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Henry Jackson (classicist)

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Portrait of Henry Jackson by Charles Wellington Furse, 1889

Henry Jackson, OM, (1839–1921), was an English classicist. He served as the vice-master of Trinity College, Cambridge from 1914 to 1919, praelector in ancient philosophy from 1875 to 1906 and Regius Professor of Greek (Cambridge) at the University of Cambridge from 1906 to 1921, and was awarded the Order of Merit on 26 June 1908. From 1882 to 1892 he sat on the Council of the Senate of the University of Cambridge, and was an active member of a number of the university boards. He lived within the walls of Trinity College for over 50 years. Born in Sheffield, he lived mainly in Cambridge, but died in Bournemouth. He is buried at the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge.

Biography

Born on March 12 1839 in Sheffield, the son of an eminent Sheffield surgeon of the same name, he attended Sheffield Collegiate School and Cheltenham College before entering Trinity College Cambridge in 1858; he graduated BA in 1862 as third Classic.[1] He joined the Cambridge Apostles in 1863. He became a fellow at Trinity College in 1864, and became Assistant Tutor in 1866, Praelector in Ancient Philosophy in 1875 and Vice-Master in 1914.

Together with Henry Sidgwick and others he essentially established the Cambridge university's supervisory system by introducing it in the classical side at Trinity. Other disciplines and other colleges soon followed suit. He was interested in university reform including the reform of Triposes (including the Classical Triposes), the admission of women for university education, the abolition of tests, and for the general reform of university and college statutes, and voted for women's degrees. He became Regius professor of Greek at Cambridge University, a post he was appointed to in 1906, following Sir Richard Jebb; after 1879 he became one of the editors of The Journal of Philology until his death. In July, 1919, Jackson was honored on the occasion of his eightieth birthday and his retirement as Vice-Master of Trinity College, with an address presented by the Master and Fellows.

Jackson's area of study was Greek philosophy, but he did not publish greatly - editing book 5 of the Nichomachean Ethics and writing a series of pieces on Plato's later theory of ideas in the Journal of Philology. His important work was in translating and commenting upon Aristotle's Ethics. His favourite author was William Makepeace Thackeray and, long before his death it was said he had read Thackeray's "Henry Esmond" forty times apparently.

His greater achievement was in his lectures and his ability to train the next generation of classical scholars, his more eminent students included R K Gaye, Francis Cornford and R G Bury. He was a founder member of Cambridge University Liberal Club in 1886, ultimately serving as its President from 1897 to 1899.[2]

Henry Jackson died at Bournemouth on September 25 1921, having been a great reformer, both within his college and the university.

There is an article on Jackson in Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society suppl. vol. 28 (Cambridge 2005), 87-110. It is in a special volume entitled The Owl of Minerva: The Cambridge Praelections of 1906.

Recognition

In Attractive and Nonsensical Classics: Oxford, Cambridge and elsewhere by Christopher Stray [1], Stray says "Then there were the joint dining clubs like the Ad Eundem and the Arcades, set up to link members of the two universities. Finally, some men moved from one place to the other, like the archaeologist Percy Gardner, who went from a Cambridge to an Oxford chair. All these mechanisms facilitated mutual learning - as did the railway line. Henry Jackson, who succeeded Richard Jebb as professor of Greek at Cambridge in 1906, belonged to the Ad Eundem club. In 1913 he responded to a comment from a friend that Gilbert Murray was a 'very attractive person' by saying that 'Oxford is very successful in breeding "attractive" scholars: more so than Cambridge. And this is not surprising. For we dare not talk our shop in a mixed company, and even in a scholars' party we are very conscious of our limitations as specialists'." Henry Jackson declared that he always regard the Ad Eundem 'as one of Henry' [Sidgwick]'s good works', and claimed that it has been very useful as a link between Oxford and Cambridge Universities.[3]

Books by Henry Jackson

He published a series of articles on "Plato's Later Theory of Ideas" (Journal of Philology); also About Edwin Drood (1911): The Fifth Book of Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle (1879) and Texts to illustrate a Course of Elementary Lectures on the History of Greek Philosophy from Thales to Aristotle (1901).

Books about Henry Jackson

PARRY, R Henry Jackson, O M, Vice-Master of Trinity College and Regius Professor of Greek in the University of Cambridge.Cambridge University Press 1926.

Martin, Stanley (2007). The Order of Merit: One Hundred Years of Matchless Honour. New York: I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd. ISBN 978-1-86064-848-9.

External links

  • [2] Henry Jackson letters at the Public Services Department, Lilly Library, Indiana University.
  • [3] Papers at Trinity College Library, Cambridge, also [4]
  • [5] The Apostles of Cambridge (web site)
  • extract/37/12/566; The Expository Times: Entre Nous (at bottom); The Expository Times, Vol. 37, No. 12, 566-568 (1926) doi:10.1177/001452462603701208.

References

  1. ^ "Jackson, Henry (JK858H)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ http://keynessociety.wordpress.com/about-the-keynes-society/
  3. ^ Jackson to J. A. Platt, 15 August 1913. R. St. J. Parry, Henry Jackson OM, CUP 1926, 184-5.
Academic offices
Preceded by Regius Professor of Greek Cambridge University
1906 - 1921
Succeeded by

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