James Whitelaw

The Rev. James Whitelaw (1749 – 4 February 1813) was an Irish historian, writer, statistician and philanthropist.[1]

Life

He was born in County Leitrim and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. He graduated in 1771. He was ordained in the Church of Ireland and became rector of St. James and then St. Catherine's in Thomas St. in Dublin. He carried out a great deal of work on behalf of the poor, including establishing the Erasmus Smith Free School on the Coombe and other institutions.

In 1798 he carried out a census of the city of Dublin (a difficult undertaking at the time on account of the 1798 Rising).[1] Epidemic diseases were then frequent in Dublin, but, undeterred by the fear of infection, he personally inspected nearly every house in the city and questioned nearly every inhabitant. Hitherto the extent of the population had been only vaguely conjectured - he counted a total population of 182,370. He published the results of his investigations in 1805 in his Essay on the Population of Dublin in 1798.[2] The many detailed statistics which he accumulated were stored in the city archives in Dublin Castle, which were among those destroyed in the Four Courts during the Irish Civil War in 1922.

In 1805 he was made one of the members of the commission to inquire into the conduct of the paving board of Dublin. He formed the Meath Charitable Loan in 1808.[2]

He collaborated with John Warburton, deputy keeper of the records in Dublin Castle, in writing a History of Dublin, completed after his death by Robert Walsh.[3]

He ministered to the poor in the vicinity of Cork Street Fever Hospital, where he caught a fever himself and died in 1813.[1]

Bibliography

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Boylan, Henry (1998). A Dictionary of Irish Biography, 3rd Edition. Dublin: Gill and MacMillan. p. 444. ISBN 0-7171-2945-4.
  2. 1 2  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: O'Donoghue, David James (1900). "Whitelaw, James". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography 61. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 109,110.
  3. Irish Times, 3 November 1934, p. 6

References

External links

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