Clement-Jones family - Person Sheet
Clement-Jones family - Person Sheet
NameEdward WAKEFIELD, 8298
Birth1774
Death1854
FatherEdward WAKEFIELD , 8296 (1750-1826)
MotherPriscilla BELL , 941 (1750-1832)
Spouses
Birth1767
Death1817
Marriage1791
ChildrenEdward Gibbon , 973 (1796-1862)
 Felix , 1288
 Daniel Bell , 968
 Catherine Gurney , 8674 (1793-1873)
 Daniel Bell , 8675
 Arthur , 8676
 John Howard , 8677 (1803-1862)
 Priscilla , 8678
 Percy , 8679
Marriage1822
Notes for Edward WAKEFIELD
Philanthropist land agent and writer on economics.

See Dictionary of National Biography.

Edward Wakefield (1774–1854) was an English philanthropist and statistician, chiefly known as the author of Ireland, Statistical and Political, and as the father of several controversial sons.
[edit]Life

Edward was the eldest son of Edward Wakefield (1750–1826) and Priscilla Bell, and was born in 1774. Wakefield commenced life as a farmer near Romford in Essex, and was subsequently employed under the naval arsenal. In 1814 he established himself as a land agent at 42 Pall Mall. He soon became well known as an authority on agriculture, while his interest in education won for him the character of a practical philanthropist.

He was a strong advocate of the educational theories of Joseph Lancaster, and was on terms of intimacy with James Mill and Francis Place. Wakefield is best known as the author of Ireland, Statistical and Political, published in 1812, a work which, in spite of many inaccuracies, is, from the candour and tolerance it displays, a very valuable account of Ireland in the early years of the nineteenth century. The book was undertaken in 1808 at the suggestion of John Foster, 1st Baron Oriel, formerly chancellor of the Irish exchequer, and Wakefield devoted four years to the task. Mackintosh in the Edinburgh Review, while noting its defects in matters of detail, said of this work that "few books have stronger marks of the candour and probity of the writer;" and McCulloch called it "the best and most complete work on Ireland since Arthur Young's tour". Wakefield was a warm admirer of Pitt, by whom he is said to have been consulted in regard to Ireland, and was also confidentially employed by Lord Melville (see Robert Saunders Dundas).

Wakefield died at Knightsbridge on 18 May 1854. His appearance in later life is described as that of "a beautiful old man of lofty stature".
Wakefield married, first, on 3 Oct. 1791, Susanna Crash (d. 1816) of Felstead, Essex, by whom he was the father of ten children,[1] including five particularly notable ones:

Edward Gibbon Wakefield
Daniel Bell Wakefield
William Hayward Wakefield
Arthur Wakefield
Felix Wakefield
He married his second wife , Frances, in 1822, she was the daughter of David Davies, headmaster of Macclesfield grammar school.[2]
Last Modified 30 Jun 2012Created 2 Apr 2024 using Reunion for Macintosh