Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet

Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet, FRS, FRGS, FSA (19 June 1764 – 23 November 1848) was an English geographer, linguist, writer and civil servant best known for serving as the Second Secretary to the Admiralty from 1804 until 1845.

Sir
John Barrow
Barrow around 1810
Second Secretary to the Admiralty
In office
22 May 1804 – 28 April 1845 (1804-05-22 – 1845-04-28)
Preceded byBenjamin Tucker
Succeeded byWilliam Baillie-Hamilton
Personal details
Born(1764-06-19)19 June 1764
Dragley Beck, Ulverston, Lancashire, England
Died23 November 1848(1848-11-23) (aged 84)
London, Middlesex, England
Spouse
(m. 1799)
Children
OccupationGeographer, linguist, writer

Early life

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Barrow was born the only child of Roger Barrow, a tanner in the village of Dragley Beck, in the parish of Ulverston, Lancashire.[1] He was a pupil at Town Bank Grammar School, Ulverston, but left at the age of 13 to found a Sunday school for poor local children.

Barrow was employed as superintending clerk of an iron foundry at Liverpool. At only 16, he went on a whaling expedition to Greenland. By his twenties, he was teaching mathematics, in which he had always excelled, at a private school in Greenwich.[2][3]

China

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Barrow taught mathematics to the son of Sir George Leonard Staunton; through Staunton's interest, he was attached on the first British embassy to China from 1792 to 1794 as comptroller of the household to Lord Macartney. He soon acquired a good knowledge of the Chinese language, on which he subsequently contributed articles to the Quarterly Review; and the account of the embassy published by Sir George Staunton records many of Barrow's valuable contributions to literature and science connected with China.[2]

Barrow ceased to be officially connected with Chinese affairs after the return of the embassy in 1794, but he always took much interest in them, and on critical occasions was frequently consulted by the British government.[2]

Some historians attribute the 'stagnation thesis' to Barrow; that China was an extremely civilized nation that was in a process of decay by the time of European contact.[4]

South Africa

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The Castle at Cape Town in about 1800, painted by John Barrow

In 1797, Barrow accompanied Lord Macartney as private secretary in his mission to settle the government of the newly acquired colony of the Cape of Good Hope. Barrow was entrusted with the task of reconciling the Boer settlers and the native Black population and of reporting on the country in the interior. In the course of the trip, he visited all parts of the colony; when he returned, he was appointed auditor-general of public accounts. He then decided to settle in South Africa, married, and bought a house in 1800 in Cape Town. However, the surrender of the colony at the peace of Amiens (1802) upset this plan.

During his travels through South Africa, Barrow compiled copious notes and sketches of the countryside that he was traversing. The outcome of his journeys was a map which, despite its numerous errors, was the first published modern map of the southern parts of the Cape Colony.[5] Barrow's descriptions of South Africa greatly influenced Europeans' understanding of South Africa and its peoples.[4] William John Burchell (1781–1863) was particularly scathing: "As to the miserable thing called a map, which has been prefixed to Mr. Barrow’s quarto, I perfectly agree with Professor Lichtenstein, that it is so defective that it can seldom be found of any use."[citation needed]

Career in the Admiralty

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Barrow returned to Britain in 1804 and was appointed Second Secretary to the Admiralty by Viscount Melville, a post which he held for forty years[2] – apart from a short period in 1806–1807 when there was a Whig government in power.[6] Lord Grey took office as Prime Minister in 1830, and Barrow was especially requested to remain in his post, starting the principle that senior civil servants stay in office on change of government and serve in a non-partisan manner. Indeed, it was during his occupancy of the post that it was renamed Permanent Secretary.[3] Barrow enjoyed the esteem and confidence of all the eleven chief lords who successively presided at the Admiralty board during that period, and more especially of King William IV while lord high admiral, who honoured him with tokens of his personal regard.[2]

In his position at the Admiralty, Barrow was a great promoter of Arctic voyages of discovery, including those of John Ross, William Edward Parry, James Clark Ross and John Franklin. Barrow Strait, Cape Barrow, and Cape John Barrow in the Canadian Arctic, as well as Point Barrow and the former city of Barrow in Alaska are named after him. He is reputed to have been the initial proposer of Saint Helena as the new place of exile for Napoleon Bonaparte following the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.[7][3] He is also remembered for infamously declaring the newly invented electrical telegraph as being "wholly unnecessary" and greatly delaying its proposed adoption by the admiralty.[8]

Barrow was a fellow of the Royal Society and received the degree of LL.D from the University of Edinburgh in 1821. A baronetcy was conferred on him by Sir Robert Peel in 1835.[9] He was also a member of the Raleigh Club, a forerunner of the Royal Geographical Society.[2] Barrow was subsequently one of the seven founding members of the Royal Geographical Society on 16 July 1830.[10]

Retirement and legacy

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Barrow retired from public life in 1845 and devoted himself to writing a history of the modern Arctic voyages of discovery (1846), as well as his autobiography, published in 1847.[2] He died suddenly on 23 November 1848.[2] The Sir John Barrow monument was built in his honour on Hoad Hill overlooking his home town of Ulverston in 1850, though locally it is more commonly called Hoad Monument.[11] Mount Barrow and Barrow Island in Australia are believed to have been named after him.[12] Barrow's Goldeneye a species of duck from North America and Iceland is also named after him.

Barrow's legacy has been met with a mixed analysis. Some historians regard Barrow as an instrument of imperialism who portrayed Africa as a resource rich land devoid of any human or civilized elements.[13] Other historians consider Barrow to have promoted humanitarianism and rights for South Africans.[4] His renewal of Arctic voyages in search of the Northwest Passage and the Open Polar Sea has also been criticized, with author Fergus Fleming remarking that "perhaps no other man in the history of exploration has expended so much money and so many lives in so desperately pointless a dream".[14]

Private life

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Barrow married Anna Maria Truter (1777–1857), a botanical artist from the Cape, in South Africa on 26 August 1799.[15] The couple had four sons and two daughters, one of whom, Johanna, married the artist Robert Batty.[16] His son George succeeded to his title. His second son, John Barrow (28 June 1808 – 9 December 1898), was appointed head of the Admiralty Records Office as a reward for developing a system for recording naval correspondence, and for rescuing documents dating back to the Elizabethan period. He published ten volumes of his travels, wrote biographies of Francis Drake and others and edited the voyages of Captain Cook[17] among other works.[18]

In fiction

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Barrow in his role as Second Secretary is portrayed as a character in Hornblower and the Crisis by C. S. Forester.[19]

Bibliography

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Besides 95 articles in the Quarterly Review,[3] Barrow published among other works:[2]

He was also the author of several valuable contributions to the seventh edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica.

Other reading

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  • Crusades against Frost:Frankenstein, Polar Ice, and Climate Change in 1818 – Siobhan Carroll.[21]
  • Barrow's Boys – Fergus Fleming (1998)[22]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Prior to 1 April 1974 Ulverston was in Lancashire
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Anonymous 1911.
  3. ^ a b c d "Sir John Barrow 1764–1848". Ulverston Town Council. Retrieved 31 July 2016.
  4. ^ a b c Huigens, Siegfriend (2007). Verkenningen van Zuid-Afrika: achttiende-eeuwse reizigers aan de Kaap (in Dutch). Zutphen: Walburg Pers. p. 139. ISBN 9789057304644.
  5. ^ Standard Encyclopaedia of Southern Africa vol 2 (1970)
  6. ^ Fergus Fleming. Barrow's Boys (Kindle Edition). Kindle Location 242–252
  7. ^ Barrow, John (2017). An Account of Travels into the Interior of Southern Africa, in the Years 1797 and 1798: Including Cursory Observations on the Geology and Geography of ... Such Objects as Occurred in the Animal, Vege. Forgotten Books. ISBN 978-0286341045.
  8. ^ "This Month in Physics History – August 5, 1816: Sir Francis Ronalds' telegraph design rejected". American Physical Society. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  9. ^ "No. 19241". The London Gazette. 17 February 1835. p. 284.
  10. ^ Markham, Sir Clements Robert (1881). The Fifty Years' Work of the Royal Geographical Society. J. Murray. p. 23.
  11. ^ "The Sir John Barrow Monument". Ulverston Town Council. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  12. ^ Prettyman, Ernest (January 1950). "Index to Tasmanian Place Names". Tasmanian Archives Online. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  13. ^ Pratt, Mary Louise, 1948- (2008). Imperial eyes : travel writing and transculturation (2nd ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-93293-3. OCLC 299750885.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Fleming, Fergus (1998). Barrow's Boys: A Stirring Story of Daring, Fortitude, and Outright Lunacy. New York: Grove Press. p. 423. ISBN 0-8021-3794-6.
  15. ^ "Rootsweb: South-Africa-L Re: Truter". Archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Archived from the original on 4 February 2015. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  16. ^ South African Botanical Art – Marion Arnold (Fernwood Press 2001)
  17. ^ Cook, James (1860). Barrow, John (ed.). Captain Cook's Voyages of Discovery. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black. Retrieved 2 October 2020 – via The British Library.
  18. ^ Cameron, J. M. R. (28 May 2008). "Barrow, Sir John, first baronet (1764–1848)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1544. Retrieved 2 October 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  19. ^ Forester, C. S. (1967). Hornblower and the crisis: an unfinished novel. London: Penguin UK. ISBN 0-7181-0181-2. OCLC 6520395. 'Captain Hornblower has been engaged on gathering information from the French coast for the last two years,' interposed Barrow. 'His name was always appearing in Cornwallis's dispatches, Mr Marsden.'
  20. ^ "Review of The Life of Richard Earl Howe, K.G., Admiral of the Fleet, and General of Marines by Sir John Barrow". The Quarterly Review. 62: 1–67. June 1838.
  21. ^ Carroll, Siobhan (2013). "Crusades Against Frost: Frankenstein , Polar Ice, and Climate Change in 1818". European Romantic Review. 24 (2): 211–230. doi:10.1080/10509585.2013.766402. S2CID 145150645.
  22. ^ Bibliopolis
  23. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Barrow.
Attribution

Further reading

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  • Fleming, Fergus (1998). Barrow's Boys. London: Granta. ISBN 1-86207-286-8.
  • William Jardine Proudfoot (1861), 'Barrow's Travels in China': An investigation into the origin and authenticity of the "facts and observations" related in a work entitled "Travels in China, by John Barrow, F.R.S." (afterwards Sir J. Barrow Bart.) Preceded by a preliminary inquiry into the nature of the "powerful motive" of the same author, and its influence on his duties at the Chinese capital, as comptroller to the British Embassy, in 1793, London: G. Philip, OCLC 13174415, OL 13515010M
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Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Ulverstone)
1835–1848
Succeeded by