The Reverend Professor Baden Powell, FRS (22 August 1796 – 11 June 1860) was an English mathematician: He held the Savilian Chair of Geometry at the University of Oxford from 1827 to 1860. After his death his family changed their surname to Baden-Powell in his memory.
His son, Sir George Baden-Powell was politician, and service in the Colonial Service. Another son, Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell, was the founder of the world scouting movement. A third son, Major Baden Baden-Powell was aviation pioneer, and travelled the world extensively. His daughter Agnes Baden-Powell was, with her brother Robert, the founder of the Girl Guides movement.
Powell married again with Henrietta Grace Smyth (1824-09-03 — 1914-10-13), and had sevens sons and three daughters:
This led Joseph Dalton Hooker to comment "These parsons are so in the habit of dealing with the abstraction of doctrines as if there was no difficulty about them whatever... that they gallop over the * course... as if we were in the pews and they in the pulpit. Witness the self confident style of...Baden Powell".
Referring to "Mr Darwin's masterly volume" and restating his argument that belief in miracles is atheistic, Baden Powell wrote that the book "must soon bring about an entire revolution in opinion in favour of the grand principle of the self-evolving powers of nature."
He would have been on the platform at the legendary British Association for the Advancement of Science debate that was a highlight of the reaction to Darwin's theory, but died of a heart attack a fortnight before the meeting.
British mathematicians | 1796 births | 1860 deaths | Anglican priests | English clergy
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