1801 – 1873
Sir Frederic Madden was born at Portsmouth and was keeper of manuscripts at the British Museum from 1837 to 1866. He was the supreme palaeographer of nineteenth-century England and a researcher and editor of extraordinary energy and quality. He tackled the most arduous and difficult projects and brought them to fulfilment.
Highly critical of the works of Sir Thomas Gatehouse, Revd. Richard Warner, and Revd. William Bingley, Madden planned a history of Hampshire of his own. He ‘methodically listed materials for what promised to be the most systematic, scholarly, and wide-ranging of county histories’. His other projects constantly intervened, so that he wrote nothing of it, but many notes survive in his vast personal archive. (British Library Additional Manuscripts 33279-86.)
Sources
Borrie, M (2004) ‘Madden, Sir Frederic, palaeographer and librarian’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 36 pp66-9
Webb, J (1987) Sir Frederick Madden and Portsmouth’ Portsmouth Paper xlvii
Hicks, M (1994) Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, English County Histories: A Guide, ed. C.R.J. Currie and C.P. Lewis Gloucester, 172
British Library Additional Manuscripts 33279-86
Portrait
R. Dighton, watercolour, 1833, private collection
W. Drummond, oil, 1837, British Library
Lithograph, 1837, National Portrait gallery
R.C. Lucas, wax medallion, 1849, National Portrait Gallery
Photograph, 1863, Portsmouth City Record Ofice
Contribution to county’s history
Unpublished manuscripts.
Relevant published works
Critical Comments
Other Comments
Contributor
Michael Hicks
Key Words
Hampshire, history of Hampshire, County history
Any queries or further suggestions for this part of the list should be addressed to celebrating@hantsfieldclub.org.uk.

