Francis Galton

Francis Galton

A look into the past of one of the great men who contributed ideas and inventions, some of which we still benefit from today.

Francis Galton was born on the 16th of Febuary, 1822. He was a half-cousin to Charles Darwin. This man did not need the help of Charles Darwin to make him famous; he did that all on his own. He was intellectually and had over 340 papers written during his life time.

Galton was the man who created the concept of correlation and the widely promoted regression among the mean”. He was the first one to study human differences and inheritance of intelligence which led him to produce the first questionnaires and surveys for collecting data on human communities. He needed these for his study in anthropometric. He led a life that anyone would envy to learn more about him we have to travel back through the history of Francis Galton.

His early years

Frances Galton was born at Sparkbrook, Birmingham, England. His family was famous; they were also, highly successful, Quaker gun manufactures and bankers. Both the Galton family and the Darwin’s formed the Royal Society where members spent their spare time inventing. The Galtons and the Darwins founded the famous Lunar Society of Birmingham whose members included industrialist and scientist of the times.

Galton showed promise from an early age. He could read at two years old and at the age of 5 he knew Greek, Latin and long division. At the age of six he was reading Shakespeare and poetry. He attended numerous schools but found them boring. His parents put him in medical school where he attended Birmingham General Hospital and London Medical School for two years. He followed this up with a study in mathematics at Trinity College from 1840 to 1844. At the end of this study Galton had a severe nervous breakdown that changed his original intentions. He decided to take a BA Degree. The death of his father in 1844 had a great impact on Galton, causing him to give up medicine and turn to foreign travel, sports and technical inventions.

His travels

 He was a pioneer in eugenics and coined the term himself of “nature versus nature”. He was an investigator of the human mind; he founded psychometric, which is the science of measuring mental facilities and differential psychology. His other great achievements were being the initiator of devising a method of identifying fingerprints. This would prove very useful in forensic science. He also devised the first weather map and established a complete record of short-term climatic phenomena, on a European scale. Galton also invented the Galton Whistle for testing hearing ability. His discoveries and inventions would stay with humanity throughout the years.

Galton spent many years traveling and one of his excursions to Eastern Europe took him to places such as Constantinople, Egypt, the Nile, and Khartoum in Sudan, Beirut, Damascus and Jordon. When this trip was finished Galton joined the Royal Geographical Society.

During the next two years Galton took a long, and difficult, trip into South-Western Africa. When he returned he wrote a book on his travels which was called the “Narrative of an Explorer in Tropical South Africa”. In 1853 Galton was awarded the Royal Geographical Society’s gold medal and a silver medal from the French Geographical Society, for his pioneering, of this area of the world. He wrote a book called “The Art of Travel” which was a best seller and is still available today.

Contributions to science

Galton was a man that made many contributions to the field of science. This included meteorology, physiology and biology. This was brought on by his love of counting and measuring. He was active in the British Association for the Advancement of Science, writing many papers on different topics. From 1858 to 1899 Galton was the general secretary and president, of the Anthropological Section. He was also an active participant in the Geographical section of the Royal Geographical Society. In 1859 an event happened that would change Galton’s life, and it came from the publishing of Charles Darwin which was called “The Origin of the Species”.

Galton became obsessed with this theory of Darwin’s, especially the first chapter, that was called the “Variation under Domestication”. This referred to the breeding of domestic animals. Galton spent the rest of his life exploring variations in the human population. The top thing on Galton’s list was the physical and mental characteristics that took place from generation to generation. By keeping records of relatives in a family, he then introduced his findings an evidence of the inheritance of abilities. In 1860 Galton conceived the standard of deviation. He went on to study fingerprinting along with other accomplishments in his life.

Francis Galton’s last years

In his final years Galton worked on a novel called the “Kantsaywhere”. This novel was not published by him but his notes tell us he had been working on it since 1901. The novel described a utopia organized by a eugenic religion which was designed to breed fitter and smarter humans. It was offered to Methuen for publication but they had very little interest in it. When his niece received the book she burnt most of it due to being offended by the love scene in it. Some of his notes were saved and still exsist today.

Galton received many awards in his life time such as, the highest award given from the Royal Geographical Society. One of  two medals were for the mapping of Southwestern Africa. He became a member of the prestigious Athenaeum Club and he was made a fellow member of the Fellow of the Royal Society. He received every award that the Victorian Scientific establishments could offer. He was knighted in 1909. It was estimated that his childhood IQ was approximately 200. Francis Galton died on the 17th of January 1911.

Summary

Francis Galton was one of a kind and astounded the world with his intelligence. He brought many new ideas and invention to this world of ours and would have proved a great loss to society without him having lived to be a great part of our history.

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9 Comments

Westbrook, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

I studied some about Francis Galton . He was a very intelligent person who was interested in just about everything.

Louie Jerome, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

Very interesting. I learned a lot here because when I read your title I thought of mathematics, but I was wrong!

Joni Keith, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

I always learn so much from your articles. I’m a big fan of forensic science but never realized Galton had contributed to it. This is a very informative piece, Yaffel. Once again you’ve done a wonderful job.

rutherfranc, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

informative and well researched.. I initially thought he`s your boyfriend or something.

yaffel, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

Oh rutherfranc you gave me the best laugh of today lol I’m old but not that old and besides did you see his IQ 200 at the age of 6, not a good match for me lol. thank you for the comment it’s appreciated

Mythili Kannan, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

Informative and had fun reading rutherfranc’s comments :-)

nutuba, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

Interesting and informative! I knew nothing of Galton before, and now I feel informed. Nicely done, nice flow. Thanks for posting this!

denus, posted this comment on Jan 29th, 2009

very informative, kept my eyes peeled to the screen.

cheers.

nrm, posted this comment on Jan 30th, 2009

Hi Yaffel, I don’t know how you do it! You compress a person’s life into just over a 1000 words! It would take me 10,000 words to try and get close! The next time I travel down to London on the M6, I’ll look across Birmingham and think how much I’ve learned from you.

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