Henry Cavendish (1731–1810)
As a fellow-scientist wrote, Henry Cavendish possessed a clarity of comprehension
and an acuteness of reasoning that have been the lot of very few
of his predecessors since the days of Newton. At home and abroad he was
regarded as the most distinguished British man of science of his day. Among
his many achievements are the demonstration of the existence of hydrogen
as a distinct substance, the demonstration that water is a compound and the
determination of the density of the earth. He was also one of the pioneers
of electrical research, presaging much of the work of Coulomb, Faraday and
Ohm. Clerk Maxwell, who edited some of his papers, was fascinated by
his character: ‘Cavendish cared more for investigation than publication. He
would undertake the most laborious researches in order to clear up a difficulty
which no-one but himself could appreciate, or was even aware of. And
we cannot doubt that the result of his enquiries, when successful, gave him
a certain degree of satisfaction. But it did not excite in him that desire to
communicate the discovery to others which, in the case of ordinary men of
science, generally ensures the publication of their results.’
Lord Charles Cavendish, the third son of the second Duke of
Devonshire, married Lady Anne Grey, the fourth daughter of Henry, Duke
of Kent. She was living in Nice, owing to frail health, when her first child Henry was born on
October 10, 1731. A second child, Frederick, was born
in England two years later, but their mother died shortly afterwards. Little
is known of the early years of the two boys, except that they attended
the Hackney Academy, a London school well thought of in its day for the
education of children of the upper classes in sound classical learning. Each
of the brothers went up to the University of Cambridge, matriculated as a
nobleman and resided there for four years, but left without taking a degree.
The college to which they belonged was St Peter’s, commonly known as
Peterhouse. Shortly after the younger brother had left Cambridge they made
the customary tour on the continent; apart from Paris, it is not known where
they went. Henry may well have studied mathematics and physics when he
was in Paris. The brothers did not have much to do with each other later in
life, although they remained on good terms.
After returning to England, Henry Cavendish went to live with his
father at a house in Great Marlborough Street, in the Soho district of London,
and apparently continued to do so until his father died. It was during this
period of almost thirty years that he carried out the fundamental electrical
research which so impressed Clerk Maxwell. He began his research career
by assisting his father, a gifted experimental physicist, who was a prominent
fellow of the Royal Society. Lord Charles made some valuable investigations
into heat, electricity and terrestrial magnetism. Franklin remarked that ‘It
were to be wished that this noble philosopher would communicate more of
his experiments to the world, as he makes many, and with great accuracy.’
Lord Charles was not a wealthy man but the financial allowance he
made to his eldest son was so small as to be described as niggardly by contemporaries.
It is not known just where the money came from, but, in 1783,