White Watson
White Watson | |
---|---|
self-silhouette | |
Born | 10 April 1760 |
Died | 8 August 1835 (aged 75) |
Nationality | British |
Parent(s) | Samuel and Martha White |
White Watson (10 April 1760 – 8 August 1835) was an early English geologist, sculptor, stonemason and carver, marble-worker and mineral dealer. In common with many learned people of his time, he was skilled in a number of artistic and scientific areas, becoming a writer, poet, journalist, teacher, botanist and gardener as well as a geologist and mineralogist. He kept extensive diaries and sketchbooks of his observations on geology, fossils and minerals, flora and fauna, and published a small but significant and influential number of geological papers and catalogues. As an artist he was well known locally for his silhouettes, both on paper and as marble inlays.
Life 1760–1800
Watson was born at Whitely Wood Hall,


Whilst still a child, Watson became interested in minerals and fossils, and began his own collection as well as providing specimens for sale in his uncle's shop. His uncle, Henry Watson, had been a marble sculptor in
Possibly inspired by geologist John Whitehurst's 1782 diagrams of stratigraphic sections in the Matlock area of Derbyshire, in 1785 Watson presented Whitehurst with a diagrammatic 'Tablet', 'A Section of a Mountain in Derbyshire', made from samples of the rocks themselves. This innovative method of display not only showed an early understanding of the new science of geological strata but also formed the first attempt at documenting the stratigraphical structure of Derbyshire as a whole as opposed to the structure of specific localities as Whitehurst had. Over the course of his life, Watson would produce about 100 such tablets, accompanied with explanatory leaflets, and his papers contain sketches for considerably more. Unfortunately most of these tablets are now untraceable, although around fifteen are known to still survive.
Henry Watson died in 1786, and the Ashford-in-the-Water business was then sold. From here on, White Watson became a finisher of marble—for many years a considerable part of his business continued to be gravestones and monumental church marbles[3]—and a fossil and mineral specimen dealer from his own premises in Bakewell which he maintained as a shop and museum for his collection until his death. It was White Watson who was chiefly responsible for the popular commercialisation of works produced in Ashford Black Marble, a limestone impregnated with bitumen to give it its sleek blackness.
In the early 1790s Watson collaborated with William Martin (1767–1810) on an illustrated catalogue of Derbyshire's Carboniferous Limestone fossils. Watson had been unsuccessfully attempting to raise funding for such a publication since 1790, and produced a one-page ' Prospectus of a Catalogue and Description of Derbyshire Fossils ' outlining the proposal (now in Sheffield Central Library) that year (a second prospectus on the theme, in conjunction with Martin, dates from 1792). However, after they began working together on the project and managed to raise the necessary funds to publish, Martin began to produce installments on his own from 1793, using Watson's text contributions and his accompanying plates with virtually no credit given. As a result, the pair eventually fell out, and Martin re-published the series under his own name as Volume I of Petrificata Derbiensia in 1809 without giving any credit to Watson at all.
Watson was elected a Fellow of the
In 1798 he remodelled a grotto in the Chatsworth House grounds into a crystal cave studded with fossils, at a cost of £110 19s.[4] (the current grotto is a later construction from the 1830s and not Watson's work). Following this, he continued to work for the Chatsworth Estate. Originally contracted for five weeks between April and June 1799 to catalogue and arrange the important mineral collection begun by Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, then partly housed in Chiswick, he also arranged the mineral collection of Lady Henrietta of Bessborough (Georgiana's sister) in Cavendish Square at the same time.
Life 1800–1835
Watson was then commissioned in 1804 to work on the rest of Georgiana's collection, the Chatsworth Mineral Collection, adding a considerable number of items during this time and further refining his understanding of the different types of rock and minerals and their relationships. By this time, Watson was something of a celebrity in natural history circles, and often received visitors to his collection at The Bath House in Bakewell, where he also lived and acted as superintendent for the Baths. One of these visitors, J. Hunter wrote of Watson in his Collectiana Hunteriana (1804): "Mr Watson was rather below the middle stature with a pug face, is a bachelor and takes his glass of spirits and water at the Inn in Bakewell every evening." Other notable visitors, correspondents and purchasers of specimens or collections over the years included
In 1808 Watson married Ann Thorpe, aged 29, from
A number of other sections along different lines across Derbyshire were published between 1813 and 1831, together with numerous localised geological sections of peaks and cliffs such as
In 1825, the year of Ann's death, Watson's business card stated he "executes monuments, tombs etc., gives lessons in geology and mineralogy and furnishes collections, affords information to antiquaries and amusement to Botanists". Probably in the same year, Watson produced an unusual circular stratigraphical diagram A DELINEATION of the ten deepest STRATA as yet discovered in the MINERAL DISTRICTS of DERBYSHIRE. In this the geological strata are arranged in near-concentric circles outwards from the oldest rocks towards the centre to youngest rocks at points around the edge marked with the different place names in Derbyshire where the strata had been noted. These points lay at different distances from the centre according to the complexity of the stratification at that point.
Later in his life, Watson designed improvements for Bakewell Baths, his residence, for the Duke of Rutland, who wanted to establish Bakewell as a fashionable spa town. Although this project ultimately failed, Watson was responsible for the Bath Gardens which were laid out in the town as part of the scheme, and these layouts largely survive today.
Despite all his works, Watson was always in debt, and he died still struggling to pay his bills by selling much of his fossil collection.[5] As Ford notes of his still-surviving cash ledger from 1796–1833, "if the entries really are a complete record of his income and expenditure he was often close to bankruptcy!"
White Watson died in Bakewell on 8 August 1835, and is buried in Bakewell churchyard. He had no children.
Surviving works

His collections were broken up and sold on his death. However, examples of his marble and limestone work survive in the tomb of the
Publications
An incomplete list of published work other than the accompanying explanations for sections and maps:
- Observations on Bakewell, post-1798
- A Catalogue of a Collection of Limestones, 1803
- A Catalogue of a Collection of Limestones, 1805
- A Catalogue of a Collection of Limestones, 1805
- A Catalogue of a Collection of Fossils, 1805
- A Delineation of the Strata of Derbyshire, 1811. Republished, 1973. ISBN 0-903485-06-0
- A Collection of Poems, 1812 (intended to accompany the 'Delineation' above)
- A Section of the Strata forming the Surface in the Vicinity of Matlock Bath in Derbyshire, 1813
- On Entrochal Marble, one-page pamphlet, 1826
- A Theory on the Formation of Mineral Veins, one-page pamphlet, 1827
- A Description of Slickensides, one-page pamphlet, 1829
- Observations on Prismatic Gritstone, one-page pamphlet, 1833
References
- ^ a b c Ford, Trevor D., 'White Watson's Tablets', Geology Today 14:1 (1998), 21–25
- ^ a b Cooper, Michael P. (30 April 2005). "The Devonshire Mineral Collection of Chatsworth House". Mineralogical Record.
- ^ Gunnis, R., Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660–1851, 1953
- ^ a b The Devonshire Mineral Collection of Chatsworth House: an 18th Century Survivor and its Preservation, Michael P Cooper, 2005
- ^ Riley and Torrens 1980
- ^ Newsletter of the Geological Curators Club, Vol 1, No. 8, 1976. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
all other references from:
- The Derbyshire Archaeological Journal, 1889 doi:10.5284/1038992
- Ford, Trevor D. 'White Watson and his Geological Sections', Proceedings of the Geologist's Association, Vol. 71 part 4, 1960. Paper received by the Association 9 May 1958
- Ford, Trevor D. 'White Watson: Pioneer Derbyshire Geologist', Bulletin of the Peak District Mines Historical Society, Vol. 1 No.7 (October 1962), pp. 27–37.
- Ford, Trevor D. 'White Watson (1760–1835) & His Geological Tablets', in John Michael Tomlinson, Derbyshire Black Marble, Peak District Mines Historical Society, Special Publication no. 4, 1996
External links
- "Archival material relating to White Watson". UK National Archives.
- History of and Russell Society work on the Chatsworth Collection, including details of the Watson catalogue and his work for Chatsworth http://www.blnz.com/news/2008/04/23/DEVONSHIRE_MINERAL_COLLECTION_Chatsworth_House_8972.html