William Hearn

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Portrait of Hearn as a professor, taken some time between 1855 and 1873.
Portrait of Hearn as a professor, taken some time between 1855 and 1873.

William Edward Hearn (21 April 1826 – 23 April 1888), university professor and politician, was one of the four original professors at the University of Melbourne and was the first Dean of the University's Law School.

Hearn was born in Belturbet, County Cavan, Ireland, in 1826, the son of Reverend William Edward Hearn (a curate and later a vicar) and Henrietta Hearn, née Reynolds. He was the second of seven sons in the family. He was educated at Portora Royal School in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland and later studied at Trinity College at the University of Dublin from 1842. There he was highly successful in his study of classics, logic and ethics, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1847.

Also in 1847 he married his first wife, Rose Le Fanu, the daughter of a rector. The two would later have six children: five daughters and one son. Following his studies in arts, Hearn also studied law, at Trinity College and later at King's Inns in Dublin and Lincoln's Inn in London, and was admitted to the Irish Bar in 1853.

Hearn's teaching career began in 1849, when he was selected as a professor of Ancient Greek at the Queen's College, Galway in Galway, Ireland, which had been established a few years earlier. In 1854, a London based committee of the newly established University of Melbourne selected Hearn as one of four original professors of the University. Hearn was to teach subjects including modern history, modern literature and political science in the Faculty of Arts, although at times during his career he also taught classics. Hearn moved to Melbourne, Victoria, Australia in 1855, where he took up residence in the rooms provided on the university campus. Hearn's students at Melbourne included Alfred Deakin, H.B. Higgins and Isaac Isaacs.

In January 1859, Hearn stood as a candidate for the Parliament of Victoria, in a by-election for a seat in the Victorian Legislative Assembly, although he was unsuccessful. The university's Chancellor, Redmond Barry, was not pleased with Hearn's attempts to enter parliament, and as a result the university council passed a rule prohibiting professors from standing for election, and even from joining any political group, a rule that would last more than a century.[1]

Hearn was admitted to the Victorian Bar in 1860, although he only occasionally practised as a barrister.[1] In 1873, Hearn was appointed as the first Dean of the newly created Faculty of Law, lecturing in subjects such as constitutional law. In 1874 and 1877 he again stood unsuccessfully for parliament, evading the ban on professors running for election on the basis that as a dean, he had lost his professorial title. In 1878 he was finally elected to the Victorian Legislative Council, for Central Province. Hearn was regarded as a good politician, who held conservative views but was less concerned with party politics than he was with the technical business of making legislation, and by 1882 he was regarded as a leader in the Council.[1]

In 1877 Hearn's first wife Rose died, after thirty years of marriage. In 1878 he married a second time, to Isabel St Clair, in Melbourne. The couple had no children. In May 1886, Hearn was elected as Chancellor of the University of Melbourne, however he lost his position on the university's council at the elections in October that year when his term expired and he was not reelected, and as such he was only able to serve one year as Chancellor. Also in 1886 he was made a Queen's Counsel, in recognition of his academic work, since he rarely practised law.

Hearn's last major project was an attempt to codify Victorian law, which resulted in a book published on its theoretical basis, The Theory of Legal Duties and Rights,[2] and a draft bill which ultimately entered parliament for consideration. The codification, influenced by positivist and utilitarian thought, was "based on a Benthamite-Austinian view of jurisprudence."[1] However, the codification was never adopted since "although praised in Parliament, [it] was regarded as too abstract by practising lawyers."[3] Thus although it "provoked formal admiration... it was quietly abandoned in favour of simple consolidation."[1] Although the codification was not adopted, Hearn nevertheless helped through his other work to estabish a strong and dominant tradition of positivism in Australia.[4]

Hearn died in Melbourne in 1888. He was survived by his son and three of his daughters.

He published several books over his career. Plutology, or the Theory of the Efforts to Satisfy Human Wants,[5] a political economy textbook which was well regarded by economists such as William Stanley Jevons and Francis Ysidro Edgeworth, although there is some indication that Hearn's book was derived from that of several less well known English writers.[1] The Government of England,[6] a work on British constitutional law, was praised by Dicey as teaching him more about the way in which early constitutional principles were developed than any other work.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g La Nauze, J.A.. (1972). "Hearn, William Edward (1826 - 1888)". Australian Dictionary of Biography 4: 370-372. Carlton: Melbourne University Press. Retrieved on 2006-07-21.
  2. ^ Hearn, William (1883). The theory of legal duties and rights : an introduction to analytical jurisprudence. Melbourne: John Ferres, Government Printer. 
  3. ^ William Edward Hearn. The University of Melbourne 150th Anniversary. University of Melbourne. Retrieved on 2006-07-22.
  4. ^ Spigelman, Jim. "Blackstone, Burke, Bentham and The Human Rights Act 2004". Australian Bar Review 26 (1). Retrieved on 2006-07-22. 
  5. ^ Hearn, William (1863). Plutology, or, The theory of the efforts to satisfy human wants. Melbourne: George Robertson. 
  6. ^ Hearn, William (1867). The government of England : its structure, and its development. Melbourne: George Robertson.