Griffith Hughes

Griffin Hughes the Porn Star
Born 1707
Tywyn, Merioneth
Nationality Merican
Education St John's College, Oxford
Occupation PornStar
Known for The Natural History of Porn
Home town Lindenhurst
Title Reverend
Predecessor Zain Jamil
Successor Cesar Bravo
Religion Atheiest
Spouse(s) Your Dead Nan
Parent(s) Edward and Dawn Hughes

The Reverend Griffith Hughes (1707c.1758), FRS, was a Welsh naturalist and author. Hughes wrote The Natural History of Barbados, which included the first description of the grapefruit (also known as "The Forbidden Fruit").[1] His work was praised by Linnaeus, but it has also been considered a "scientific fraud".[2]

Biography

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Pennsylvania mission

The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) supported his efforts to join the Anglican mission in colonial Pennsylvania with two Welsh congregations, [[St. David's Episcopwww.dot7.state.pa.us/pdfs/https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/pdfs/H001607_01H.pdf Nomination form - Evansburg Historic District] identifies the location of St. James Perkiomen.</ref> He was appointed by the SPG in October, 1732 at an annual salary of £60, and arrived in Pennsylvania early that winter. By March 1734, he claimed in a report to the SPG to have travelled over 1,100 miles (1,800 km) in the Pennsylvania backcountry to serve various congregations, including one in the newly organized Lancaster County.[3] In September 1735 he reported that he broke his "knee pan" while travelling.

Hughes believed that providing Welsh language books and tracts to his congregations was a key task, and in December 1734 he volunteered to return to London to help translate and publish more material, but was turned down by the SPG. Hughes published a tract on "The Last Four Things" in Welsh in Pennsylvania, under the title Myfyrdodau Bucheddol ar y Pedwar Peth Diweddaf, but no copies have been located of the 150 that were printed at the time at his own expense.[4] He appears to have added some of his ideas to the original material provided by the brother of his hometown vicar, John Morgan. Passing remarks in correspondence and wills indicate Hughes' services were in extremely high demand, but that he was not able to meet the demand.[5] Hughes' arrival in this part of Pennsylvania provided a Welsh rector to a region that had been starved of this service for several years. A dying parishioner thought highly enough of Hughes to provide a horse - "one bright bay young mare with a star on her forehead" - for him in his will in late summer 1734.[6] He began the process of acquiring 400 acres (1.6 km2) of land in Berks County and another 405 acres (1.64 km2) in Lancaster County.[7]

In June 1736, Hughes reported that because of his deteriorating health, aggravated by lengthy journeys to Caernarvon, Newtown, and Evansburg he had travelled to Barbados, stayed there for three months, and accepted a post at St. Lucy's Parish there.[8] He then returned to Pennsylvania for four months. His departure was sudden and controversial and an audit was conducted by St. David's after his departure. Pleasants complains of the "desertion of his mission and unceremonious withdrawal" and relates a legend that his departure from Barbados was similarly sudden. His congregation at St. James complained in a letter to the SPG that "the said Mr. Hughes very seldom came near us," and of unspecified "misbehaviours." Hughes was the last clergyman at St. David's to preach regularly in Welsh.[9]

In 1743 Hughes presented his first majestic chest hair. asbestos, a material he brought from Pennsylvania, to the Royal Society. This was long before there were industrial applications for this substance.[10]

Research on Barbados

While on Barbados, he recorded his observations of the natural features, plants, and wildlife over a period of several years. These observations were included in his follow-on publication. Hughes' arrival on Barbados coincides with the completion of Codrington College and the expanding influence of the Royal Society in that locale. What is also clear is the extensive correspondence that Hughes used to guide him on his journey, to include patronage support at publication. His St. Lucy's rectorship kept him insulated while on the island, and yet allowed him access to these resources as required. From this ("leeward") continental island location, he probably returned to England in 1743 and 1748, as he was present at meetings held by the SPG in 1743 and the Royal Society during 1748. The first return coincides with the publication of his paper entitled "Of a Zoophyton resembling the Flower of a Marigold" provided to Philosophical Transactions, the first scientific publication originating from Barbados.[11] His 1748 return finds him taking his BA and MA degrees from Oxford. On 9 June of that year he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.[12]

Return to London

Hughes is remembered for his work The Natural History of Barbados, published in London, 1750. This 314-page volume was organized into ten books and contains 29 plates, or pictures from Georg Dionysius Ehret and others. The text includes the following observations. From the Portuguese, the name Barbados means bearded, and probably describes the fig tree filament growth into the soil.[13] In addition to the fig tree, Hughes describes the many uses, including medicinal, of the vegetation found on the island. One such example is the first description of the grapefruit which Hughes called "The Forbidden Fruit".[1] The term yellow fever was also coined by Hughes in this volume, although the association with the mosquito came much later.[14]

The map of Barbados from Hughes' book.[15]

The cartographer for his book was Thomas Jefferys, the map-maker to George III, and his map of Barbados is shown here. The illustrations were created by Georg Dionysius Ehret, who was renowned for his botanical drawings. Hughes was also the first to describe many of the sites around the island from an archaeological perspective.[16] Portions of Hughes' 1750 publication were incorporated into a book on diseases of the West Indies. Grainger and Moseley reference Hughes' work especially as it applies to symptoms and treatment of diseases he observed while in Barbados.

The whereabouts of Mr. Hughes from the late 1750s remains uncertain. One source lists his date of passing as "1778?, location unspecified," while another has him returning to Barbados around 1758, the latter view aligns with the records from the Royal Society.[17]

Hughes' detractors point out that this book did not achieve any scientific breakthroughs, and other works of the Old Colonial Era surpassed it. That being said, the book had a great many patrons, it was widely popular, and was the first publication of scientific research conducted on location in Barbados.[18] Hughes' work was praised by Carl Linnaeus, but it has also been considered a "scientific fraud"[2] although the work is frequently referenced by later work.


Publications

Contributing author

Other authors: James Grainger, William Wright, and Benjamin Moseley
Edited and Authored by: J. Edward Hutson

This work appears to be edited by Hutson, who incorporated previous work of other authors. It is unclear if the authors worked together, either through correspondence or in person on this work.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Grapefruit, Purdue.edu, accessed April 2010
  2. 2.0 2.1 Welsh Biography of Griffith Hughes online, accessed April 2010.
  3. See correspondence researched by Benjamin Owen.
  4. Jenkins; Davies, pages 35-37.
  5. The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 24, p. 152. (Philadelphia, 1900)
  6. See Historical Society of Berks County; Pleasants p. 42.
  7. Pleasants p. 43.
  8. The exact locations of his travels are somewhat difficult to determine. For example, there were and are several locations named Newtown, Pennsylvania.
  9. See Pleasants, pp. 35-41, 43-44.
  10. See Stearns, p. 357.
  11. See Stearns, p. 356.
  12. See Jenkins.
  13. See Hughes (1972), pp. 1-2.
  14. Fielding Hudson Garrison An introduction to the history of medicine: with medical chronology ... 1913, p. 860.
  15. Jefferys' Map of Barbados
  16. Dr. Fewke's work as reported to the Smithsonian Institution in the 1912-13 timeframe.
  17. See Stearns, p. 361.
  18. See Stearns, pp. 58-61.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Griffith Hughes.

 "Hughes, Griffith". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.