George Birkbeck Norman Hill

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George Birkbeck Norman Hill (June 7, 1835 - February 27, 1903), English editor and author, son of Arthur Hill, headmaster of Bruce Castle school, was born at Tottenham, Middlesex.

Arthur Hill, with his brothers Rowland Hill, the postal reformer and Matthew Davenport Hill, afterwards recorder of Birmingham had worked out a system of education which was to exclude compulsion of any kind. The school at Bruce Castle, of which Arthur Hill was head master, was founded to carry into execution their theories, known as the Hazelwood system. George Birkbeck Hill was educated in his father's school and at Pembroke College, Oxford, where he made lasting friendships with Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris. It was also at Oxford that he began his writing career, contributing articles to William Fulford's Oxford and Cambridge Magazine. HIll suffered a serious attack of typhoid fever in 1856 which left him in a delicate state of health. Consequently, he only received an 'honorary' fourth class degree in 1858, although he was later awarded a Bachelor of Civil Law in 1866 and a Doctor of Civil Law in 1871 in recognition of his contribution to English letters.

In 1858 Hill began to teach at Bruce Castle school, and from 1868 to 1877 was headmaster. He married Annie Scott, the sister of a friend from his schooldays, on 29 December 1858. Partly to relieve what he felt to be the tedium of running the school, Hill returned to writing and reviewing. In 1869, he became a regular contributor to the Saturday Review, with which he remained in connection until 1884. On his retirement from teaching he devoted himself to the study of English 18th century literature, and established his reputation as the most learned commentator on the works of Samuel Johnson.

Remaining true to his family's radical roots, Hill was a strong supporter of the Liberal Party and actively campaigned on behalf of Gladstone in the mid 1880s. He settled at Oxford in 1887, but from 1891 onwards his winters were usually spent abroad for his health. He died at Hampstead, London, on 27 February 1903.

His works include:

  • Dr Johnson, his Friends and his Critics (1878)
  • an edition of Boswell's Correspondence (1879)
  • a laborious edition of Boswell's Life of Johnson, including Boswell's Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, and Johnson's Diary of a Journey into North Wales (Clarendon Press, 6 vols., 1887)
  • Wit and Wisdom of Samuel Johnson (1888)
  • Select Essays of Dr Johnson (1889)
  • Footsteps of Dr Johnson in Scotland (1890)
  • Letters of Johnson (1892)
  • Johnsonian Miscellanies (2 vols., 1897)
  • an edition (1900) of Edward Gibbon's Autobiography
  • Johnson's Lives of the Poets (3 vols., 1905)

Dr Birkbeck Hill's elaborate edition of Boswell's Life is a monumental work, invaluable to the student.

See a memoir by his nephew, Harold Spencer Scott, in the edition of the Lives of the English Poets (1905), and the Letters edited by his daughter, Lucy Crump, in 1903.

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.