James De Ville

Summary

James De Ville (12 March 1777 – 6 May 1846) was a British lamp maker, sculptor and plaster-caster, known also as a phrenologist. He acquired moulds and busts for business purposes, manufacturing reproductions, and also built up a renowned phrenological collection.

Early life edit

From a Swiss Protestant background on his father's side, he was born in Hammersmith, the son of James Louis De Ville and his wife Mary Bryant.[1][2] His family fell on hard times, and as a boy De Ville was fostered by an uncle who had a brickmaking business there.[1]

De Ville learned plaster casting from Charles Harris (died 1796), to whom he was apprenticed at age 12.[3][4]

Businessman edit

De Ville set up a plaster works in Soho in 1803, moving on after two years to Great Newport Street in the Covent GardenLeicester Square area.[2][5] In the 1810s he was in business as a lampmaker and plaster caster, dealing also in lighthouse fittings.[6] From 1814, he had business premises at 367 Strand, London, opposite Fountain Court.[2][7]

In other lines of business, De Ville dealt in architectural metal wares, and supplied lights for the Menai Bridge. He joined the Institute of Civil Engineers in 1823.[8] From the late 1820s he provided gas fittings to Hanwell Asylum.[9] He also engaged in radical politics.[10]

Caster, moulder, sculptor edit

While still young, De Ville worked for the sculptor Joseph Nollekens on casting. He later bought the moulds for busts made by Nollekens.[11] In 1817 Bryan Donkin, representing an early British phrenological group, commissioned him to do some reproductive moulding work.[12]

De Ville's first life-mask was that of William Blake, taken 1 August 1823.[13] He travelled to Devon to take another, of the teenage William Makepeace Thackeray, in 1824–5; it was much later used by Joseph Boehm and Onslow Ford.[14]

 
Life-mask of William Blake, plaster cast by James De Ville 1823 (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge)

In the period 1823 to 1826, De Ville showed busts at the Royal Academy. His sitters included Harford Jones-Brydges.[11]

Phrenologist edit

 
Satirical print of 1826, Bumpology, showing a caricature phrenologist, intended for James De Ville, conducting an examination of a youth

De Ville started to collect phrenological specimens in 1817, and in 1821 began to cast heads from life.[15] In 1829 Johann Spurzheim referred to his collection as data supporting phrenology.[16] Franz Joseph Gall sent a wax mould of a dissected brain.[1] There were casts taken from the collection of Joshua Brookes, and skulls from Australia including some supplied by Robert Espie.[10]

George Murray Paterson, who began to teach phrenology in the Bengal Presidency in 1825, ordered 90 phrenological busts from De Ville to show in his lectures.[17] In a room adjacent to his shop, De Ville gave public shows of part of his collection of casts and skulls.[10] Jonathan Mason Warren saw the collection in 1832 and found it impressive; on the same occasion De Ville did a phrenological reading of James Jackson Jr., which Warren did not find convincing.[18]

De Ville campaigned against penal transportation, at the same time involving himself with phrenological examination of convicts.[19] In 1826 James Wardrop hired him to examine convicts about to be transported in the England to Australia. Of 148 convicts, De Ville provided notes on around one-third, to the ship's surgeon George Thomson. Wardrop's intention was to discredit De Ville's evaluations: in the event, there was a plot among the convicts to take over the ship, and the effect, according to Thomson's notes, was to validate De Ville's prediction of troublemakers.[20][21]

Joseph d'Ortigue and Ludwig Rellstab, early biographers of Franz Liszt, recount how Liszt at age 15 was examined in 1825 by De Ville.[22] As a phrenological practitioner, he examined a large number of heads including those of John Elliotson, Hermann Prince of Pückler-Muskau, Charles Bray, George Eliot, William Blake, Richard Dale Owen, Richard Carlile, the Duke of Wellington and Prince Albert.[1] Harriet Martineau, a believer in phrenology but mocker of incompetent phrenologists, found it amusing that De Ville's examination of her head led to the conclusion that she lived "a life of constant failure through timidity."[23]

De Ville also took an interest in the heads of criminals, such as François Benjamin Courvoisier.[24] He had a cast of the head of Daniel Good (provenance not clear), another convicted murderer who was convicted in 1842.[25]

In the mid-1830s De Ville lectured on phrenology at Sass's Academy, where William Powell Frith was in his audience.[26] In 1840 he became a member of the Phrenological Association. He resigned in 1842 on the schism among British phrenologists. It occurred when William Collins Engledue (1813–1858), in a speech before the Association, announced that phrenology and materialism were the same.[1]

Death and legacy edit

De Ville's casts were distributed throughout the world; and some are extant in the collection of the Edinburgh School of Anatomy.[1] De Ville & Co. was carried on by his son-in-law William Matthews.[2]

Bibliography edit

  • Outlines of Phrenology, as an accompaniment to the Phrenological Bust (1824).
  • Manual of Phrenology as an accompaniment to the Phrenological Bust (1826, 1828, 1831, 1841).
  • 'Account of a number of cases in which a change had been produced on the form of the head by education and moral training-Phrenological Association, Glasgow', Phrenological Journal, 14 (1841) pp. 32–8.
  • Browne, James P., "Memoir of the late Mr James De Ville", Phrenological Journal, 19, 1846, pp. 329–344.[27]
  • "Mr De Ville's Collection", Phrenological Journal, 14 (1841), pp. 19–23
  • Cooter, R., Phrenology in the British Isles: An Annotated, Historical Bibliography and Index (1989).
  • Pückler-Muskau, Briefe eines Verstorbenen: Ein fragmentarisches Tagebuch aus Deutschland, Holland, England, Wales, Irland und Frankreich, geschrieben in den Jahren 1826 bis 1829 (1830).

Family edit

De Ville married in 1797 Jane Smith, and they had five children, including sons William and George, daughters Emily and Jane, who married William Matthews, and a further daughter.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "History of Phrenology on the Web". www.historyofphrenology.org.uk.
  2. ^ a b c d e "British bronze sculpture founders and plaster figure makers, 1800-1980 - D - National Portrait Gallery". www.npg.org.uk.
  3. ^ Pearce, Nick (5 July 2017). William Hunter's World: The Art and Science of Eighteenth-Century Collecting. Routledge. p. 458. ISBN 978-1-351-53691-2.
  4. ^ Smith, Dorothy Bentley (15 December 2017). No Ordinary Surgeon: The Life and Times of William Binley Dickinson. Amberley Publishing Limited. p. 452. ISBN 978-1-4456-7641-8.
  5. ^ Martineau, Harriet (21 December 2006). Autobiography. Broadview Press. p. 298 note 2. ISBN 978-1-77048-074-2.
  6. ^ Cooter, Roger (1984). The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science: Phrenology and the Organization of Consent in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Cambridge University Press. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-521-22743-8.
  7. ^ Haggarty, S.; Mee, J. (28 November 2008). Blake and Conflict. Springer. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-230-58428-0.
  8. ^ Skempton, A. W.; Chrimes, Mike (2002). A Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland: 1500-1830. Thomas Telford. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-7277-2939-2.
  9. ^ "The reports of the visiting justices of the County Lunatic Asylum at Hanwell to the Epiphany Sessions, 1839". Printed by M'Gowan and Co. 1842: 41. JSTOR 60204897. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ a b c Turnbull, Paul (29 November 2017). Science, Museums and Collecting the Indigenous Dead in Colonial Australia. Springer. pp. 160–163. ISBN 978-3-319-51874-9.
  11. ^ a b Gunnis, Rupert (1968). Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660–1851 (Revised ed.). p. 130.
  12. ^ The Phrenological Journal and Magazine of Moral Science from the year 1846 VOL.XIX. Vol. XIX. 1846. pp. 332–333.
  13. ^ Bentley, Gerald Eades (2003). The Stranger from Paradise: A Biography of William Blake. Yale University Press. p. 368 note. ISBN 978-0-300-10030-3.
  14. ^ Bock, Peter; Ormond, Richard (1974). Early Victorian Portraits: Text. Vol. I. H.M. Stationery Office. p. 462. ISBN 978-0-11-290093-1.
  15. ^ Martineau, Harriet (21 December 2006). Autobiography. Broadview Press. p. 510 note 248. ISBN 978-1-4604-0314-3.
  16. ^ Spurzheim, Johann Caspar (1829). Outlines of Phrenology. p. 1.
  17. ^ Poskett, James (18 February 2022). Materials of the Mind: Phrenology, Race, and the Global History of Science, 1815-1920. University of Chicago Press. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-226-82064-4.
  18. ^ Arnold, Howard Payson (1886). Memoir of Jonathan Mason Warren, M.D. University Press. p. 321.
  19. ^ Giustino, David de (17 June 2016). Conquest of Mind: Phrenology and Victorian Social Thought. Routledge. pp. 155–156. ISBN 978-1-317-23775-4.
  20. ^ Anderson, Clare (13 January 2022). Convicts: A Global History. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-84072-9.
  21. ^ Cox, Robert (1836). Selections from the Phrenological Journal: Comprising Forty Articles in the First Five Volumes. Maclachlan & Steward, and John Anderson Jun. pp. 140–142.
  22. ^ Trippett, David (2015). "Exercising Musical Minds: Phrenology and Music Pedagogy in London circa 1830". 19th-Century Music. 39 (2): 103–104. doi:10.1525/ncm.2015.39.2.99. JSTOR 26348854.
  23. ^ Orestano, Francesca (2009). Strange Sisters: Literature and Aesthetics in the Nineteenth Century. Peter Lang. p. 49. ISBN 978-3-03911-840-3.
  24. ^ The Phrenological Journal, and Magazine of Moral Science. Machlachlan, Stewart & Company. 1840. p. 328.
  25. ^ Wade, Rebecca (18 October 2018). Domenico Brucciani and the Formatori of 19th-Century Britain. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-5013-3221-0.
  26. ^ "Know thyself? Did Phrenology help William Powell Frith address middleclass Victorian crowd anxiety? by Jane de Beneducci, open.conted.ox.ac.uk (beta)". open.conted.ox.ac.uk. p. 206.
  27. ^ The Phrenological Journal and Magazine of Moral Science. 1846. pp. 329–344.