Frederick Eden (other)
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Sir Frederick Morton Eden, 2nd Baronet, of Maryland (18 June 1766 – 14 November 1809) was an English writer on poverty and pioneering social investigator.


Early life

Frederick Morton Eden was the eldest son of Sir Robert Eden, 1st Baronet, of Maryland, and his wife
Caroline Calvert Caroline Louisa Waring Calvert (; 25 February 1834 – 28 April 1872) was an early Australian writer, botanist and illustrator. While she was well known for her fiction during her lifetime, her long-term significance rests on her botanical work ...
, sister of the last Lord Baltimore and niece of
Thomas Bladen Thomas Bladen (23 February 1698 – 2 February 1780) was a colonial governor in North America and politician who sat in the British House of Commons between 1727 and 1741. He served as the 19th Proprietary Governor of Maryland from 1742 to 1747 ...
's wife. His father was governor of Maryland and was created a baronet in 1776. Frederick inherited the baronetcy on the death of his father in 1784. Eden studied at
Christ Church, Oxford Christ Church ( la, Ædes Christi, the temple or house, '' ædēs'', of Christ, and thus sometimes known as "The House") is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England. Founded in 1546 by King Henry VIII, the college is uniqu ...
. He was one of the founders of the Globe Insurance Company and later its chairman. in 1809 he died suddenly at the office of the company he founded at the early age of 43.


Career

Eden’s reputation as a social investigator rests on '' The State of the Poor, '' published in 3 volumes in 1797. He explained the circumstances that led him to do the research:
The difficulties which the labouring classes experienced, from the high price of grain, and of provisions in general, as well as of cloathing and fuel, during the years 1794 and 1795, induced me, from motives both of benevolence and personal curiosity, to investigate their conditions in various parts of the kingdom.
The book was intended to provide a factual basis for the current debate on what to do about the poor. Eden writes at the beginning of the book:
These and many similar questions elating to the poor lawscannot, as it seems to me, be fully and satisfactorily answered, unless many minute circumstances are previously stated, which have been rarely sufficiently attended to in the plausible and ingenious but unsolid speculations of several merely theoretic reasoners.
In the style of the time, the full title of the book is a catalogue of its contents:
''The State of the Poor: or a history of the labouring classes in England, from the Conquest to the present period; in which are particularly considered, their domestic economy, with respect to diet, dress, fuel, and habitation; and the various plans which, from time to time, have been proposed and adopted for the relief of the poor: together with parochial reports relative to the administration of work-houses, and houses of industry; the state of the Friendly Societies, and other public institutions; in several agricultural, commercial and manufacturing, districts. With a large appendix; containing a comparative and chronological table of the prices of labour, of provisions, and of other commodities; an account of the poor in Scotland; and many original documents on subjects of national importance.''
Eden did some of the field-work himself, obtained information from clergymen but also sent out "a remarkably faithful and intelligent person" with a questionnaire he had designed. This was modelled on that used by Sir John Sinclair in his ''Statistical Account of Scotland.''


Influence and legacy

In '' The Literature of Political Economy'' McCulloch wrote of Eden's work "Altogether, this is the grand storehouse of information respecting the labouring classes of England, and should have a prominent place in every library." Karl Marx wrote that Eden was "the only disciple of
Adam Smith Adam Smith (baptized 1723 – 17 July 1790) was a Scottish economist and philosopher who was a pioneer in the thinking of political economy and key figure during the Scottish Enlightenment. Seen by some as "The Father of Economics"——— ...
during the eighteenth century that produced any work of any importance"' (DNB). However, he also criticized his advocacy of expropriation of the poor and vulnerable by the ruling classes. In ''Capital'', Marx cites Eden: "It may, perhaps be worthy the attention of the public to consider, whether any manufacture, which, in order to be carried on successfully, requires that cottages and workhouses should be ransacked for poor children; that they should be employed by turns during the greater part of the night and robbed of that rest which, though indispensable to all, is most required by the young; and that numbers of both sexes, of different ages and dispositions, should be collected together in such a manner that the contagion of example cannot but lead to profligacy and debauchery; will add to the sum of individual or national felicity?"Marx, K., Mandel, E., & Fowkes, B. (1976). Capital: A Critique of Political Economy. Vol. I. London: Penguin, 922
Edgeworth Edgeworth may refer to: People * Edgeworth (surname) Places * Edgeworth, Gloucestershire, England * Edgeworth, New South Wales, Australia * Edgeworth, Pennsylvania, USA * Edgeworth Island, Nunavut, Canada * Edgeworthstown, County Longford, Repu ...
wrote the article on Eden in the original '' Palgrave Dictionary.'' He considered that the book entitled Eden to "rank with Arthur Young as one of those immediate successors of Adam Smith who best developed the inductive branch of political economy." The twentieth-century British Prime Minister
Anthony Eden Robert Anthony Eden, 1st Earl of Avon, (12 June 1897 – 14 January 1977) was a British Conservative Party politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1955 until his resignation in 1957. Achieving rapid promo ...
was a kinsman and, according to a recent biography (D.R. Thorpe '' Eden: The Life and Times of Anthony Eden'' ), he was influenced by F. M. Eden's work and kept a copy on his shelves throughout his life.


Family life

Eden married Anne Smith on 10 January 1792. They had seven children: * Marianne Eden (c1793 – 13 May 1859) * Sir Frederick Eden, 3rd Baronet (c1794- – December 1814) * Caroline Eden (c1801 – 10 November 1854) married Vice-Admiral Hyde Parker * Sir William Eden, 4th/6th Bt.+1 (31 Jan 1803 – 21 Oct 1873) * Rt Reverend Robert Eden (2 September 1804 – 26 Aug 1886) * Lieutenant-General
George Morton Eden Lieutenant-General George Morton Eden (10 May 1806 – November 1862) was a British Army officer who became General Officer Commanding Western District. Military career Born the fourth son of Sir Frederick Eden, 2nd Baronet and Anne Smith, Eden ...
(10 May 1806 – November 1862) * Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Eden (3 July 1808 – 7 Mar 1878) Retrieved September 2011


See also

*
Eden baronets The Eden Baronetcy, of West Auckland in the County of Durham, and the Eden Baronetcy, of Maryland in North America, are two titles in the Baronetage of England and Baronetage of Great Britain respectively that have been united under a single hold ...


References


Further reading

* Stone, Richard. (1997): '' Some British Empiricists in the Social Sciences 1650–1900 '' Cambridge University Press, New York. * Stone, M. (2001): Sir Frederick Morton Eden. In '' Statisticians of the Centuries '' (C.C. Heyde and E. Seneta, eds.), pp. 115–118. Springer , New York.


External links

* Retrieved September 2011 *Eden, Frederick Morton, Sir
''The state of the poor...'' Volume 1, 1797
(1966 facsimile) Retrieved 7 June 2022 *Eden, Frederick Morton, Sir
''The state of the poor...'' Volume 2, 1797
Retrieved 7 June 2022 *Eden, Frederick Morton, Sir
''The state of the poor...'' Volume 3, 1797
Retrieved 7 June 2022 {{DEFAULTSORT:Eden, Frederick 18th-century British economists British statisticians 1766 births 1809 deaths Alumni of Christ Church, Oxford Frederick Eden Baronets in the Baronetage of Great Britain 18th-century British male writers