Memories of my life by Francis Galton

"Memories of my life" by Francis Galton is a memoir written in the early 20th century. It presents a self-portrait of the Victorian polymath’s upbringing, travels, and the formation of his scientific interests—spanning statistics, heredity, geography, and meteorology—told thematically rather than strictly in sequence. The work likely follows his family heritage (including ties to the Darwins), early education and medical training, and the explorations and observations that shaped his outlook. The opening of the memoir explains that the recollections are grouped by subject, with an index-like method for people and dates, and then turns to parentage: a Birmingham birth, the Larches and Duddeston homes, a Quaker lineage tied to the Lunar Society through his grandfather Samuel John Galton, and maternal links to Dr. Erasmus Darwin. He sketches vivid family figures—Captain Barclay’s feats, the piety of Mrs. Fry, the statistical bent of his father, his mother’s method and ingenuity—and notes inherited traits of stamina and a tendency to asthma. The narrative on childhood shows an adoring, invalid sister (Adele) schooling him in scripture and verse, harsh schooling at Boulogne with its patois and punishments, happier growth at Kenilworth, then frustration with classical drill at King Edward’s School under Dr. Jeune. Early medical studies follow: mentorship by Hodgson and Bowman, a first sobering post-mortem, intense hands-on hospital work before anesthesia and antisepsis, reflections on pain, experiment, and the need for data in medicine, a year at King’s College among notable teachers, and a narrow escape from drowning. A brief, impulsive tour to the East takes him down the Danube to Constantinople and Smyrna, through quarantines at Syra and Trieste (including the ritual of “pratique” and “Spoglio”), and to the Adelsberg caves, before returning home broadened. At Cambridge he enters Trinity, admires the rigor but laments the neglect of biology, spends a lively reading party at Keswick (glimpsing Whewell’s courtship, watching ordnance surveyors sight Snowdon), and records local sports, a sham Polish count, work with the famed tutor William Hopkins, and new friendships—bringing the opening chapters to a close. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

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About this eBook

Author Galton, Francis, 1822-1911
Title Memories of my life
Original Publication London: Methuen & Co, 1908.
Credits Peter Becker and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Language English
LoC Class Q: Science
Subject Galton, Francis, 1822-1911
Subject Scientists -- Great Britain -- Biography
Category Text
eBook-No. 78669
Release Date
Copyright Public domain in the USA.
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