William Arthur Shaw Explained

Birth Date:1865 4, df=y
Birth Place:Ashton-under-Lyne, England
Death Place:Enfield, Middlesex, England
Alma Mater:Owens College

William Arthur Shaw (1865–1943) was an English historian and archivist.[1]

Life

Born on 19 April 1865, in Hooley Hill, Ashton-under-Lyne, now in Greater Manchester, he was the son of James Shaw and his wife Sarah Ann Hampshire. He graduated B.A. at Owens College in 1883.[1]

Shaw worked for the Chetham Society, and then the Public Record Office, as an editor. In 1940 he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy. He died at Chase Farm Hospital in Enfield, Middlesex, on 15 April 1943.[1]

The majority of his later life was devoted to the calendaring of Treasury records of the later Stuart and early Georgian period, between 1660 and 1745. These were published with extensive introductions, charting his view of the development of the national financial administration and other topics, and often challenging the received wisdom. F.H. Slingsby, who brought Shaw's posthumous final volumes to press, considered that the "animosities" expressed in some of these introductions were "usually well founded";[2] although P.G.M. Dickson considered that "Shaw's views were curiously vehement and often based on inaccurate data, and must be treated with caution."[3] In particular, Shaw's summary tables of revenue and expenditure have been found to be incorrect, failing to take into account some of the intricate accounting devices of the time, leading him to incorrect conclusions.[4]

Shaw also wrote a substantial number of entries for the Dictionary of National Biography.[5]

Works

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. 36053 . F. H. Slingsby, revised by Marc Brodie . Shaw, William Arthur (1865–1943).
  2. F.H. Slingsby (1959), "Shaw, William Arthur" in L.G. Wickham Legg and E.T. Williams (eds.), Dictionary of National Biography, Sixth Supplement, 1941-1950
  3. P.G.M. Dickson (1967/1993) The Financial Revolution in England: A Study in the Development of Public Credit, 1688-1756: Bibliography: Calendars, Parliamentary Papers, Statutes, Journals
  4. D.C. Coleman (1976), Review of The English Public Revenue by C.D. Chandaman (1975), The Historical Journal 19(1), 278-279
  5. See eg Wikisource Author:William Arthur Shaw.