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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Antebellum Era, 1800-1860 >> People >> William Brown Hodgson (1801-1871) |
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William Brown Hodgson (1801-1871) The distinguished scholar-diplomat William Brown Hodgson became a mainstay in the cultural and intellectual life of Savannah following his marriage in 1842 to Margaret Telfair, the youngest daughter of Georgia governor Edward Telfair. Education and Diplomatic Career Born
As a young man Hodgson attracted the attention of Henry Clay, then a member of the U.S. Congress, who secured for him a position in the U.S. State Department. When Clay became secretary of state under U.S. president John Quincy Adams, he assigned Hodgson to the Barbary States of northern Africa to receive further linguistic training and to assist the consul general at Algiers in Algeria. It was there that Hodgson began his lifelong fascination with the Berbers and their ancient language. He was sent to Constantinople, Turkey, in the spring of 1831 with instructions to negotiate a ratified treaty with the Turks. There he gained the respect of the American chargé d'affaires, who requested that Hodgson be assigned to his legation as dragoman,
In 1834 Hodgson was sent to Egypt to ascertain the practicability of carrying on commercial relations with that country. In 1836 he served in London, England, and the following year he was at a desk in Washington, D.C. Soon thereafter he was dispatched on a mission to Lima, Peru, to deliver a treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce with the new Peru-Bolivian Confederation. After another stint in the nation's capital, Hodgson was appointed in 1841 to his first consular post—as consul general in Tunis, Tunisia—by U.S. secretary of state Daniel Webster. In Paris, France, on his way to Tunis, Hodgson met and fell in love with Savannah native Margaret Telfair, a member of the prominent Telfair family, who was traveling on the European continent with her sisters. Telfair agreed to marry him on the condition that he resign his post in Tunis. Hodgson accepted her terms, and they were married in July 1842 at St. George's Church in London. Scholarship Upon their return to America, Hodgson and his bride settled into the Telfair residence at Savannah's
Hodgson's scholarly work included studies in the physical sciences, among them an 1843 paper to the National Institute in Washington on the organic remains and geology of the Georgia coast. He presented a second paper to this organization entitled "The Foulahs of Central Africa and the African Slave Trade" and in 1844 published his "Notes on Northern Africa, the Sahara and Soudan." Other works followed on equally exotic subjects. When Sir Charles Lyell, the eminent British geologist, visited Savannah in December 1845, Hodgson accompanied him on an excursion to Skidaway Island (which Lyell later described in A Second Visit to the United States of North America). Hodgson based much of his ethnological and linguistic scholarship on his contacts with the slaves of the Telfair plantations. He found a great deal of ethnic diversity within this population and could distinguish among the Mandingo, Ebo, Gullah, Fula (according to Hodgson, a powerful, warlike nation), and people from Guinea. Through his knowledge of African languages, he was able to converse with the Africans in their native tongues. Hodgson
Hodgson died on June 26, 1871, while visiting New York City. He was buried in the Telfair family crypt at Bonaventure Cemetery in Savannah. The respect and affection in which Margaret Telfair Hodgson held the man to whom she had been married for almost thirty years was evidenced by her decision to construct, in his memory, a new headquarters and library for the Georgia Historical Society. Hodgson Hall was dedicated on February 14, 1876, the thirty-seventh anniversary of the society's founding. During the ceremony, Carl Brandt's portrait of Hodgson, to be hung in the new hall, was unveiled, and General Henry Rootes Jackson delivered a stirring oration in praise of the gifted scholar-diplomat. Suggested Reading Thomas A. Bryson, An American Consular Officer in the Middle East in the Jacksonian Era: A Biography of William Brown Hodgson, 1801-1871 (Atlanta: Resurgens, 1979). Charles J. Johnson Jr., Savannah Published 2/3/2006 |
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