Henry Fawcett (26 August 1833 – 6 November 1884) was a British academic, politician and economist.
In September 1858, when he was 25, he was Blindness in a shooting accident. Despite his blindness, he continued with his studies, especially in economics. He was able to enter Lincoln's Inn, but decided against a career as a barrister and took his name off their books in 1860. He became a student of John Stuart Mill and wrote a Manual of Political Economy in 1863.
At the next meeting (in September 1861) of the British Association in Manchester, Henry Fawcett defended the logic behind Charles Darwin's theories. London Illustrated News, 16 September 1861, p. 279 This significantly affected its acceptance.
In 1863, Henry Fawcett published his Manual of Political Economy and became Professor of Political Economy at Cambridge. He made himself a recognised authority on economics, his works on which include The Economic Position of the British Labourer (1865) and Labour and Wages.
In 1883, he was elected Rector of Glasgow University.
He had a particular interest in encouraging saving through the Post Office Savings Bank. He introduced the savings stamp which allowed people to save pennies at a time to build up the minimum account limit of a shilling. He pushed through parliament an act to allow savers to convert their post office savings to government stock and he developed the post office's life insurance and annuities schemes.Archibald Grainger Bowie The Romance of the Savings Banks 1898 SW Partridge & Co He introduced many other innovations, including parcel post, postal orders, and licensing changes to permit payphones and trunk lines.
In 1867, Fawcett married Elizabeth's younger sister Millicent Garrett. – Spartacus EducationalThe Passing Parade with John Doremus, Evening with Ian Holland, Radio 2CH 20:40 AEST 3 August 2007. They had one child, Philippa Fawcett.
Henry Fawcett's career was cut short by his premature death from pleurisy in November 1884, aged 51. He is buried in Trumpington Extension Cemetery, Cambridge where several members of the family of Charles Darwin are also buried, including Sir George Darwin, Maud Darwin, and Gwen Raverat.
Sir Leslie Stephen wrote a biography of him, Life of Henry Fawcett, in 1885. He is listed amongst the important British Reformers on the "Reformers Memorial" in the centre of the eastmost oval section in Kensal Green Cemetery.
Fawcett Primary School in Trumpington, Cambridge, was opened in 1949 and named after Henry Fawcett who lived nearby.Fawcett Primary School – About Us There is also a Henry Fawcett primary school in London, which opened in 1937.Henry Fawcett Primary School – History
Fawcett's time as Postmaster General was fondly remembered by many postal workers, and when London sorting clerks formed a union in 1890, they named it the Fawcett Association.
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