A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE 



Unfortunately few of them left any enduring record of their labours; 

 some of the later members of the group however, such as Chappell of 

 Manchester and Gregson of Liverpool, were able to take advantage of 

 the increased facilities for the recording of their knowledge afforded by 

 the numerous periodicals devoted to natural history, and to them we 

 certainly owe the best part of our knowledge of the entomological fauna 

 of south Lancashire as it was before the changes of the last forty or fifty 

 years had so altered the face of the county. 



One of the earliest of these students of nature of whom we have 

 any knowledge was James Growth er,' born 1768 in a cellar in Deansgate, 

 Manchester, and employed at the age of nine as ' draw boy ' at petti- 

 coat weaving. He was a botanist as well as an entomologist, but poverty 

 necessitated the disposal of his collections before his death (1847), ^^^ 

 except from oral traditions and a few references in natural history works 

 of the last century, we know but little of his work. 



Jethro Tinker of Staleybridge is a figure which stands out more 

 distinctly. He was born near Staleybridge in 1788, where he died in 

 1 87 1. Quite without education he began life as a hand-loom weaver, 

 becoming overseer of a mill, inn keeper, and finally a gardener, but con- 

 tinuing throughout his life an ardent and self-taught botanist and ento- 

 mologist. His entomological collections were left to the Staleybridge 

 museum, where they now are, and a public monument in the town park 

 attests the respect in which he was held by his fellow citizens. 



Edward Hobson (after whom is named a variety of a beetle, C6ry- 

 somela orichalcia. Mull.) was born in Manchester 1782, dying there in 

 1830. His claim to fame rests perhaps more in his researches as a 

 muscologist than as an entomologist, although Stephens was much in- 

 debted to him for many of his localities in his Manual of the Coleoptera of 

 Great Britain. 



Other names that occur are those of George Crozier, a saddler, born 

 at Eccleston in the Fylde, who died at Manchester 1847, an accomplished 

 entomologist and a member of the old Banksian Society of Manchester, 

 and Samuel Gibson, born near Hebden Bridge 1790, died 1849, an entirely 

 self-educated naturalist. The latter's entomological collections were for 

 many years in the Peel Park Museum in Manchester, and his fine collec- 

 tion of fossil shells of the lower coal measures still remains in the Owens 

 College Museum of that city. Samuel Carter, a cabinet maker, also 

 of Manchester, who rearranged the entomological collections in the 

 Manchester Museum in 1858, was one of the same group. 



More especially should be mentioned Joseph Chappell, a mechanic 

 in Sir Joseph Whitworth's works in Manchester, whose obituary ap- 

 peared in the Manchester City News, 17 October 1896. His know- 

 ledge of the entomological fauna of Lancashire was intimate and exhaus- 

 tive, his enthusiasm and perseverance unlimited ; he has told the present 



* For particulars as to the career of this and of other south Lancashire artisan naturalists I am 

 greatly indebted to Dr. H. Bailey of Port Erin, Isle of Man, some time of Pendleton, Manchester. — 

 W.E.S. 



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