- John Ball (naturalist)
John Ball (
20 August 1818 –21 October 1889 ) was an Irish politician, naturalist and Alpine traveller, eldest son of an Irish judge, Nicholas Ball and his wife Jane Sherlock.Education
He was born in
Dublin , and educated atOscott College nearBirmingham , and atChrist's College, Cambridge . He showed in early years a taste for natural science, particularlybotany ; and after leavingCambridge he travelled inSwitzerland and elsewhere inEurope , studying his favourite pursuits, and contributing papers on botany and the Swiss glaciers to scientific periodicals.Politics
In 1846 he was made an assistant poor-law commissioner, but resigned in 1847, and in 1848 stood unsuccessfully as a parliamentary candidate for Sligo. In 1849 he was appointed second poor-law commissioner, but resigned in 1852 and successfully contested the Carlow County constituency in the Liberal interest. In the
British House of Commons he attracted Lord Palmerston's attention by his abilities, and in 1855 was madeUnder-Secretary of State for the Colonies , a post which he held for two years.At the colonial office he had great influence in furthering the cause of natural science, particularly in connection with equipment of the
Palliser Expedition inCanada (for his efforts, theBall Range in theCanadian Rockies was named after him), and withWilliam Jackson Hooker 's efforts to obtain a systematic knowledge of the colonial floras.Alpinist
In 1858 he stood for County Limerick, but was beaten, and he then gave up politics and devoted himself to natural history. He was first president of the Alpine Club (founded 1857), and it is for his work as an Alpinist that he is chiefly remembered, his well-known "Alpine Guide" (
London , 1863 - 1868) being the result of innumerable climbs and journeys and of careful observation recorded in a clear and often entertaining style. He also travelled inMorocco (1871) andSouth America (1882), and recorded his observations in books which were recognized as having a scientific value. [Tyndall pages 169,352,380,406 "veined ice of glacier, if unweathered, shows no tendency to cleave"] He died in London.Notes
References
*cite book| title=The Glaciers of the Alps| author=John Tyndall| date=1896
publisher=Longmans, Green and Co.| url=http://www.archive.org/details/glaciersalpsbeing00tyndrich NEW EDITION
*1911
*Gordon L. Herries Davies, ‘Ball, John (1818–1889)’, [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1217 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography] , Oxford University Press, 2004
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.