James Patrick Muirhead
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Patrick Muirhead FRSE (26 July 1813[1] – 15 October 1898) was a Scottish advocate and author, best known as the biographer of James Watt.

Born at The Grove, Hamilton, Lanarkshire, he was son of Lockhart Muirhead; George Muirhead was his great-uncle. He was educated first at Glasgow College. Gaining on 3 February 1832 a Snell exhibition at Balliol College, Oxford, he matriculated there on 6 April 1832; spending his long vacations in alpine expeditions, and in the study of German rather than in working for honours, he took a third class in lit. hum. on graduating B.A. in 1835 (M.A. 1838).[2]

Little Haseley, Oxfordshire
Admitted advocate at Edinburgh in 1838, Muirhead practised law in Edinburgh. He lived with his family at 26 Heriot Row in Edinburgh's New Town.[3]
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1841, his proposer being Sir John Robison.[4]
His wife found the climate of Edinburgh too cold, and in 1846 he gave up his career at the Scottish bar, and in 1847 settled at Haseley Court, Oxfordshire, a property in his wife's family.[2]
Muirhead died in his eighty-sixth year, on 15 October 1898.[2]
