Collection MACT* - Papers of Thomas Babington Macaulay, Lord Macaulay

Zone d'identification

Cote

MACT*

Titre

Papers of Thomas Babington Macaulay, Lord Macaulay

Date(s)

  • 17th-20th c. (Production)

Niveau de description

Collection

Étendue matérielle et support

33 bound vols.; 6 notebooks; 6 boxes; 3 box files; 22 loose items.

Zone du contexte

Nom du producteur

(1800-1859)

Notice biographique

Thomas Babington Macaulay was born on 25 October 1800 to Zachary Macaulay (1768–1838) and Selina, née Mills (1767-1831), at Rothley Temple, Leicestershire, the home of Zachary Macaulay's brother-in-law Thomas Babington, after whom he was named. Raised in Clapham, he was sent in 1812 to Matthew Preston's school at Little Shelford, Cambridgeshire, and in April 1817 was admitted to Trinity College. He matriculated in 1818 and was awarded the Chancellor's English medal in 1819 and 1821; a college scholarship in 1820 and a Craven scholarship in 1821. He graduated BA in 1822 and MA in 1825, and was elected to a Trinity fellowship in 1824.

Macaulay was admitted to Lincoln's Inn in January 1822 and called to the Bar in February 1826, but never practised, instead beginning his writing career in June 1824 with articles for Knight's Quarterly Magazine. His first piece for the Edinburgh Review, on West African slavery, was published in January 1825, and his August 1826 article on Milton for the review brought him fame. Having begun an ambitious 'Universal History' at the age of seven, Macaulay's first publications on the subject were an essay entitled 'History' and a long review of Hallam's Constitutional History of England, both published in the Edinburgh Review in 1828. However, the failure of the family business forced Macaulay to look for a source of steady income, and he turned to politics.

Appointed a commissioner in bankruptcy by Lord Lyndhurst in December 1828, a position he held until July 1830, he was invited by Lord Lansdowne in February 1830 to become the MP for the pocket borough of Calne. He spoke in favour of parliamentary reform and became MP for Leeds subsequent to the 1833 enactment of the Reform Act. Macaulay was appointed to the Board of Control in June 1832 , becoming Secretary in December of that year. He resigned his seat in March 1834 after the passing of the Government of India Act 1833 to accept an appointment as first Law Member of the Governor-General's Council, and sailed for India that month. He had a great influence on education there, recommending the introduction of the English language for all secondary level teaching in a famous Minute to the Governor-General, Lord William Bentinck, and on law, as President of the Commission appointed to compose a criminal code from 1835-1837.

He returned to Britain in 1838 and was elected MP for Edinburgh the following year, soon being appointed Secretary at War and named to the Privy Council by Lord Melbourne. Under Lord John Russell's administration in 1846, he returned to office as Paymaster General. However, he began to dedicate more time to writing in the 1840s, publishing The Lays of Ancient Rome, which were a great popular success, in 1842, and beginning the research for his History of England. He lost his seat in 1847, and though he was re-elected in 1852, his historical work was now his main focus, due in part to increasing ill-health.

Histoire archivistique

Source immédiate d'acquisition ou de transfert

Macaulay's letters to Thomas Flower Ellis were given to Trinity by H. T. Flower Ellis in Jan. 1928. Later that year, his great-nephew George Macaulay Trevelyan gave the library the eleven volumes of Macaulay's journals; further gifts of correspondence and other papers by Trevelyan followed in 1953, and in 1974 his grandson George Trevelyan passed on the commonplace book of Charles James Fox which G. M. Trevelyan had used to collect loose Macaulay letters, as well as financial and legal papers.

Other small donations were made over the years by members of the Trevelyan and Macaulay families, Dr. A.N.L. Munby, gave a large number of letters in 1971, along with his collection of printed Macaulay books, and small purchases have been made by the Library from auction-houses and dealers over the years.

Zone du contenu et de la structure

Portée et contenu

The collection includes journals, correspondence, poems and juvenilia by Macaulay, notes made in the course of his historical research, a scrapbook of broadsheet ballads kept by him, financial papers, and material relating to the publication of his works. There is a substantial amount of material relating to Macaulay's executors' administration of his estate, including the sale of his house, Holly Lodge, as well as correspondence regarding a dispute with Macvey Napier in 1875 over the publication of letters by Macaulay.

Papers of other members of the Macaulay family are also linked, including diaries of Zachary Macaulay in the West Indies and Sierra Leone (1795-1798) and a diary of Kenneth Macaulay in Sierra Leone (1809-1911), as well as a memoir of her brother by Hannah More Trevelyan and an album of poetry kept by her.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

Accruals

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Zone des conditions d'accès et d'utilisation

Conditions d’accès

This material is open for research unless otherwise stated.

Conditions governing reproduction

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      Language and script notes

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      Related units of description

      Macaulay's library of classical texts, extensively annotated, passed to his nephew, George Otto Trevelyan, who published Marginal notes by Lord Macaulay in 1907. On Trevelyan's death, they were inherited by his son Robert, who left them to Trinity in 1951; they are catalogued under the shelfmarks Z.O.1-147.

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      Note

      This record has been created to bring together links to Macaulay's papers, catalogued as discrete items across several additional manuscript series, for the user.

      Please cite as per item-level reference numbers.

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