Charles Partridge (anthropologist)
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Charles Stanley Partridge (10 February 1872 – 21 December 1955) was an English anthropologist and historian with a particular focus on Suffolk, and former colonial administrator in Nigeria.
Partridge was born at Offton Place, Offton, Suffolk, the elder son of Charles Thomas Partridge,[1] later of Sulley's Manor Farm at Raydon and of Stowmarket,[2] and his wife Catherine Pleasance, daughter of William Robert Hewitt, of The Rookery, Stowmarket. The Partridges were a family of wealthy yeoman farmers of whose Suffolk roots Partridge was very proud (all but one of his great-great-grandparents being born in that county). The earliest known ancestor of the Partridge family was yeoman farmer Thomas Partridge, of Higham and Capel St. Mary, Suffolk, born circa 1560.[3] The family also owned Shelley Hall, where Partridge's father farmed between 1872 and 1875.[4][5] He was educated at Queen Elizabeth School, Ipswich- where he was a younger contemporary of the writer H. Rider Haggard- and at Christ's College, Cambridge, where he took a B.A. in Theology in 1895, and an M.A. in 1901. His interest in the humanities led him to become a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (1903), Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries (1904),[6] and elected member of the council of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology.[7][8]