TUKNEES AND PALGEAVES 19 



^^■Falter Fitch as illustrator at Kew. 



^^V Dawson Turner's eldest daughter, as we have seen, married 

 ^V7. J. Hooker. His second daughter, EHzabeth, married that 

 Francis Cohen who on his marriage assumed the name of 

 Palgrave with the consent of her uncles, the two surviving 

 sons of WilHam Palgrave, and last male representatives of 

 the family. 



Of Elizabeth's children Sir Francis Palgrave became Keeper 

 of the Eecords. One of his sons, Francis Turner Palgrave, 

 is in perpetual memory as editor of the Golden Treasury ; 

 another was William Gifford Palgrave, the famous traveller 

 in the East ; another, Sir E. H. Inglis Palgrave, banker and 

 writer on financial subjects ; and the fourth. Sir Eeginald 

 Palgrave, Clerk to the House of Commons. To all these first 

 cousins Joseph Hooker was warmly attached, and with Inglis 

 Palgrave especially, who constantly advised him on business 

 matters, he kept up a lifelong correspondence, albeit a 

 correspondence which seldom lends itself to quotation for 

 general purposes. 



Of the rest of the Turner family Harriett (1806-69) was 

 the author of * Letters from Holland.' She married, 1830, 

 Eev. John Gunn, President of the Geological Society, 

 Norwich. 



Hannah Sarah (1808-82) made sixty portraits from 

 drawings on stone, and fifty-one drawings for the * Outlines 

 in Lithography ' for private circulation. She married, 1839, 

 Thomas Brightwen of Great Yarmouth. 



Eleanor Jane (1811-95) was an accomplished classical 

 scholar. She married, 1836, Eev. Wm. Jacobson, D.D., Bishop 

 of Chester. 



Gurney (1813-48) married, 1844, Mary Anne Hamilton. 



Dawson William (1815-85) Headmaster of the Eoyal 

 Institution, Liverpool, married Ophelia Dixon. 



The atmosphere in which the young Hookers grew up was 

 one not only of strenuous work, but also of a certain austerity 

 in moral and rehgious training, recalhng the Puritan trend 

 of their forbears. In daily example they saw that their 



