- John Hawkins (geologist)
Infobox Scientist
name = John Hawkins
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birth_date = Birth date|1761|5|6|df=y
birth_place =Probus, Cornwall
death_date = Dda|1841|07|04|1761|05|06|df=y
death_place =Probus, Cornwall
residence =Cornwall &Sussex
citizenship = British
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field =Geology
work_institutions = RGSC, Geological Society,Royal Society
alma_mater =Trinity College, Cambridge
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footnotes =John Hawkins (
6 May 1761 H. S . Torrens, ‘Hawkins, John (1761–1841)’, "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", (Oxford University Press) 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/12675 accessed 5 Dec 2007] ] —4 July 1841 ) was a geologist, traveller and writer,He was the youngest son of Thomas Hawkins of Trewinnard,
St Erth ,Cornwall , M.P. for Grampound, by Anne, daughter of James Heywood of London.cite web | last = Watt | first = Francis | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Hawkins, John (1758?–1841), miscellaneous writer, by Francis Watt | work =Dictionary of National Biography Vol. XXV | publisher =Smith, Elder & Co. | date = 1891 | url = http://www.oxforddnb.com/templates/olddnb.jsp?articleid=23147 | format = HTML | doi = | accessdate = 2007-12-05]He was educated at
Helston school,Winchester College , and took his BA fromTrinity College, Cambridge in 1782. He then enteredLincoln's Inn (the family tradition was the practice of law), but decided to travel instead, and in Germany he studied mining and mineralogy.Hawkins was a man of considerable means, (owning much Cornish mining property) and inherited the
Trewithen Estate [ [http://www.trewithengardens.co.uk/history.html Trewithen Gardens & Nursey Website (Open to the Public, during summer months). (Accessed 24 December 2007).] ] . He devoted his long life to the study of literature, science, and art. He travelled in Greece, where he purchased stele, and in theLevant , and wrote dissertations ‘On the Syrinx of Strabo and the Passage of the Euripus,’ ‘On the site of Dodona,’ and the like which are printed in Robert Walpole's " [http://books.google.com/books?id=ZLdNAAAAMAAJ Memoirs of European and Asiatic Turkey] " (1818), and Walpole's "Travels in various Countries of the East."In 1806 Hawkins purchased Bignor Park,
Sussex , formerly the residence of the poetCharlotte Smith . In 1826-32 he rebuilt the house [For [http://www.bignorpark.co.uk/history.html Bignor Park] , a modest Grecian box, he employed the London builder and surveyor Henry Harrison (c. 1785-c 1865), according to Howard Colvin, "A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840" 3rd ed. (Yale University Press) 1995: "s.v." "Henry Harrison".] as a secondary residence more convenient to Westminster than his Cornish estate, and collected a great number of valuable paintings, drawings to add to his antiquities.Hawkins, who was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1791, wrote a number of papers on scientific subjects, most of them connected with thegeology of Cornwall (a full list is given in Boase and Courtney'S "Bibliotheca Cornubiensis", i. 222, 223, iii. 1224).He was a founder member of the
Royal Horticultural Society , an honorary member of theGeological Society of London , and a founder member of theRoyal Geological Society of Cornwall . He contributed papers to the RGSC on the submarine mine atWherrytown , nearPenzance .Hawkins was a correspondent of
Davies Gilbert andGideon Mantell .In 1826 he served the office of
High Sheriff of Sussex; he also served as a magistrate in both Cornwall and Sussex. He died at his seat of Trewithen, Cornwall. He married Hester, daughter of Humphrey Sibthorpe, M.P. for Lincoln, and had four sons and two daughters. The eldest, John Heywood Hawkins (1802-1877), was M.P. for Newport, Isle of Wight, from 1833 to 1841, and inherited his Sussex properties, the younger son, Christopher (1820-1903) inheriting the Cornish properties.References
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External links
[http://www.nhm.ac.uk/research-curation/collections-library/collections-management/collections-navigator/transform.jsp?rec=/ead-recs/nhm/uls-a351172.xml Natural History Museum collection of John Hawkins manuscripts]
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