Richard Lovell Edgeworth | |
Birth Date: | 31 May 1744 |
Birth Place: | Bath, England |
Death Place: | Edgeworthstown, County Longford, Ireland |
Spouses: |
|
Children: | 22, including
|
Alma Mater: | Corpus Christi College, Oxford |
Richard Lovell Edgeworth (31 May 1744 – 13 June 1817) was an Anglo-Irish politician, writer and inventor. He had 22 children.
Edgeworth was born in Pierrepont Street, Bath, England, son of Richard Edgeworth senior, and great-grandson of Sir Salathiel Lovell through his mother, Jane Lovell, granddaughter of Sir Salathiel. The Edgeworth family came to Ireland in the 1580s. Richard was descended from Francis Edgeworth, appointed joint Clerk of the Crown and Hanaper in 1606, who inherited a fortune from his brother Edward Edgeworth, Bishop of Down and Connor.
A Trinity College, Dublin and Corpus Christi College, Oxford alumnus, he is credited for creating, among other inventions, a machine to measure the size of a plot of land. He also made strides in developing educational methods. He anticipated the caterpillar track with an invention that he played around with for forty years but that he never successfully developed. He described it as a "cart that carries its own road".
He was married four times, including to Honora Sneyd and to Frances Beaufort, older sister of Francis Beaufort of the Royal Navy. Edgeworth and Francis Beaufort installed a semaphore line for Ireland. Edgeworth was a member of the Lunar Society, an informal organisation of Birmingham-based industrialists, scientists and intellectuals that met regularly to discuss and share ideas relating to their fields of interest. Other members included Erasmus Darwin, Josiah Wedgwood and James Watt.
Richard Edgeworth and his family lived in Ireland at his estate at Edgeworthstown, County Longford, where he reclaimed bogs and improved roads. He sat in Grattan's Parliament for St Johnstown (County Longford) from 1798 until the Act of Union in 1801, and advocated Catholic Emancipation and parliamentary reform. He was a founder-member of the Royal Irish Academy. He died in Edgeworthstown on 13 June 1817.
He was the father of 22 children by his four wives
Richard Edgeworth (1765–1796), m. Elizabeth Knight 1788. Died in America
Lovell Edgeworth (1766–1766)
Maria Edgeworth (1768–1849) the novelist
Emmeline Edgeworth (1770–1817), married Dr. John King of Bristol, October 1802
Anna Maria Edgeworth (1773–1824), married Dr. Thomas Beddoes 1794.
Honora Edgeworth (1774–1790)
Lovell Edgeworth (1775–1842), who inherited the property
Elizabeth Edgeworth (1781–1805)
Henry Edgeworth (1782–1813)
Charlotte Edgeworth (1783–1807)
Sophia Edgeworth (1784–1784)
Charles Sneyd Edgeworth (1786–1864) m. Henrica Broadhurst 1813, succeeded his brother Lovell Edgeworth
William Edgeworth (1788–1790)
Thomas Day Edgeworth (1789–1792)
Honora Edgeworth (1792–1858), married Francis Beaufort (his brother-in-law from his fourth marriage) in 1838
William Edgeworth (1794–1829), engineer.[1]
Frances Maria Edgeworth (1799–1848) m. Lestock Wilson 1829
Harriet Edgeworth (1801–1889) m. Richard Butler 1826
Sophia Edgeworth (1803–1836) m. Barry Fox 1824
Lucy Jane (1805–1897), married the Irish astronomer Thomas Romney Robinson 1843.
Francis Beaufort Edgeworth (1809–1846), Mentioned in Thomas Carlyle's Life of Sterling. Married Rosa Florentina Eroles of Spain.[2]
Michael Pakenham Edgeworth (1812–1881), m. Christina Macpherson 1846, botanist.