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James Patrick Muirhead
FRSE Fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (FRSE) is an award granted to individuals that the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Scotland's national academy of science and letters, judged to be "eminently distinguished in their subject". This soci ...
(26 July 1813 – 15 October 1898) was a Scottish advocate and author, best known as the biographer of
James Watt James Watt (; 30 January 1736 (19 January 1736 OS) – 25 August 1819) was a Scottish inventor, mechanical engineer, and chemist who improved on Thomas Newcomen's 1712 Newcomen steam engine with his Watt steam engine in 1776, which was fun ...
.


Life

Born at The Grove,
Hamilton, Lanarkshire Hamilton ( sco, Hamiltoun; gd, Baile Hamaltan ) is a large town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. It serves as the main administrative centre of the South Lanarkshire council area. It sits south-east of Glasgow, south-west of Edinburgh and nor ...
, he was son of
Lockhart Muirhead Lockhart Muirhead (1765–1829) was a Scottish librarian, museum-keeper and academic. He was Regius Professor of Zoology at Glasgow University, from 1807. Life Muirhead travelled in Europe shortly before the French Revolution, and subsequently wro ...
; George Muirhead was his great-uncle. He was educated first at Glasgow College. Gaining on 3 February 1832 a Snell exhibition at
Balliol College, Oxford Balliol College () is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. One of Oxford's oldest colleges, it was founded around 1263 by John I de Balliol, a landowner from Barnard Castle in County Durham, who provided the f ...
, he matriculated there on 6 April 1832; spending his long vacations in alpine expeditions, and in the study of German rather than in working for honours, he took a third class in lit. hum. on graduating B.A. in 1835 (M.A. 1838). Admitted advocate at Edinburgh in 1838, Muirhead practised law in Edinburgh. He lived with his family at 26 Heriot Row in
Edinburgh's New Town The New Town is a central area of Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland. It was built in stages between 1767 and around 1850, and retains much of its original neo-classical and Georgian period architecture. Its best known street is Princes Street ...
. He was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh The Royal Society of Edinburgh is Scotland's national academy of science and letters. It is a registered charity that operates on a wholly independent and non-partisan basis and provides public benefit throughout Scotland. It was established i ...
in 1841, his proposer being Sir John Robison. His wife found the climate of Edinburgh too cold, and in 1846 he gave up his career at the Scottish bar, and in 1847 settled at Haseley Court, Oxfordshire, a property in his wife's family. Muirhead died in his eighty-sixth year, on 15 October 1898.


Works

While at Oxford, he had become acquainted with his kinsman James Watt the younger, who decided not to write a memoir of his father, and gave the task to Muirhead. In 1804 his grandfather, Patrick Muirhead of Glasgow University, married his cousin, Anne Campbell, whose mother (née Muirhead) was a first cousin of James Watt. Muirhead in 1839 translated
François Arago Dominique François Jean Arago ( ca, Domènec Francesc Joan Aragó), known simply as François Arago (; Catalan: ''Francesc Aragó'', ; 26 February 17862 October 1853), was a French mathematician, physicist, astronomer, freemason, supporter of t ...
's ''Eloge Historique de James Watt'' for the
Académie des Sciences The French Academy of Sciences (French: ''Académie des sciences'') is a learned society, founded in 1666 by Louis XIV at the suggestion of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, to encourage and protect the spirit of French scientific research. It was at the ...
, given in 1834. In the priority dispute of Watt with
Henry Cavendish Henry Cavendish ( ; 10 October 1731 – 24 February 1810) was an English natural philosopher and scientist who was an important experimental and theoretical chemist and physicist. He is noted for his discovery of hydrogen, which he termed "infl ...
over the discovery of the chemical composition of water, he visited Paris in 1842 to confer with savants there, and in 1846 published a vindication of Watt, ''The Correspondence of the late James Watt on his Discovery of the Theory of the Composition of Water''. This was followed in 1854 by ''The Mechanical Inventions of James Watt'' (3 vols.). The third volume, illustrated with engravings of machinery by
Wilson Lowry Wilson Lowry FRS (24 January 1762 – 23 June 1824) was an English engraver. Life He was born at Whitehaven, Cumberland, the son of Strickland Lowry, a portrait painter. The family settled in Worcester, and Wilson Lowry, as a boy, left home ...
, dealt with patent specifications; the second with extracts from correspondence. The introductory memoir (vol. i.) was the basis of the fuller ''Life of James Watt'' that Muirhead published in 1858 (2nd edit. 1859). Other works were: *''Disputatio Juridica ad Lib. XII. Tit. ii. Digest = de Jurejurando sive voluntario sive necessario sive Judiciali'' (1838); *''Winged Words on Chantrey's Woodcocks'' (1857) a collection of epigrams (editor) *''The Vaux de Vire of Maistre Jean le Houx, Advocate, of Vire. Edited and translated into English Verse, with an Introduction'' (1875). On the purported poems of
Olivier Basselin Olivier Basselin (; ; was a French poet. Life He was born in the Val-de-Vire in Normandy about the end of the 14th century. He was by occupation a fuller, and tradition still points out the site of his mill. His drinking songs became famous unde ...
by Jean le Houx. Between August 1882 and March 1891 Muirhead contributed to ''Blackwood's Magazine'' original poems and translations from English and old French poems, into Latin or English verse compositions as "J. P. M." He printed privately more of the same.


Family

In 1844 Muirhead married Katharine Elizabeth, second daughter of
Matthew Robinson Boulton Matthew Robinson Boulton (8 August 1770 – 16 May 1842) was an English manufacturer, a pioneer of management, the son of Matthew Boulton and the father of Matthew Piers Watt Boulton, who first patented the aileron. He was responsible with Ja ...
. She predeceased her husband in 1890. Six children survived them, the eldest son being Lionel Boulton Campbell Lockhart Muirhead, who composed hymns, and the third son Colonel Herbert Hugh Muirhead, R.E., who played for the
Royal Engineers The Corps of Royal Engineers, usually called the Royal Engineers (RE), and commonly known as the ''Sappers'', is a corps of the British Army. It provides military engineering and other technical support to the British Armed Forces and is heade ...
in the
1872 FA Cup Final The 1872 FA Cup Final was a football match between Wanderers and Royal Engineers on 16 March 1872 at Kennington Oval in London. It was the final of the first staging of the Football Association Challenge Cup (known in the modern era as the FA C ...
. Their daughter Beatrix Marion (later Sturt) would write her father's biography, mentioning her brothers but not herself. Lionel's son,
Anthony Anthony or Antony is a masculine given name, derived from the ''Antonia (gens), Antonii'', a ''gens'' (Roman naming conventions, Roman family name) to which Mark Antony (''Marcus Antonius'') belonged. According to Plutarch, the Antonii gens were ...
, was MP for
Wells Wells most commonly refers to: * Wells, Somerset, a cathedral city in Somerset, England * Well, an excavation or structure created in the ground * Wells (name) Wells may also refer to: Places Canada *Wells, British Columbia England * Wells ...
in
Somerset ( en, All The People of Somerset) , locator_map = , coordinates = , region = South West England , established_date = Ancient , established_by = , preceded_by = , origin = , lord_lieutenant_office =Lord Lieutenant of Somerset , lord_ ...
from 1929 to 1939.


Notes

Attribution {{DEFAULTSORT:Muirhead, James Patrick 1813 births 1898 deaths Scottish lawyers Scottish biographers Scottish book editors