George Fairholme

George Fairholme (1789–1846) was a land owner, banker, traveler, naturalist and scriptural geologist, born in Lugate, Midlothian, Scotland, January 15, 1789.[1]

Biography

His father, William Fairholme (mother Elizabeth) made his living from banking and was a serious art collector. Nothing is known of George's childhood years and there is no record of his attending any university. But he was probably tutored at home and self-taught in keeping with his family’s wealthy financial situation. In 1800 an uncle bequeathed to him the Greenknowe estate (5000 plus acres) near Gordon, Berwickshire.[2] Like many in his day he used his wealth to pursue his study of geology both in Britain and in Europe.

On November 15, 1818, He married Caroline Forbes who was the eldest daughter of the eighteenth Lord Forbes and granddaughter of the sixth Duke of Atholl.[3] They lived in Perth; Greenknowe; Berne, Switzerland; Brussels; Ramsgate, Kent; and many other locations in Europe.[4] They had five children, William, James, George, Charles and a daughter.

George died on November 1846 in Royal Leamington Spa, willing homes, paintings and nearly 3000 pounds to each child.[5][6]

Writings

During the formative era of geology in the early 1800s, Fairholme wrote two books on geology[7] and published articles on coal, Niagara Falls, and human fossils.

Notes

  1. Sir John Bernard Burke, Burke's Landed Gentry (1965-72), III:315-16.
  2. George Fairholme, Notes on the Family of Greenknowe and on the History of the estate from 1470 to the present time (1838), unnumbered page of the preface to this unpublished manuscript in the possession of Mrs. Waveney Jenkins of the Isle of Man.
  3. George and Elizabeth Fairholme's contract of marriage.
  4. Susanna Evans, Historic Brisbane and Its Early Artists (1982), 24.
  5. Death Notices, Leamington Spa Courier, Vol. XIX, No. 963 (21 Nov. 1846), 3
  6. Gentlemen's Magazine, N.S. Vol. XXVII (1847), 108.
  7. Kölbl-Ebert, Martina (2009). Geology and religion: a history of harmony and hostility. Geological Society of London. p. 164.
  8. Livingstone, Hart & Noll 1999, pp. 178–179

References

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