John Ingram Lockhart (writer)
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John Ingram Lockhart (1812–1889) was an English writer and translator. He is known also for his involvement in radical politics.


Life

He was son of James Lockhart, born in
Hawkshead Hawkshead is a village and civil parish in Cumbria, England, which attracts tourists to the South Lakeland area. The parish includes the hamlets of Hawkshead Hill, to the north west, and Outgate, a similar distance north. Hawkshead contains on ...
, at that time in Lancashire. Brought up in Haarlem, he encouraged his school friend Nicolaas Beets to translate
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. They also read
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together. Lockhart in 1877 published a translation of a tale from Beets's 1839 work ''Camera Obscura'', as "The Leyden Eel-bobber". A Fellow of the
Royal Astronomical Society (Whatever shines should be observed) , predecessor = , successor = , formation = , founder = , extinction = , merger = , merged = , type = NG ...
, as his father was, in 1838 Lockhart was listed at the same address, Lanhams in Berkshire. In 1839 he contested as a radical candidate, nominated by John Gibbs. Charles John Baillie Hamilton was elected, Lockhart coming second ahead of
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. In 1846, when Donald Maclean who was a sitting MP for Oxford suffered bankruptcy, he put himself forward as a replacement, on a policy platform of six points: (a) abolition of church rates, (b) change in the Poor Laws, (c) abolition of primogeniture, (d) dissolution of the
church court An ecclesiastical court, also called court Christian or court spiritual, is any of certain courts having jurisdiction mainly in spiritual or religious matters. In the Middle Ages, these courts had much wider powers in many areas of Europe than be ...
s, (e) extension of suffrage, and (f) full civil and religious liberty. He signed from Pomona Place, Fulham. His chances as a prospective candidate were affected by newspaper reports of a fight in a third-class railway carriage, which he had entered in a party with the Rev. William Langley and others. Lockhart spoke at a broad-based reform meeting in London in March 1852. He was then a Chartist candidate in the 1852 general election for , where two Liberals were elected. At a disorderly meeting in November 1853 at the National Hall, Holborn, for an anniversary of the November uprising, supporters of
George Julian Harney George Julian Harney (17 February 1817 – 9 December 1897) was a British political activist, journalist, and Chartist leader. He was also associated with Marxism, socialism, and universal suffrage. Early life George Julian Harney, the son ...
and Lockhart clashed to try to gain the chair. In 1855 Lockhart was a speaker for the National Reform League, in July for the State Reform Association, and in December of that year he spoke at a meeting chaired by Francis Bennoch on the Bank Charter Act. In February 1857 Lockhart chaired a meeting against the Second Opium War; he was on the platform for a March meeting against the Opium War and
Anglo-Persian War The Anglo-Persian War or the Anglo-Iranian War () lasted between 1 November 1856 and 4 April 1857, and was fought between the United Kingdom and Iran, which was ruled by the Qajar dynasty. The war had the British oppose an attempt by Iran to ...
. After the watershed general election of March–April 1857, perceived to have purged from parliament radicals including
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, he spoke with Bronterre O'Brien at a London meeting at the Royal British Institution off
City Road City Road or The City Road is a road that runs through central London. The northwestern extremity of the road is at Angel where it forms a continuation of Pentonville Road. Pentonville Road itself is the modern name for the eastern part of Lon ...
, chaired by Samuel Lucas. He outlined a political programme of (a)
manhood suffrage Universal manhood suffrage is a form of voting rights in which all adult male citizens within a political system are allowed to vote, regardless of income, property, religion, race, or any other qualification. It is sometimes summarized by the slog ...
, (b) more equal distribution of electors in the population, (c) no property qualification for MPs, (d) vote by ballot, and (e) triennial parliaments. In 1862 Lockhart was in bankruptcy proceedings, as a practitioner of homoeopathy and hydropathy. At the time of his death, he was described as a familiar figure in the British Museum Reading Room.


Works

*'' An Apology for a Thief, or the title of 'Divine Right' a mask to cover the iniquities of the great, by a British Ismaelite'' (1839) *''Attica and Athens'' (1842), translated from Karl Otfried Müller, Georg Friedrich Grotefend and others *''The Memoirs of the Conquistador Bernal Díaz del Castillo'' (1844), translated from the Spanish *''Report of the Fulham Charities'' (1846) *''The Good Boy Henry, Or, The Young Child's Book of Manners'' (1849), translation from the Dutch of Nicolaas Anslijn *''The Wife's Peril: A Romance'' (1867) *''The Triple Angel'', poem A volume of his correspondence with Nicolaas Beets was published in 1884.


Family

Lockhart married Emma Marie Angela Hayward in 1841. She died in 1849.


Notes

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lockhart, John Ingram English translators English male novelists English male non-fiction writers People from Hawkshead