William Gowan Todd

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William Gowan Todd (1820–1877) was a nineteenth-century Anglo-Irish author and cleric.[1] In the later years of his life he founded and managed St. Mary's Orphanage, Blackheath, England, where he died on 24 July 1877.[2]

The son of physician and president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) Charles Hawkes Todd (1784–1826) and Elizabeth Bentley (1786–1862), William was born on 1820 in Dublin, Ireland. He is the eleventh of fifteen children and the brother of James Henthorn Todd, Robert Bentley Todd, and Armstrong Todd.[3]

In 1831, Ireland suffered an epidemic of Asiatic cholera, which killed 5,632 people in Dublin and more than 50,000 in Ireland.[4] It also nearly killed William Todd and his mother, Elizabeth.[4][5]

There is unconfirmed evidence that Todd married. It is said that after Todd completed his doctorate in theology in Rome, his wife joined a religious order.[4]

Professional life

Partial bibliography

References

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