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Topic: Charles Badham


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In the News (Sat 14 Nov 09)

  
  Charles Badham
Charles Badham (July 19, 1813 - February 26, 1884), was an English scholar, born at Ludlow, Shropshire.
As a child, Badham was sent to Switzerland to study under Johann Pestalozzi[?].
Dr Badham's classical attainments were recognized by the most famous European critics, such as CG Cobet, Ludwig Preller, W Dindorf, FW Schneidewin, JAF Meineke, A Ritschl and Tischendorf[?].
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/ch/Charles_Badham.html   (345 words)

  
 [No title]
BADHAM, CHARLES (1813-1884), English scholar, was born at Ludlow, in Shropshire, on the 18th of July 1813.
His father, Charles Badham, translator of Juvenal.and an excellent classical scholar, was regius professor of physic at Glasgow; his mother was a cousin of Thomas Campbell, the poet.
Dr Badham's classical attainments were recognized by the most famous European critics, such as G. Cobet, Ludwig Preller, W. Dindorf, F. Schneidewin, J. Meineke, A. Ritschl and Tischendorf.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?locale=en&content_id=6242   (431 words)

  
 Charles Badham - LoveToKnow 1911   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
CHARLES BADHAM (1813-1884), English scholar, was born at Ludlow, in Shropshire, on the 18th of July 1813.
His father, Charles Badham, translator of Juvenal and an excellent classical scholar, was regius professor of physic at Glasgow; his mother was a cousin of Thomas Campbell, the poet.
Dr Badham's classical attainments were recognized by the most famous European critics, such as G. Cobet, Ludwig Preller, W. Dindorf, F. Schneidewin, J. Meineke, A. Ritschl and Tischendorf.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Charles_Badham   (409 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Charles Badham
Charles Badham (July 19, 1813 – February 27, 1884), was an English scholar, active in Australia.
Badham was born at Ludlow, Shropshire, his father was regius professor of physic at Glasgow; his mother was a cousin of Thomas Campbell, the poet.
Dr Badham's classical attainments were recognized by the most famous European critics, such as CG Cobet, Ludwig Preller, W Dindorf, FW Schneidewin, JAF Meineke, A Ritschl and Tischendorf; and in Australia, Sir James Martin, William Forster and Sir William Macleay.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Charles_Badham   (839 words)

  
 Badham, Charles (1813 - 1884) Biographical Entry - Australian Dictionary of Biography Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
BADHAM, CHARLES (1813-1884), university professor, was born on 18 July 1813 at Ludlow, Shropshire, England, the fourth son of Charles Badham, M.D., F.R.S., and his first wife Margaret Campbell.
Charles and his three brothers were sent to Pestalozzi's institution at Yverdon in Switzerland, where the educational reformer, Dr Charles Mayo (1792-1846), taught Greek and Latin.
Badham's work with the public examinations under the authority of the university continued his already long connexion with school pupils and their education.
www.adb.online.anu.edu.au /biogs/A030070b.htm   (2189 words)

  
 The Biography of Early Australia
was the son of Charles Badham, M.D., F.R.S., professor of physic at the university of Glasgow, and of Margaret Campbell, cousin of Thomas Campbell, the poet.
But Badham was not content to laze in a backwater and he even went so far as to write to the leading newspapers in New South Wales offering to correct the exercises of students who might be studying Latin, Greek, French or German, in the country.
In August 1883 Badham was given a banquet at the town hall, Sydney, to celebrate the completion of his seventieth year, and though his health was then beginning to fail, one of the youngest of those present afterwards recorded that "Badham's speech was unforgettable".
www.bendigolive.com /australia/b/badham1.htm   (924 words)

  
 The Oxford Movement, by R.W. Church
CHARLES MARRIOTT was a man who was drawn into the movement, almost in spite of himself, by the attraction of the character of the leaders, the greatness of its object, and the purity and nobleness of the motives which prompted it.
After his death, Charles, a studious boy, with ways of his own of learning, and though successful and sure in his work, very slow in the process of doing it, after a short and discouraging experiment at Rugby, went to read with a private tutor till he went to Oxford.
The pains which he would take with even the most uncongenial and unpromising men, who somehow had come in his way, and seemed thrown on his charge, the patience with which he would bear and condone their follies and even worse, were not to be told, for, indeed, few knew what they were.
anglicanhistory.org /england/church/om/5.html   (2583 words)

  
 §1. Greek Scholars. XV. Scholars, Antiquaries and Bibliographers. Vol. 12. The Romantic Revival. The Cambridge ...
Thompson had a high regard for the original and independent scholarship of Charles Badham, of Wadham college, Oxford, and of Peterhouse, Cambridge.
Badham gave ample proof of his ability and his critical acumen in his editions of three plays of Euripides, and of five dialogues of Plato.
He was specially attracted to the school of Porson, and of the great Dutch scholar, Cobet, to whom he dictated a letter written on his death-bed at Sydney, where he passed the last seventeen years of his life as professor of classics and logic.
www.bartleby.com /222/1501.html   (4274 words)

  
 The Piper Stabbing
On Tuesday morning the inquest was held on the body of Charles Piper at the King's Head Inn, Ballingdon, by Mr William Dowman, Coroner, Mr J.Gooday appeared for the father of the deceased.
Charles Piper stepped back and fell on the footpath and called out, "oh my body, I have got a pain within me", he said nothing more.
Charles Constable, a labourer who left the house with Elliston said that he saw John Ager, young Howard and Ginn standing round Charles Piper who was laying on the ground.
www.foxearth.org.uk /ThePiperStabbing.html   (2197 words)

  
 Beris Penrose | Occupational Lead Poisoning in Battery Workers: the Failure to Apply the Precautionary Principle | ...
Badham said in 1925 that knowledge of lead poisoning over the past few years had flourished mainly through the work of Americans like Alice Hamilton, Joseph Aub and the United States Public Health Service's committee on tetraethyl lead.
Badham was highly critical of Stewart Smith's contention that lead poisoning 'does not necessarily follow the chemical fact of absorption'.
Charles Badham and H.B. Taylor, 'Lead Poisoning: Concerning the Standards Which Should be Used in Diagnosing this Industrial Disease, Together with a New Method for the Determination of Lead in Urine', Studies in Industrial Hygiene, no. 7, Joint Volumes of Papers Presented to the Legislative Council and Legislative Assembly, New South Wales, vol.
www.historycooperative.org /journals/lab/84/penrose.html   (10043 words)

  
 Dictionary of Australian Biography Ba   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
Badham was a man of great charm who had many friends, including, in Europe, such distinguished men as Cobet, Dr Thompson, F. Maurice, Newman, Thackeray and Theodore Martin; and in Australia, Sir James Martin (q.v.), William Forster (q.v.) and Sir William Macleay (q.v.).
second son of Sir Charles Barry, architect of the houses of parliament, London, was born at London on 15 January 1826.
The drawing in the historical section of the public library at Melbourne was done by Charles Nuttall (q.v.) from a picture by Frederick Woodhouse called "The Settlers' first meeting with Buckley" in which Batman appears as the central figure.
www.gutenberg.net.au /dictbiog/0-dict-biogBa.html   (20043 words)

  
 Badham, Charles (1884 - 1943) Biographical Entry - Australian Dictionary of Biography Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
BADHAM, CHARLES (1884-1943), medical practitioner and public health officer, was born on 15 March 1884 at Armidale, New South Wales, son of English-born parents Charles Lennard Cobet Badham, clerk of petty sessions, and his wife Wilhelmina, née Baynes, and grandson of Professor Charles Badham.
Badham's most significant research was on dust diseases of the lungs of workers in coal-mines and in sandstone tunnels, for which he received international recognition.
Badham played an important role in introducing compensation for workers with dusted lungs in New South Wales.
www.adb.online.anu.edu.au /biogs/AS10019b.htm   (640 words)

  
 Dictionary of Australian Biography Ba   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
Badham was a man of great charm who had many friends, including, in Europe, such distinguished men as Cobet, Dr Thompson, F. Maurice, Newman, Thackeray and Theodore Martin; and in Australia, Sir James Martin (q.v.), William Forster (q.v.) and Sir William Macleay (q.v.).
second son of Sir Charles Barry, architect of the houses of parliament, London, was born at London on 15 January 1826.
The drawing in the historical section of the public library at Melbourne was done by Charles Nuttall (q.v.) from a picture by Frederick Woodhouse called "The Settlers' first meeting with Buckley" in which Batman appears as the central figure.
gutenberg.net.au /dictbiog/0-dict-biogBa.html   (19967 words)

  
 SCEGGS Darlinghurst - Heads of School   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
Edith Badham, SCEGGS’ first headmistress, initially agreed to be the School’s ‘Lady Principal’ for six months but stayed till her death, 25 years later.
Edith Annesley Badham was born at Louth, Lincolnshire in December 1853, the eldest child of Julia and Charles Badham, future Professor of Classics and Principal of the University of Sydney (1867 - 1884).
Dignified and remote and a somewhat forbidding presence for both pupils and staff, Miss Badham was a firm believer in a classical education for women, and in the benefits of a trained mind for the nations’ future wives and mothers.
www.sceggs.nsw.edu.au /SCEGGS/Head/012004.1231.html   (187 words)

  
 Badham Variants
It is an expression of the state of knowledge at the moment and does not exclude the possibility of further developments.
Given the localized occurrence of Badman in Somerset we could find, for example, that this is derived from a distortion of Badham rather than being derived from some other root but for the present we are sensible to treat it as separate.
Localised single family, could be an orthographic error or a deliberate form derived from Badham with knowledge of the ab adam roots of the name.
www.badham.org.uk /Badham_web_pages/Badham_history/badham_variants.htm   (1329 words)

  
 Badham photographs
Richard Charles Badham and his wife Alma Ann (nee Brazier) at the wedding of their eldest son, Ernest Charles, on 3 Aug 1903.
Richard Charles Badham and his wife Alma Ann (nee Brazier) on their Golden Wedding Day on 2 May 1927.
Annie Katherine Badham (nee Holinshead) with her son Sidney Richard and her daughter Diana Mary.
www.judithwhite.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk /Badhamphotographs.htm   (203 words)

  
 Discover the Wisdom of Mankind on HACKED BY TURK-SOPHİA
Charles Augustus Ellis, 6th Baron Howard de Walden (en)
Charles Beauclerk, 1st Duke Of, Baron Heddington, Earl of Burford Saint Albans (en)
Charles Bonaventure de Longueval, Comte de Bucquoy (de)
www.blinkbits.com /wikifeeds/CH?from=7500   (273 words)

  
 Babcock,
BADHAM - Jane Lavina, in hospital Arnprior, on Tuesday, Aug 11 1970, aged 85, wife of Hartley, and, Badham, Christopher Hartley, in hospital, Ottawa, on Wednesday, Aug. 12 1970, aged 85 years, husband of Jane Lavina Hazard, Mr.
Badham Dies in Ottawa at 93 - The death occurred this morning of Mrs.
Fred Asselstine, Seattle, Wash. The sons are: Charles, Vancouver; Samuel, Dakota; John, Winnipeg; Frank, Rose City, Mich., and Fred A. Bell, Deseronto, and one sister, Mrs.
www.sfredheritage.on.ca /deathsobitsB.htm   (6776 words)

  
 The Curran Index to Wellesley Index Revisions
Her son, Charles H. Tindal, republished her verse, which had ‘appeared at various times in Bentley’s Miscellany and other leading magazines’ (to [George] Bentley, 16 July 1879 [Bentley Corresp., Univ. Illinois, reel 53]).
BentM 2067 Sir Charles Napier and the unhappy valley, 31 (Jan. 1852), 82-88.
Charles Badham, The life of James Deacon Hume, Secretary of the Board of Trade (London, 1859), 330.
victorianresearch.org /curranindex.html   (10751 words)

  
 Amazon.com for America - Search Results - Books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
A treatise on the esculent funguses of England, by David Badham
Eyes of the eagle: The exploits of Henry Lee Badham, Jr.
A state at war;: The official history of the Lord Mayor's Patriotic and War Fund of New South Wales, the Australian Comforts Fund, N.S.W. Division by C.
astore.amazon.com /540-20/search?node=22&keywords=badham&page=4   (138 words)

  
 Speeches & Lectures Delivered In Australia. - BADHAM, CHARLES.
"Charles Badham (1813-84) born in Shropshire, England, and renowned as one of the leading Greek scholars of his day in Europe, became Professor of Classics at the University of Sydney in 1867.
Intensely interested in the problems of tertiary education in the colony, Badham strongly espoused the introduction of evening classes at the University of Sydney.
He was the first President of the Board of Trustees of the Free Public Library of NSW.
www.antiqbook.com /boox/pou/2328.shtml   (166 words)

  
 Badham One Name Society Welcome Page
Reverend Charles Badham M.A., Sudbury, England, wrote in 1847.
or that anyone with the surname Badham is entitled to use them.
one Badham family, showing their awareness of those borne by the Baronial family of ap Adam.]
www.badham.org.uk   (93 words)

  
 Digital Collections - Pictures - [Portrait of Charles Badham, Professor of Classics and Logic, University of Sydney, ...
Digital Collections - Pictures - [Portrait of Charles Badham, Professor of Classics and Logic, University of Sydney, 1867 to 1884] [picture].
[Portrait of Charles Badham, Professor of Classics and Logic, University of Sydney, 1867 to 1884] [picture].
If you wish to use it for any other purposes, you must complete the Request for permission form.
nla.gov.au /nla.pic-an22932041   (85 words)

  
 CHARLES BADHAM (1813-1... - Online Information article about CHARLES BADHAM (1813-1...
- Online Information article about CHARLES BADHAM (1813-1...
When about seven years old, Badham was sent to See also:
Dr Badham's classical attainments were recognized by the most famous See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /AUD_BAI/BADHAM_CHARLES_1813_1884_.html   (735 words)

  
 [No title]
CHAPTER V CHARLES MARRIOTT Charles Marriott was a man who was drawn into the movement, almost in spite of himself, by the attraction of the character of the leaders, the greatness of its object, and the purity and nobleness of the motives which prompted it.
He was naturally a man of metaphysical mind, given almost from a child to abstract and indeed abstruse thought.[31] He had been a student of S.T. Coleridge, whom the Oriel men disliked as a misty thinker.
Both in philosophy and religion, the [Greek: mathaetaes] is a distinct character, and Charles Marriott was an example of it at its best.
www.ibiblio.org /pub/docs/books/gutenberg/1/2/0/9/12092/12092.txt   (16720 words)

  
 The Badham Shops
Sidney George Badham (my grandfather) was a greengrocer.
In the 1900s, he went to Rugby to help his eldest brother, Ernest Charles Badham, in his greengrocery shop in the High Street.
My parents ran another Badham's greengrocery shop in the Market Place in Frome, which can be seen below.
www.judithwhite.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk /badhamgreengrocers.htm   (189 words)

  
 Amazon.com for America - Search Results - Books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
Showing 21 - 30 of 44 results for "badham" in Books.
Love speaks from the Cross;: Thoughts on the seven words by Leslie Stephen Ronald Badham
Mother of the maid by Emily Badham Coxe
astore.amazon.com /540-20/search?node=22&keywords=badham&page=3   (136 words)

  
 Badham family 1850 onwards   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-08)
My father was Sidney Richard Badham (born Wellingborough 1911, died Wells 1962).
My grandfather was Sidney George Badham (born Battersea 1883, died Basingstoke 1957).
He had an elder brother Ernest Charles (born Bishops Waltham 1878, died Rugby 1956).
genforum.genealogy.com /cgi-bin/print.cgi?badham::5.html   (75 words)

  
 REV CHARLES BADHAM: THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF ALL SAINTS CHURCH SUDBURY, 1852, 1st edn, hf c... (Lot 1030)
REV CHARLES BADHAM: THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF ALL SAINTS CHURCH SUDBURY, 1852, 1st edn, hf c...
Lot 1030: REV CHARLES BADHAM: THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF ALL SAINTS CHURCH SUDBURY, 1852, 1st edn, hf c...
REV CHARLES BADHAM: THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF ALL SAINTS CHURCH SUDBURY, 1852, 1st edn, hf cf worn £ 40-50
www.icollector.com /item.aspx?lid=479091   (87 words)

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