William Garrow Lettsom

William Garrow Lettsom (1805-1887) was a British diplomat, mineralogist and spectroscopist. He was instrumental in procuring the publication of the secret Treaty of the Triple Alliance between Argentina, the Empire of Brazil and Uruguay.

Early life

Lettsom was born into a Quaker family at Fulham in March 1805. His paternal grandfather John Coakley Lettsom was a famous physician, philanthropist and abolitionist who held that sea-bathing[1] was good for public health.

Main article: John Coakley Lettsom

His maternal grandfather − with whom he lived in his youth − was Sir William Garrow the celebrated criminal defender, afterwards a judge, who introduced the phrase "presumed innocent until proven guilty" into the common law and whose life inspired the television drama series Garrow's Law.

Main article: William Garrow

Lettsom was educated at Westminster School and Cambridge University.[2]

Literary acquaintance

As an undergraduate at Cambridge University Lettsom befriended the author William Makepeace Thackeray and was the (or an) editor of The Snob in which some of Thackeray's earliest work appeared;[3] Lettsom has been identified as the character Tapeworm[4] in Thackeray's novel Vanity Fair.[5] Lettsom was well acquainted with the cartoonist George Cruikshank, illustrator of the early works of Charles Dickens. Lettsom was a contributor to various literary periodicals under the pseudonym Dr. Bulgardo.[2]

An extract from Lettsom's book on mineralogy.

Scientist

Lettsom was a competent scientist in an age where it was still possible for an amateur to be so. He was best known as the joint author of Greg and Lettsom's Manual of the Mineralogy of Great Britain and Ireland,[6] which was the most complete and accurate work that had appeared on the mineralogy of the British Isles. But his scientific interests were wider, and he corresponded with the most eminent workers in spectroscopy. He was the author of several papers on geological, electrical and spectroscopic subjects.[7]

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1849. In that year he communicated an experiment in bioelectricity: by making a wound in a finger and inserting the electrode of a galvanometer, while placing the other electrode in contact with an unwounded finger, a current was observed to flow. Lettsom observed that the experiment was repeatable for he had tried it himself.[8] In 1857 while on diplomatic service in Mexico he sent to the Royal Entomological Society of London some seeds which, when put in a warm place, became "very lively". The grub responsible had not been investigated scientifically before, wrote Lettsom, and he asked the Society to do so. These were the celebrated Mexican jumping beans.[9]

Diplomat

After being called to the Bar by Lincoln's Inn he entered the diplomatic service. After postings in Berlin, Munich (1831), Washington (1840), Turin (1849) and Madrid (1850) he was appointed secretary to the Legation at Mexico (1854) and became the Chargé d'Affaires.

In the unreformed British diplomatic service there were no examinations; candidates were appointed by the influence of political friends. This caused criticism. In the House of Commons on May 22, 1855 the motion was

That it is the opinion of this House that the complete Revision of our Diplomatic Establishment recommended in the Report of the Select Committee of 1850 on Official Salaries should be carried into effect.

In this debate Lettsom was used as a case in point to illustrate the defects of the unreformed system. It has been noted that Lettsom, "who had invariably conducted himself to the satisfaction of those who employed him",[10] received one of the slowest promotions in the diplomatic service.[11] A diplomat was expected to be a gentleman and to have a private income whereby he could receive unpaid diplomatic appointments. Hence nine of the twenty-three years of Lettsom's service were unsalaried; promotion was slow. This glacial treatment did not apply, however, to those who had powerful political friends, for they were soon appointed to agreeable capitals at enormous salaries. [10] The motion was carried by 112 votes to 57, [12] Mr Otway MP remarking that "The person who had shown himself to be the fittest man, whether he was the son of a Peer or a tailor, should be chosen".[13]

While in Mexico the British government suspended relations with that country on Lettsom's representation, and he was the object of an attempted assassination. In 1859 Lettsom was appointed Consul-General and Chargé d'Affaires to the Republic of Uruguay.[2]

Parliamentary paper. Lettsom tells London he is getting a copy of the secret Treaty..

In 1864 and early 1865 Paraguayan forces under the orders of Francisco Solano López seized Brazilian and Argentine shipping and invaded the provinces of the Mato Grosso and Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil) and Corrientes (Argentina). On 1 May 1865 Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay signed the Treaty of the Triple Alliance against Paraguay. By Article XVIII of the Treaty its provisions were to be kept secret until its "principal object"[14] should be obtained. One of its provisions concerned the acquisition by Argentina of large tracts of territory then in dispute between it and Paraguay. Lettsom was not satisfied about this and surreptitiously obtained a copy of the Treaty from the Uruguayan diplomat Dr Carlos de Castro. He forwarded it to London and the British government ordered it to be translated into English and published to Parliament. When the text became available in South America there was outrage in several quarters, some because of the Treaty's content, others because it had been published at all.

Lettsom retired from the diplomatic service in 1869. He never married.[15] He died of acute bronchitis on December 14, 1887.[16]

Notes

  1. Urban, p. 143.
  2. 1 2 3 Obituary, p. 165.
  3. Benét, p. 62.
  4. Presumably because his grandfather Dr Lettsom treated tapeworm by dosing his patients with paraffin.
  5. Greig, pp. 102-3.
  6. Greg and Lettsom.
  7. Obituary, pp. 165-6.
  8. Vanable, p. 164.
  9. Entomological Transactions, p. 90.
  10. 1 2 Hansard, p. 917.
  11. Bindoff, p. 162.
  12. Hansard, pp. 898-921.
  13. Hansard, p. 919.
  14. The deposition of López or (on another view) the demolition of the Fortress of Humaitá.
  15. Hostettler and Braby, p. 177.
  16. Royal Astronomical Society, p. 167.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.