Joseph Hume

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Joseph Hume, 1854

Joseph Hume FRS (22 January 1777 – 20 February 1855) was a Scottish surgeon and Radical MP.[1]

Early life[]

He was born the son of a shipmaster in Montrose, Angus, and apprenticed to a local surgeon.

Medical career[]

He studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh and moved to India in 1797. There, he was commissioned as a surgeon to an Army regiment, and was able to take up work as an interpreter and commissary-general due to his knowledge of Indian languages.

His knowledge of chemistry helped him provide the administration with a method to recover damp gunpowder in 1802, on the eve of Lord Lake's Maratha war. In 1808, he resigned and returned home with a fortune of about £40,000.

Between 1808 and 1811, he travelled around England and Europe and, in 1812, published a blank verse translation of The Inferno.

In 1818 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society by virtue of being, according to his nomination citation, "well versed in various branches of Useful knowledge and particularly in Chimistry, in various branches of oriental literature and Antiquities".[2]

Political career[]

In 1812, he purchased a seat in Parliament for Weymouth, Dorset, England, and voted as a Tory. When the parliament was dissolved the patron refused to return his money, and Hume brought an action to recover part of it. Six years later, Hume again entered the House, and made acquaintance with James Mill and the philosophical reformers of the school of Jeremy Bentham. He joined with Francis Place, of Westminster, and other philanthropists, to help improve the condition of the working classes, labouring especially to establish schools for them on the Lancastrian system, and forming savings banks.

In 1818, soon after getting married, he was returned to Parliament as member for the Aberdeen Burghs, Borders, Scotland. He was afterwards successively elected for Middlesex, England (1830), Kilkenny, Ireland (1837) and for the Montrose Burghs, Montrose, Scotland (1842), in the service of which constituency he died.

Political campaigns[]

A Humebugging attempt to Dissect a Naval Estimate, 1822
Joseph Hume 2.jpg

From the date of his re-entering Parliament, Hume became the self-appointed guardian of the public purse, by challenging and bringing to a direct vote every single item of public expenditure. In 1820, he secured the appointment of a committee to report on the expense of collecting tax revenue. He was very active and became known as someone who gave Chancellors of the Exchequer no peace. He exercised a check on extravagance, and helped to abolish the sinking fund. It was he who caused the word "retrenchment" to be added to the Radical programme "peace and reform." He carried on a successful warfare against the old anti-trade union combination laws that hampered workmen and favoured masters. He brought about the repeal of the laws prohibiting the export of machinery, and of the act preventing workmen from going abroad. He constantly protested against flogging in the army, the impressment of sailors and imprisonment for debt.

The Political Martyrs Monument, Edinburgh

In 1837 he initiated a plan for a memorial to the Scottish Political Martyrs.[3] The monument is in the form of a 90-foot (27 m) obelisk of grey-black sandstone blocks, and is inscribed with the names of the five men:

On 21 August 1844, 3000 gathered to see Hume lay the monument's foundation stone at the Old Calton Cemetery, Edinburgh.

In February 1852, a second monument to the Scottish Political Martyrs, again initiated by Hume, was unveiled at Nunhead Cemetery, London.[4]

Personal life[]

Hume married Maria Burnley, the daughter of an East India Company director, and had nine children,[citation needed] the eighth of which was Allan Octavian Hume, the notable ornithologist and founder of the Indian National Congress.

Death[]

The grave of Joseph Hume, Kensal Green Cemetery

He died at his seat, Burnley Hall, Norfolk in 1855 and is buried to the north-east of the main chapel in Kensal Green Cemetery in London next to his good friend William Williams.

Legacy[]

A memorial of Hume was published by his son Joseph Hume (London, 1855). Another son, Allan Octavian Hume, a renowned ornithologist, also went into the Indian Civil Service and was involved in much political activism during his career, especially on behalf of India, and founded the Indian National Congress.

According to Hawkins' History of the Silver Coinage of England, a groat was known as a "Joey", "so called from Joseph Hume, M.P., who strongly recommended the coinage for the sake of paying short cab-fares, etc."[5]

A statue of Hume stands in the High Street of Montrose, at its intersection with Hume Street [1].

References[]

  1. ^ Ronald K. Huch, Paul R. Ziegler 1985 Joseph Hume, the People's M.P.: DIANE Publishing. ISBN 0-87169-163-9
  2. ^ "Fellow details". Royal Society. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  3. ^ . Muir of Huntershill/ Oxford University Press. 1981. ISBN 0-19-211768-8
  4. ^ . "The Scottish Martyrs", a pamphlet published by the Friends of Nunhead Cemetery.
  5. ^ E. Cobham Brewer (1898) Dictionary of Phrase and Fable.

External links[]

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Charles Adams
Richard Steward

Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis
1812–1812
With: Charles Adams

Succeeded by

Thomas Wallace
John Broadhurst
Preceded by
Member of Parliament for Aberdeen Burghs
18181830
Succeeded by
Sir James Carnegie, Bt
Preceded by
George Byng
Samuel Charles Whitbread
Member of Parliament for Middlesex
18301837
With: George Byng
Succeeded by
George Byng
Thomas Wood
Preceded by
Daniel O'Connell
Member of Parliament for Kilkenny City
18371841
Succeeded by
John O'Connell
Preceded by
Patrick Chalmers
Member of Parliament for Montrose Burghs
1842–1855
Succeeded by
William Edward Baxter
Academic offices
Preceded by
The 4th Earl Fife
Rector of Marischal College, Aberdeen
1824–1825
Succeeded by
Sir James McGrigor
Preceded by
Sir James McGrigor
Rector of Marischal College, Aberdeen
1828–1829
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