Difference between revisions of "William James Knowles"

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| birth_date        = 1832
 
| birth_date        = 1832
 
| death_date        = 1927
 
| death_date        = 1927
| address            = Culleybacky, Belfast [1881]<br />FlIxton Place, Ballymena, Co. Antrim [1899]<br />
+
| address            = Culleybacky, Belfast [1881]<br />Flixton Place, Ballymena, Co. Antrim [1883]<br />
 
| occupation        = antiquarian<br />educator
 
| occupation        = antiquarian<br />educator
 
| elected_ESL        =  
 
| elected_ESL        =  
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| elected_LAS        =  
 
| elected_LAS        =  
 
| membership        = ordinary fellow
 
| membership        = ordinary fellow
| left              =  
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| left              = 1927 deceased
 
| clubs              = Ballymena Naturalists Field Club<br />Belfast Naturalists Field Club
 
| clubs              = Ballymena Naturalists Field Club<br />Belfast Naturalists Field Club
 
| societies          = Royal Irish Academy<br />Ballymena Archeological Society<br />Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland
 
| societies          = Royal Irish Academy<br />Ballymena Archeological Society<br />Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland
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=== House Notes ===
 
=== House Notes ===
1881.10.25 proposed
+
1881.10.25 proposed<br />death reported in Report of the Council for 1927
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
 
William James Knowles (1832 - 1927): <br />Antiquarian<br /> <br />W. J. Knowles was born in Fenagh, near Cullybackey, County Antrim. He was educated privately, and later taught botany and geology. He taught in Cullybackey, Portglenone and Ballymena, such diverse subjects as heat and light and the principles of agriculture. He was the land agent for the Casement estate, and from 1879 to 1920, secretary of the Antrim County Land, Building and Investment Company. He embarked on his antiquarian career in 1870 and in 1871 discovered sandhill settlement sites in Portstewart, excavated at Whitepark Bay and at Tievebulliagh, where his major achievement was the discovery of a Neolithic Axe Factory. In 1878 he was secretary of the committee set up by the British Association for the Advancement of Science, in order to investigate such sites. He founded the Ballymena Naturalists' Field Club and the Ballymena Archaeological Society. He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy, a fellow of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, a member of Belfast Naturalists' Field Club, and a fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. He published more than seventy papers in journals. His fine collection of antiquities was dispersed in 1924 and he left Ballymena and retired to Ballvcastle. He is buried at the Craigs. <br /><br />See also book: The archaeology of a collection: the Keiller–Knowles collection of the National Museum of Ireland <br />by Peter Woodman, Nyree Finlay and Elizabeth Anderson<br /><br />Born Fernagh, Co Antrim. Published seventy papers in journals, mainly on Northern Ireland archaeology. His collection of 30,000 items was sold in London in 1924.<br />
 
William James Knowles (1832 - 1927): <br />Antiquarian<br /> <br />W. J. Knowles was born in Fenagh, near Cullybackey, County Antrim. He was educated privately, and later taught botany and geology. He taught in Cullybackey, Portglenone and Ballymena, such diverse subjects as heat and light and the principles of agriculture. He was the land agent for the Casement estate, and from 1879 to 1920, secretary of the Antrim County Land, Building and Investment Company. He embarked on his antiquarian career in 1870 and in 1871 discovered sandhill settlement sites in Portstewart, excavated at Whitepark Bay and at Tievebulliagh, where his major achievement was the discovery of a Neolithic Axe Factory. In 1878 he was secretary of the committee set up by the British Association for the Advancement of Science, in order to investigate such sites. He founded the Ballymena Naturalists' Field Club and the Ballymena Archaeological Society. He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy, a fellow of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, a member of Belfast Naturalists' Field Club, and a fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. He published more than seventy papers in journals. His fine collection of antiquities was dispersed in 1924 and he left Ballymena and retired to Ballvcastle. He is buried at the Craigs. <br /><br />See also book: The archaeology of a collection: the Keiller–Knowles collection of the National Museum of Ireland <br />by Peter Woodman, Nyree Finlay and Elizabeth Anderson<br /><br />Born Fernagh, Co Antrim. Published seventy papers in journals, mainly on Northern Ireland archaeology. His collection of 30,000 items was sold in London in 1924.<br />

Latest revision as of 10:24, 22 January 2021

William James Knowles
Knowles, William James.jpg
Born 1832
Died 1927
Residence Culleybacky, Belfast [1881]
Flixton Place, Ballymena, Co. Antrim [1883]
Occupation antiquarian
educator
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
left 1927 deceased
elected_AI 1881.11.08
clubs Ballymena Naturalists Field Club
Belfast Naturalists Field Club
societies Royal Irish Academy
Ballymena Archeological Society
Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland




Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1881.10.25 proposed
death reported in Report of the Council for 1927

Notes From Elsewhere

William James Knowles (1832 - 1927):
Antiquarian

W. J. Knowles was born in Fenagh, near Cullybackey, County Antrim. He was educated privately, and later taught botany and geology. He taught in Cullybackey, Portglenone and Ballymena, such diverse subjects as heat and light and the principles of agriculture. He was the land agent for the Casement estate, and from 1879 to 1920, secretary of the Antrim County Land, Building and Investment Company. He embarked on his antiquarian career in 1870 and in 1871 discovered sandhill settlement sites in Portstewart, excavated at Whitepark Bay and at Tievebulliagh, where his major achievement was the discovery of a Neolithic Axe Factory. In 1878 he was secretary of the committee set up by the British Association for the Advancement of Science, in order to investigate such sites. He founded the Ballymena Naturalists' Field Club and the Ballymena Archaeological Society. He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy, a fellow of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, a member of Belfast Naturalists' Field Club, and a fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. He published more than seventy papers in journals. His fine collection of antiquities was dispersed in 1924 and he left Ballymena and retired to Ballvcastle. He is buried at the Craigs.

See also book: The archaeology of a collection: the Keiller–Knowles collection of the National Museum of Ireland
by Peter Woodman, Nyree Finlay and Elizabeth Anderson

Born Fernagh, Co Antrim. Published seventy papers in journals, mainly on Northern Ireland archaeology. His collection of 30,000 items was sold in London in 1924.

Publications

External Publications

The Antiquity of Man in Ireland, being an account of the older series of Irish flint implements by W. J. Knowles (1914)

On the mounting of leaf-shaped arrow-heads of flint by W. J Knowles (1909)

Second report on the prehistoric remains from the sandhills of the coast of Ireland: A paper read before the Royal... by W. J Knowles (1891)

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material

In 1924 W.J. Knowles’s collection of 30,000 artefacts—the vast bulk of which comprised prehistoric Irish stone tools—was put up for auction in London. As a result, the largest collection of Irish archaeological artefacts was dispersed among a variety of dealers, collectors and museums. One of the purchasers, Alexander Keiller, donated 15,000 objects to the National Museum of Ireland in 1938, a large proportion of which derived from Knowles’s collection.
PRM field collector