Charles Alexander Johns

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The Rev. Charles Alexander Johns

Charles Alexander Johns (1811–1874) was a 19th-century British botanist and educator who was the author of a long series of popular books on natural history.

Charles Alexander Johns was born on 31 December 1811 in Plymouth, England, one of eight surviving children of Henry Incledon Johns, a banker and poet, and Maria (Boone) Johns.[1]:4–14 Two of his sisters, Emily and Julia, would prove to be exceptionally talented botanical artists.[1]:21 An economic crisis in 1825 forced the closure of the bank where Johns's father Henry was a working partner, throwing him out of a job and causing hardship for the family.[1]:16 Henry Johns then went to work as a teacher at Plymouth New Grammar School.[1]:16

Johns's father had encouraged his interest in natural history from an early age, and Charles had aimed for a career in the church, following an established pattern in Britain of "parson naturalists."[1]:15–18 One of his early teachers was a local silversmith and amateur botanist, George Banks, who published a study of English botany in 1823.[1]:19 Johns was, however, largely self-taught as a botanist.

Teaching

In 1830, Johns's father suffered a stroke that led to failing health, creating further economic uncertainty for the family and indefinitely deferring Johns's plans for going to university.[1]:20 Instead, he took up a post as assistant master at the Helston Grammar School.[1]:23 which his father had attended as a youth. He remained for four years, working under headmaster Derwent Coleridge, who was a son of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.[2] One of his pupils was the future novelist Charles Kingsley, who would later praise him as one of his country's "most acute and persevering botanists."[3]

In 1836, Johns was finally able to combine teaching long enough with part-time studies at Trinity College, Dublin. He obtained his degree in 1839, and began to write books on his favourite subjects in natural history. This led to his first completed book, Flora Sacra (1840), a volume of inspirational poetry interspersed with illustrations of dried plants with religious significance that featured in the Holy Bible.[4]

He was ordained a priest in 1842, after a period as a deacon in 1841 and took up a single post as a vicar under Bishop Henry Philpotts of Exeter in the village of Yarnscombe, near Bideford.[1][4] He did not find the post inspiring and decided to follow his former Headmaster Coleridge back to a residential chaplaincy post in London where Derwent was now the first Principal of St Mark's Training College for the poor in Chelsea. There he was to meet his life's partner, Ellen Field, who assisted her mother, the widow Mrs Julia Field, in the creation of a sister college for young women which was established as Whitelands Teaching College for Women. The couple were to have four children in total, with three surviving to adulthood. Their joint life's work was to establish private residential schools, generally very successful, for young gentlemen, noted for a full classical syllabus and innovative teaching in preparation for the 'greater' public schools of Eton, Rugby and Winchester.

In the 1850s and 1860s, Johns established two schools: the first was Callipers Hall at Chipperfield in 1855.[1]:xi He established Winton House in Winchester, a private school for boys, in 1863.[3]

Botany and natural history books

Publications

References

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