manchester, Sheffield &
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Lincolnshire railway near Retford, and he was there knocked down and killed by a train on the 14th of September 1853 . He was buried at Deerhnrst church near Tewkesbury, where a memorial window was erected . See Memoirs of H . E . Strickland, by Sir William Jardine, Bart . (1858) .

End of Article: HUGH EDWIN STRICKLAND (1811—1853)
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