Henry Chichester Hart Explained

Henry Chichester Hart
Fields:Natural history, Botany
Known For:Exploration, climbing, walking
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Dublin

Henry Chichester Hart MRIA FLS (1847–1908) was an Anglo-Irish botanist and explorer.[1]

Early life

He was the son of Sir Andrew Searle Hart and his wife Frances MacDougall, daughter of Henry MacDougall, Q.C., of Dublin.[2] He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, with a B.A. in experimental and natural science.

Botany and exploration

From the age of 17, Hart conducted a botanical survey of Donegal (lasting until 1898), which led to his publication Flora of the County Donegal, widely regarded as his most important botanical work. The publication was destroyed during a fire as part of the 1916 Easter Rising.[3]

In 1886, H. C. Hart wagered fifty guineas with the naturalist R. M. Barrington that he could walk the between the tram terminus in Terenure in Dublin, Ireland to the summit of Lugnaquilla in Wicklow and back in under 24 hours. Hart, accompanied by Sir Frederick Cullinan, walked from Terenure to Lugnaquilla, in the Wicklow Mountains - a total of 75 miles - and back in 24 hours, making a record at the time. Hart left Terenure at 10:58 pm on 20 June 1886 and arrived back at 10:48 pm the next evening.[4] [5] The success of this challenge is remembered by the commemorative Hart Walk.[5]

In 1875–1876, Hart accompanied Sir George Strong Nares as a naturalist on his British Arctic Expedition.[6] He was also a naturalist on the Palestine Exploration Fund's 1883-1884 expedition to Palestine.[3]

Personal life

In 1887, he married Edith Susan Anna Donelly (1852-1901), daughter of William Donnely, C.B., L.L.D, of Dublin. They had two daughters and divorced in 1897.[7]

Hart was also interested in Elizabethan literature and he edited numerous Shakespeare plays for the Arden Shakespeare and many works by Ben Jonson for Methuen's Standard Library.[8]

He lived at Carrablagh House, Portsalon, County Donegal. He was High Sheriff of Donegal in 1895.

Publications

  1. On the botany of the British polar expedition of 1875–1876, (1880).
  2. On the botany of Sinai and South Palestine, (1885).
  3. Flora of Howth, (Hodges, Figgis, 1887).
  4. The animals mentioned in the Bible, (Religious Tract Society, 1888).[9]
  5. Flora of the County Donegal, (Sealy, Bryers and Walker ; 1898).

Notes and References

  1. J. Akeroyd, 2004, "Henry Chichester Hart (1847-1908), botanist and polymath", Sherkin Comment, 38:21.
  2. http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Biographies/Hart.html Andrew Searle Hart, 1811-1890
  3. http://plants.jstor.org/stable/10.5555/al.ap.person.bm000055721 Hart, Henry Chichester (1847-1908)
  4. http://www.irishexaminer.com/lifestyle/features/the-way-that-we-climbed-a-look-at-the-rivalry-of-irish-climbers-322664.html The Irish Times, Wednesday, 8 April 2015
  5. http://www.simonstewart.ie/Longwalk/HartWalk/hartwalkRecord2004.htm The Hart Walk, 2006
  6. Web site: H.C. Hart 1847-1908 . 2016-09-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150223224747/http://www.botanicgardens.ie/herb/books/inetok.htm . 2015-02-23 . dead .
  7. An Irish Family History, Vol 3, The Harts of Glenalla, by K.E. Whitton
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=BFxdo8PyeT4C&dq=henry+chichester+hart+arden+shakespeare&pg=PA257 50. H.C. Hart, a critical introduction
  9. Review of The Animals Mentioned in the Bible by Henry Chichester Hart. The Academy. 13 July 1889. 36. 897. 25–26.