Henry Toynbee
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Henry Toynbee FRAS FRGS (22 October 1819 – 29 March 1909) was an merchant sailor and an early meteorologist, whose career was dedicated to passing on his expertise. He introduced local weather-forecasting to the British Isles.


Personal life

Henry Toynbee was born in Heckington, Lincolnshire on 22 October 1819, and baptised there the next day. He was the sixth son of fifteen children of the wealthy land owner and farmer George Toynbee (1783–1865). George's first wife, and Henry's mother, was Elizabeth, née Cullen, (1785–1820). Henry's parents were married at Bracebridge, Lincolnshire, on 21 May 1811, by Licence. On 22 December 1854 Henry, aged 35, married 25-year-old Ellen Philadelphia Smyth (July 1828 – 1881), a daughter of Admiral
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KCB Henry Toynbee and his wife Ellen had no children. She died aged 53 in 1881 in Kensington


Career


At sea

At the age of fourteen Henry signed on as a midshipman and was appointed to the
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. He then became third officer for Thomas & William Smith, ship builders, established in 1756 at St. Peter's, Newcastle upon Tyne, and later took command of some of their best-known ships. While at sea, he had a reputation as a navigator, and for holding daily navigation classes, through which he trained some the best navigators of his era. In addition, he submitted several Papers to the Royal Astronomical Society on the subject of rating chronometers by lunar distance. His wife often sailed with him, and added her illustrations to his meteorological logbooks. In 1859 the President of the Board of Trade presented Henry Toynbee with a gold pocket watch "for the best meteorological registers since 1855." The British Meteorological Office have a portrait of him.


On land

In 1866, aged 47, Henry went ashore, and became Marine Superintendent of the Meteorological Office. Here he produced his "Barometer Manual", and during the next twenty-one years wrote many papers on meteorology. He also provided information about weather conditions in the Southern Ocean to Sir George Airy for planning the 1874
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Expeditions. During 1888 and 1889 at the request of the Council of the Meteorological Office Toynbee gave lectures at various British ports on the use of the barometer for seafarers. In 1890 the lectures were published as "Weather Forecasting for the British Islands by means of a barometer, the direction and force of wind and cirrus clouds".


Death

Toynbee died in London on 29 March 1909, aged 89.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Toynbee, Henry 1819 births 1909 deaths