23,182
edits
Changes
Bot: Automated import of articles *** existing text overwritten ***
'''Henry Neville Hutchinson'''
{{Infobox rai-fellow
| first_name = Henry Neville
=== House Notes ===
1898.01.25 proposed by J.G. Garson, seconded by E.W. Brabrook<br /><br />In the Dec. 6, 1898 meeting of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Rev. H. N. Hutchinson presented ethnological photographs, including the photograph of an aged Kaffir Chief contributed to the Anthropological Institute by Miss Anne Walbank Buckland. <br />death reported in Report of the Council for 1927
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
Henry Neville Hutchinson FGS, FRGS, FZS (1856, Chester – 1927) was an Anglican clergyman and, during the 1890s, a leading writer of popular books on geology, palaeontology, evolution and anthropology.[1][2]<br />Henry Neville Hutchinson was the eldest son of Thomas Neville Hutchinson, an Anglican clergyman and amateur naturalist.[3] H. N. Hutchinson was educated at Rugby School and St John's College, Cambridge, where he earned a bachelor's degree in 1878.[4] In 1879–1880 he was a student-master at Clifton College. In 1884 he was curate to St Saviour's, Redland Park, Bristol. In 1886–1887 he was private tutor to the sons of the Earl of Morley. In 1891 he began literary work in London. He was an amateur naturalist and photographer. He married in 1902.[2]<br /><br />Born Chester. After 1891 he devoted himself to literary work, publishing a large number of books of a geological and anthropological nature. He had an interest in photography and in 1899 proposed that the AI form a photographic collection.<br />