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William Edward Hartpole Lecky

William Edward Hartpole Lecky (1838-1903), an Anglo-Irish historian and essayist of classic Whig proclivities, was perhaps the greatest historical scholar Ireland ever produced.

William Lecky was born in Newtown Park near Dublin on March 26, 1838. After the death of his father when he was 14, Lecky was raised as a member of the family of the 8th Earl of Carnwath, whom his stepmother had married. Family wanderings during his childhood gave him a varied education at Kingstown, the Royal School at Armagh, Cheltenham, and Trinity College, Dublin, where he received his bachelor of arts degree in 1859 and his master of arts degree in 1863. An indifferent student, he appears to have benefited much more from the wide range of reading in which he engaged to satisfy his own eclectic interests than from the inspiration of formal academic study.

Lecky entered an active career in letters with the anonymous publication of his first book, Religious Tendencies of the Age, in 1860, at the age of 22. The following year a second work, The Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland, also published anonymously, was received with disappointing results. Fortunately, Lecky did not have to depend upon his earnings as a writer for financial support; his private income also made it possible for him to develop language skills and to spend a large part of each year working abroad in the great Continental libraries.

Lecky's reputation as historian and essayist was finally secured with the publication of his History of the Rise and Influence of the Spirit of Rationalism (1865) and the History of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne (1869). Both proved enormously popular. His most important work, the great multivolumed History of England in the Eighteenth Century, apparently resulted at least in part from a desire to answer James Froude, whose English in Ireland, published in 1872, had passed some unflattering judgments on the people of Ireland. Lecky's magisterial study, whose twelfth and final volume appeared in 1890, occupied his unremitting attention during all the mature years of his scholarly life. The work finally took form in two parts - seven volumes on England and five on Ireland. The undertaking remains a monument to Lecky's scholarly diligence and insight, so much so that it must still be read by serious students of the period despite the severe modifications imposed on some of his judgments by a later generation of scholars. The last major work of his life was a two-volume historical-political essay entitled Democracy and Liberty (1896), in which he, like many another Victorian intellectual, gave voice to some of his doubts about the growing democratic tendencies of his age.

A happy marriage and a successful career were capped in his last years by entry into Parliament, where as a Liberal Unionist he opposed the separatism of the Irish home rule movement. In 1897 he was made a privy councilor and in 1902 a member of the exclusive Order of Merit. Lecky died in London on Oct. 22, 1903.

Lecky was a Whig in the tradition of Edmund Burke, who remained his lifelong intellectual hero. Always suspicious of democracy, he deplored the evils of excess in religion or nationalism; at the same time he was acutely and somewhat pessimistically aware of the importance of mass social influences and ideas in history. Like his contemporary John Richard Green, he helped to reorient the purposes of 19th-century historical writing away from politics and diplomatics.

Further Reading

Biographies of Lecky are Elisabeth van Dedem Lecky (Mrs. W. E. H. Lecky), A Memoir of the Right Honourable William Edward Hartpole Lecky (1909), and James J. Auchmuty, Lecky: A Biographical and Critical Essay (1945).

Additional Sources

McCartney, Donal, W.E.H. Lecky, historian and politician, 1838-1903, Dublin: Lilliput Press, 1994.

 
 
Irish Literature Companion: William Edward Hartpole Lecky

Lecky, W[illiam] E[dward] H[artpole] (1838-1903), historian. Born in Newton Park, Co. Dublin, and educated at TCD. After some poems and essays he issued anonymously Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland (1861) which promoted a liberal, Unionist, ascendancy view. His History of England in the Eighteenth Century (8 vols., 1878-90) refuted the ‘anti-Irish calumnies’ of J. A. Froude's The English in Ireland (1872-4). The Irish sections were republished as The History of Ireland in the Eighteenth Century (5 vols., 1892-6). Chief among his later works were Democracy and Liberty (1896) and The Map of Life (1899).

 
Wikipedia: William Edward Hartpole Lecky
William Edward Hartpole Lecky, Photography 1868 by Julia Margaret Cameron, National Portrait Gallery London
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William Edward Hartpole Lecky, Photography 1868 by Julia Margaret Cameron, National Portrait Gallery London

William Edward Hartpole Lecky, OM (26 March 183822 October 1903) was an Irish historian and publicist.

Early life

Born at Newtown Park, near Dublin. An eminent historian, he was the eldest son of John Hartpole Lecky, a landowner. He was educated at Kingstown, Armagh, at Cheltenham College, and at Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated B.A. in 1859 and M.A. in 1863, and where, with a view to becoming a clergyman in the Church of Ireland, he studied divinity.

Career

In 1860 he published anonymously a small book entitled The Religious Tendencies of the Age, but on leaving college he abandoned his original intention and turned to historiography. In 1861 he published Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland, a brief sketch of the lives and work of Jonathan Swift, Henry Flood, Henry Grattan and Daniel O'Connell, which showed great promise. This book, originally published anonymously, was republished in 1871; and the essay on Swift, rewritten and amplified, appeared again in 1897 as an introduction to a new edition of Swift's works. Two learned surveys of certain aspects of history followed: A History of the Rise and Influence of Rationalism in Europe (2 vols., 1865), and A History of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne (2 vols., 1869). The latter aroused criticism, with its opening dissertation on "the natural history of morals," but both have been generally accepted as acute and suggestive commentaries upon a wide range of facts.


Lecky then devoted himself to the chief work of his life, A History of England during the Eighteenth Century, vols. i. and ii. of which appeared in 1878, and vols. vii. and viii. (completing the work) in 1890. His object was "to disengage from the great mass of facts those which relate to the permanent forces of the nation, or which indicate some of the more enduring features of national life". In carrying out this task, Lecky displays many of the qualities of a great historian. The work is lucid in style, extensive in its use of source material, and, above all, by impartial throughout. These qualities are particularly valuable in the chapters dealing with the history of Ireland, and in the "cabinet" edition of 1892, in 12 volumes (frequently reprinted), this part of the work is separated from the rest, and occupies five volumes under the title of A History of Ireland in the Eighteenth Century.

A volume of Poems (1891) was less successful. In 1896 he published two volumes entitled Democracy and Liberty, in which he considered, with special reference to Britain, France and America, some of the tendencies of modern democracies. The pessimistic conclusions at which he arrived provoked criticism both in Britain and America, which was renewed when he published in a new edition (1899) an elaborate and very depreciatory estimate of Gladstone, then recently dead. This work, though essentially different from the author's purely historical writings, has many of their merits, though it was inevitable that other minds should take a different view of the evidence.

In The Map of Life (1900) he discussed in a popular style some of the ethical problems which arise in everyday life. In 1903 he published a revised and greatly enlarged edition of Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland, in two volumes, from which the essay on Swift was omitted and that on O'Connell was expanded into a complete biography of the great advocate of repeal of the Union. Though always a keen sympathizer with the Irish people in their misfortunes and aspirations, and though he had criticized severely the methods by which the Act of Union was passed, Lecky, who grew up as a moderate Liberal, was from the first strenuously opposed to Gladstone's policy of Home Rule, and in 1895 he was returned to parliament as Unionist member for Dublin University in a by-election. In 1897 he was made a privy councillor, and among the coronation honours in 1902 he was nominated an original member of the new Order of Merit.

Degrees

His university honours included the degree of LL.D. from Dublin, St Andrews and Glasgow, the degree of D.C.L. from Oxford and the degree of Litt.D. from Cambridge. In 1894 he was elected corresponding member of the Institute of France. He contributed occasionally to periodical literature, and two of his addresses, The Political Value of History (1892) and The Empire, its Value and its Growth (1893), were published.

Family

He married in 1871 Elizabeth, baroness de Dedem, daughter of baron de Dedem, a general in the Dutch service, but had no children. She contributed articles, chiefly on historical and political subjects, to various reviews. A volume of Lecky's Historical and Political Essays was published posthumously (London, 1908).

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Parliament of the United Kingdom (1801–present)
Preceded by
D. R. Plunket
Member of Parliament
for Dublin University

1895–1903
Succeeded by
J. H. M. Campbell

 
 

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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