Shallet Turner

Shallet Turner FRS LL. D. (ca. 1692 – 13 November 1762) was a Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge, and a Fellow of the Royal Society. As Regius Professor of Modern history he was notorious for treating the position as a sinecure.

Life

Turner was baptised on 27 September 1692, the son of John Turner of Tynemouth, Northumberland, and received his early education in Houghton-le-Spring.[1] In 1710, at the age of seventeen, he matriculated at Peterhouse as a pensioner, but later the same year he became a Cosin Scholar.[1][2] He went on to graduate BA in 1713/14 and was elected a fellow of Peterhouse in 1715. He proceeded MA in 1717 and graduated Doctor of Laws in 1728, also being promoted to Junior Dean of his college.[1][3][4] He had a particular interest in Mathematics.[5]

The Hall of Peterhouse, little changed since the time of Turner

In 1724, King George I established Regius Professorships in Modern History and Modern Languages at both Oxford and Cambridge. Those to be appointed, at a salary of £400 a year, were to be "persons of sober conversation and prudent conduct... skilled in modern history and in the knowledge of modern languages". In reality, the position was a sinecure in the gift of the King. In 1735, a year after the death of Samuel Harris, the first of the new regius professors at Cambridge, Turner was appointed to succeed him. The History of the University of Cambridge says of the appointment that Turner had "no qualifications whatever apart from his being a fellow of Peterhouse".[6][7]

Shortly after Turner's appointment as regius professor, a government official asked him for information on his work. Turner replied that it was more than seven years since a list of King's Scholars had been made, that all such places were currently vacant, and that the documents and nomination forms could be found in the office of the Secretary of State. In response to this, no action was taken.[3] At the end of the Summer Term of 1737, Thomas Gray wrote with heavy irony to Horace Walpole

Not to tire you with my travels, you must know that Mr. Turner is come down. His list is vastly near being full notwithstanding which, and the cares and duties of his office, he says he thinks to go to Paris every year.[3][8]

Turner continued as regius professor from 1735 until 1762.[1] A historian of the University reports that "Turner held the professorship for seven and twenty years and did absolutely nothing." [9][10]

The antiquary William Cole (1714–1782) wrote of Turner –

He never resided in the University, but only occasionally with Dr Smith at Trinity College Lodge, being a great acquaintance. As to reading lectures he never thought it incumbent upon him to do so: but allowed some small pittance to the French and Italian teachers in the University. I have often heard my old Italian master, Signor Piazza, complain of him for the exility of his exhibition to him.[11]

On 26 March 1741, Turner was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.[12][13]

In 1748, he was a subscriber to Colin Maclaurin's Account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries.[14]

In 1748, Turner resigned his fellowship of Peterhouse,[1] and in 1749 Thomas Gooch, as Bishop of Ely, filled the vacancy by appointing one Edward Osborne.[15]

An anonymous pamphlet appeared in 1751 which complained of various abuses at the University and said of Turner that "If the Professor of Modern History and Modern Languages was to reside with proper assistants in the University, it is not to be doubted but that a numerous audience would regularly attend a course of lectures so useful and entertaining".[16] However, neither the king nor the government was inclined to take any action, so such criticisms had no effect whatever.[9]

In 1750, Turner was noted as a new subscriber to Archibald Bower's The History of the Popes (1748-1766).[17] In 1759, he was a subscriber to a new translation of The Tragedies of Sophocles by Thomas Francklin, the University's Regius Professor of Greek.[18]

Sir Edmund Gosse, in his biography of Thomas Gray, notes that the post held by Turner came to be seen as a complete sinecure. In 1762, when Turner had been dead two weeks, Gray's friends lobbied to secure the regius chair in modern history for Gray, as "It was not expected that any lectures should be given; as a matter of fact not one lecture was delivered until after Gray's death". In the event, Gray lost out to Lawrence Brockett, but he later secured the position after Brockett's death in a fall from his horse in 1768.[19]

Turner's Will was proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury.[1]

In his 1955 edition of Smyth's The Lessons of History (1955), Wallace Brockway says dismissively of Turner –

Of Shallet Turner, regius professor for more than a quarter of a century, good or ill fame says nothing: he is a footnote, and an uninteresting one.[20]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Turner, Shallet (TNR710S)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. Thomas Alfred Walker, Peterhouse (1906), p. 158
  3. 1 2 3 G. P. Gooch, 'The Cambridge Chair' in Studies in Modern History p. 295 at books.google.com
  4. Thomas Gery Cullum, Register of the University of Cambridge (1864), p. 183 at books.google.com
  5. Lesley Hanks, Buffon avant l'"Histoire Naturelle" (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1966), p. 129 at books.google.com
  6. Peter Searby, A History of the University of Cambridge: Volume 3: 1750-1870 p. 233 online at books.google.com
  7. John Le Neve, Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae (1854), p. 664 at books.google.com
  8. Paget Toynbee, ed., The Correspondence of Gray, Walpole, West and Ashton, 1734-71 (1915), I, 151-152
  9. 1 2 Denys Arthur Winstanley, Unreformed Cambridge: a Study of Certain Aspects of The University in the Eighteenth Century (1935), p. 156 online at books.google.com
  10. Karl Hammer & Jürgen Voss, Historische Forschung im 18. Jahrhundert: Organisation, Zielsetzung (Deutsches Historisches Institut, 1976), p. 321
  11. British Library Add. MS. 5882, folio 140
  12. Thomas Thomson, History of the Royal Society, from its institution to the end of the eighteenth century (1812), p. xlii at books.google.com
  13. John Chamberlayne, Magnae Britanniae Notitia: or the Present State of Great-Britain (1748), p. 203 at books.google.com
  14. Colin Maclaurin's Account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries, in four books (1747), List of Subscribers at p. xviii
  15. Charles Durnford, Edward Hyde East, eds., Reports of cases argued and determined in the Court of King's Bench, vol. 2 (1792), p. 308 at books.google.com
  16. Free Thoughts Upon University Education (1751), p. 14
  17. Archibald Bower, The History of the Popes, from the Foundation of the See of Rome to the Present Time (1748-1766); vol. 2 (1750), 'List of Names omitted in the Catalogue; or of New Subscribers' at p. 26 online at books.google.com
  18. Thomas Francklin (ed.), The Tragedies of Sophocles (London: printed for R. Francklin, 1759), List of Subscribers at p.26 online at books.google.com
  19. Edmund William Gosse, Gray (London: Macmillan, 1902), p. 133 at books.google.com
  20. Wallace Brockway, 'Introduction' to William Smyth, The Lessons of History: lectures on modern history and the French and American Revolutions: abridged and edited by Wallace Brockway (1955 edn), p. xi at books.google.com
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