Webb John Seymour

Lord Webb John Seymour FRS (7 February 1777 – 15 April 1819) was an English aristocrat and amateur geologist.[1]

Webb John Seymour was the fourth son of Webb Seymour, 10th Duke of Somerset. Webb John Seymour attended Edward Meyrick's school in Ramsbury.[1] In 1793 his brother Edward Adolphus Seymour became the 11th Duke. On 29 January 1794 Webb John Seymour matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford and on 15 December 1797 graduated there M.A.[2] At Oxford he was interested in anatomy and, especially, chemistry. In his rooms, he set up a chemical laboratory. After graduation he went to Edinburgh and became friends with Francis Horner, the philosopher Thomas Brown and John Playfair. Seymour took trips with Playfair on a number of occasions studying the geology of Scotland and a few times in England. Seymour also learned mathematics from Playfair and studied political economy as well as Bacon's De Augmentis Scientiarum and Novum Organum. In 1802 he was elected F.R.S. Upon the threat of Napoleonic invasion of England, Seymour from 1803 to 1805 took command of a company of volunteers in Devonshire. In 1805 he returned to Edinburgh and settled there until the end of his life, with occasional trips to England. He published a few pages on geology but nothing else. He died unmarried and without issue.[1]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 Horner, Leonard, ed. (1843). "Appendix A. "Biographical Notice of Lord Webb Seymour" by Henry Hallam". Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner, M.P. vol. 1. London: John Murray. pp. 437–486.
  2. Alumni Oxoniensis (1715–1886). 4. p. 1277.
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