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William Howitt

 
(1792-1879)

Author and pioneer British Spiritualist. Howitt was born on December 18, 1792, at Heanor, Derbyshire, England, the son of a Quaker. He published his first poem at age 13. He studied chemistry and natural philosophy at Tamworth and expanded his education by reading widely. He married Mary Botham in 1821, and they cowrote a number of works. Howitt traveled through England and Germany, extending his knowledge of foreign languages. He wrote several books during his early adulthood, including Popular History of Priestcraft in All Ages and Nations (1833) and Homes and Haunts of the Most Eminent British Poets (1847). He edited Howitt's Journal of Literature and Popular Progress (3 vols., 1847-49) and published a translation of J. Ennemoser, The History of the Supernatural (2 vols., 1854; reissued in 1970).

In 1852 Howitt went to Australia, and while there first learned of the outbreak of Spiritualism when digging for gold in the Australian bush. In his novel Tallangetta or the Squatters' Home, which he conceived there, he included many incidents of a Spiritualist or supernatural nature. Before the novel was published (two and a half years after his return to England) he had some interesting experiences.

His wife attended a séance in April 1856 in the home of a Mrs. de Morgan (see Augustus de Morgan), and within a month mediumship developed in the Howitt family. It started with automatic writing and automatic drawing and continued with clairvoyance and spirit vision. There may have been some inherited tendency, because William Howitt's mother was a seeress and he himself was a sleepwalker in early youth. The phenomena started with his son and daughter. In January 1858 Howitt himself gained the power to write and draw automatically. It suddenly began after a visit to a Mrs. Wilkinson, who was a good drawing medium.

William Howitt's debut as a champion of Spiritualism occurred with a lively exchange of letters in The Critic regarding a haunted house and ghosts in general. Charles Dickens desired to visit some well-known haunted houses and asked for information. Howitt told him of Willington Mill, which he had visited, and of a house at Cheshunt, near London, of which he had read in Catharine Crowe's Night Side of Nature (2 vols., 1848). But the house at Cheshnut was partly pulled down, and Dickens could not find it.

When William Wilkinson's Spiritual Magazine was started in 1860, Howitt became a regular contributor and in the 13 years of its existence he wrote more than a hundred articles on the supernatural in the lives of men and nations, on the religious and philosophical aspects of the manifestations, and on personal experiences. In his leisure time he arranged séances with the famous medium D. D. Home.

His most important work was a book of two volumes, The History of the Supernatural in All Ages and Nations and in All Churches, Christian and Pagan, Demonstrating a Universal Faith, published in 1863. Howitt died in Rome on March 3, 1879.

Sources:

Ennemoser, Joseph. The History of the Supernatural. Translated by William Howitt. 2 vols. 1854. Reprint, New Hyde Park, N.Y.: University Books, 1970.

Howitt, William. The History of the Supernatural in All Ages and Nations and in All Churches, Christian and Pagan, Demonstrating a Universal Faith. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1863. Reprinted as The History of Magic. New Hyde Park, N.Y.: University Books, 1970.

——. Homes and Haunts of the Most Eminent British Poets. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1847.

Howitt-Watts, Mrs. Pioneers of the Spiritual Reform. London: Psychological Press Association, 1883.

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William Howitt

picture from BritishLibrary.co.uk
Born 18 December 1792 (1792-12-18) [1]
Heanor in Derbyshire[1]
Died 3 March 1879 (1879-03-04)
Rome
Education Friends public school at Ackworth
Occupation Writer
Spouse(s) Mary Botham


William Howitt (18 December 1792 – 3 March 1879), was an English author.

He was born at Heanor, Derbyshire. His parents were Quakers, and he was educated at the Friends public school at Ackworth, Yorkshire. His younger brothers were Richard and Godrey who he helped tutor. In 1814 he published a poem on the Influence of Nature and Poetry on National Spirit. He married, in 1821, Mary Botham, who like himself was a Quaker and a poet. William and Mary Howitt collaborated throughout a long literary career, the first of their joint productions being The Forest Minstrels and other Poems (1821).

In 1831, William Howitt produced a work resulting naturally from his habits of observation and his genuine love of nature. It was a history of the changes in the face of the outside world in the different months of the year, and was entitled The Book of the Seasons, or the Calendar of Nature (1831). His Popular History of Priestcraft (1833) won him the favour of active Liberals and the office of alderman in Nottingham, where the Howitts had made their home.

They moved in 1837 to Esher, and became friends with Elizabeth Gaskell and her husband. In 1840 they went to Heidelberg, primarily for the education of their children, remaining in Germany for two years. In 1841 William Howitt produced, under the pseudonym of Dr Cornelius, The Student Life of Germany, the first of a series of works on German social life and institutions. Mary Howitt devoted herself to Scandinavian literature, and between 1842 and 1863 she translated the novels of Frederika Bremer and many of the stories of Hans Christian Andersen. With her husband she wrote in 1852 The Literature and Romance of Northern Europe. In June of that year William Howitt, with two of his sons, set sail for Australia, where he spent two years in the goldfields. The results of his travels appeared in A Boy's Adventures in the Wilds of Australia (1854), Land, Labor and Gold; or, Two Years in Victoria (1855) and Tallangetta, the Squatter's Home (1857).

On his return to England Howitt had settled at Highgate and resumed his indefatigable book-making. From 1856 to 1862 he was engaged on Cassell's Illustrated History of England, and from 1861 to 1864 he and his wife worked at the Ruined Abbeys and Castles of Great Britain. The Howitts had left the Society of Friends in 1847, and became interested in Spiritualism. In 1863 appeared The History of the Super-natural in all Ages and Nations, and in all Churches, Christian and Pagan, demonstrating a Universal Faith, by William Howitt. He added his own conclusions from a practical examination of the higher phenomena through a course of seven years.

From 1870 onwards Howitt spent the summers in Tyrol and the winters in Rome, where he died. In 1880 Mary Howitt had a house built for her (which is still standing) in the spa town of Meran in South Tyrol (then part of Austria) and from then on divided her time between Rome and Meran. Mary Howitt was much affected by William's death, and in 1882 she joined the Roman Catholic Church, towards which she had been gradually moving during her connection with spiritualism. She died at Rome on 30 January 1888.[1]

The Howitts are remembered for their untiring efforts to provide wholesome and instructive literature. Their son, Alfred William Howitt, made himself a name by his explorations in Australia. Anna Mary Howitt married Alaric Alfred Watts, and was the author of Pioneers of the Spiritual Reformation (1883). Mary Howitt's autobiography was edited by her daughter, Margaret Howitt, in 1889.[1] William Howitt wrote some fifty books, and his wife's publications, inclusive of translations, number over a hundred.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Dictionary of National Biography now in the public domain

This entry contains information from the Meran Stadarchiv and an on the spot visit to the house in Meran, which has a plaque with her initials MAH and the date 1880.


This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.


 
 

 

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