John Chapman 1821 - 1894
John Chapman 1821 - 1894 was a publisher, based at 142 Strand, London.
John Chapman was an ‘invaluable enabler’ who gave the start to the careers of many famous writers.
John Chapman was the owner of the Westminster Review, which published widely on homeopathy and upon the radical new ideas of the day.
John Chapman had the tenacity to edit the Westminster Review for forty two years through countless crises, during which time the Westminster Review was the unrivaled radical periodical of its day.
Please note: A *John Chapman MA Cantab was a homeopath, and ^^John Chapman 1801 - 1854 was a cousin of publisher John Chapman! Matthew James Chapman and James Chapman were also homeopaths.
The information below is all related to publisher John Chapman 1821 - 1894, and the information on the homeopathic Chapman’s is located in the ‘of interest’ section at the end of this blog - so please be aware of the potential confusions possible here!
Charles Darwin had contributed articles to the Westminster Review, and John Chapman was responsible for publishing Thomas Henry Huxley’s articles promoting Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species in the Westminster Review’s April 1860 issue. Charles Darwin’s first paid employment was as scientific reviewer on the Westminster Review, the radical quarterly periodical that John Chapman bought in 1851 and turned into the best journal of the century.
This publication probably did more for the promulgation of Charles Darwin’s work than any other source. The Westminster Review was the leading radical periodical of its day.
‘Charles Darwin lay low at his home in Kent’ while John Chapman published The Origin of Species and Thomas Henry Huxley earned his reputation as Darwin’s Bulldog in the pages of the Westminster Review.
Publisher John Chapman was the inventor of the spinal ice bag and qualified as a medical practitioner in 1857.
In his letter to Thomas Henry Huxley dated 27.5.1865, Charles Darwin states:
… but I now begin to hope that through the aid of an acquaintance of yours (Dr Chapman) my health will receive some considerable improvement from the application of ice to the spine.
John Chapman purchased the Westminster Review in 1851. The Westminster Review did a review on homeopathy, mesmerism, hydrotherapy and phrenology in 1842, and also in 1842, the Westminster Review published an article on Swedenborg by James John Garth Wilkinson.
It is not surprising therefore that John Chapman was eager to obtain this particular periodical.
In 1852 the Westminster Review reviewed all of the vegetarian and homeopathic societies, and the April issue included an article called ‘Medical Puritans’ by Samuel Brown which was reviewed in the 1852 British Journal of Homeopathy.
The British Journal of Homeopathy mentions the Westminster Review again in 1853. The Westminster Review was also widely reported in America by the American Institute of Homeopathy and in India by the Indian Homeopathic Review.
John Chapman was associated with this publication for the rest of his life, enabled by financial contributions from George Combe, Edward Lombe, Samuel Courtauld, Octavius Smith (the uncle of Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon), Harriet Martineau, John Stuart Mill and Edward Henry Stanley.
John Chapman assembled a glittering intelligentsia around the Westminster Review, which was the was the leading radical periodical of its day, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Charles Darwin, Harriet Martineau, Agnes Pochin, Mark Pattison, John Lothrop Motley, Bessie Rayner Parkes, William Hale White, Wathen Mark Wilks Call, Lydia Ernestine Becker, W J Fox, George Grote, George Henry Lewes, George Eliot, Arthur Hugh Clough, Francis William Newman, William Rathbone Greg, Herbert Spencer, Alexander Bain, John Stuart Mill, William Benjamin Carpenter, Robert Chambers, George J. Holyoake, John Tyndall, Giuseppe Mazzini, Karl Marx and many others.
John Chapman was a friend of Moncure Daniel Conway, Charles Dickens, Robert Browning, Erasmus Alvey Darwin, and Thomas Carlyle, Charles Babbage, Charles Darwin, Harriet Martineau, George Everest and his brother, homeopath Thomas Roupell Everest, Robert Everest (?brother of George Everest and Thomas Roupell Everest - a geographer who lived in India). Charles Lyell and Thomas Henry Huxley were also part of this group.
John Chapman also knew George Henry Lewes and his life partner George Eliot, who was a patient of James Manby Gully. Publisher John Chapman was George Eliot’s publisher. *John Chapman MA Cantab was a homeopath who worked alongside James Manby Gully.
Over these years, many people stayed with John Chapman who went on to become famous, but initially they all needed the helping hand they received from John Chapman, including Americans Ralph Waldo Emerson and Horace Greeley
142 Strand was positioned right at the centre of London’s publishing trade, with The Morning Chronicle at 332 Strand, The Illustrated News at 198 Strand, The Economist at 340 Strand next door to The Railway Monitor, where Herbert Spencer worked and lived. The Strand was also thick with other publishers, including Chapman and Hall, Thomas Cadell, John Limbird, William S Orr and Co, John W Parker and Son and many others.
John Chapman was also well known in America and many famous Americans came to stay at 142 Strand, including Ralph Waldo Emerson (Chapman was his British publisher), and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a friend of Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon, who mentions that:
John Chapman rejuvenated the Westminster Review and brought it back to the level, standards, and influence it had attained during the years John Stuart Mill was editor.
George Eliot described John Chapman’s Circle of Westminster Reviewers as an ‘assemblage of intellectuals‘.
The Westminster Review was strongly supportive of the Suffragette Movement and published works on the morality of marriage, and the Westminster Review also published works on phrenology.
John Chapman was ‘long known as an extensive importer and publisher of American works‘ and an American edition of the Westminster Review was established.
The Westminster Review was founded in 1823 by Jeremy Bentham and James Mill as a quarterly journal for philosophical radicals, and was published from 1824 to 1914.
In 1851 the journal was acquired by John Chapman based at 142 Strand, London, a publisher who originally had medical training.
The then unknown Mary Ann Evans, later better known by her pen name of George Eliot, had brought together his authors, including Francis William Newman, William Rathbone Greg, Harriet Martineau and the young journalist Herbert Spencer who had been working and living cheaply in the offices of The Economist opposite John Chapman’s house.
These authors met during that summer to give their support to this flagship of free thought and reform, joined by others including John Stuart Mill, William Benjamin Carpenter, Robert Chambers and George J. Holyoake. They were later joined by Thomas Henry Huxley, an ambitious young ship’s surgeon determined to become a naturalist.
George Eliot became assistant editor and produced a four page prospectus setting out their common beliefs in progress, ameliorating ills and rewards for talent, setting out a loosely defined evolutionism as “the fundamental principle” of what she and John Chapman called the “Law of Progress”.
The group was divided over the work of Thomas Malthus, with George J. Holyoake opposing it as the principle of the workhouse which blamed the poor for their poverty, while to William Rathbone Greg and Harriet Martineau this was a law of nature encouraging responsibility and self improvement.
John Chapman asked Herbert Spencer to write about this divisive matter for the first issue, and Herbert Spencer’s Theory of Population deduced from the General Law of Animal Fertility actually appeared in the second issue, supporting the painful Malthusian principle as both true and self-correcting.
After 1853 John Tyndall joined Thomas Henry Huxley in running the science section of the Westminster Review and formed a group of evolutionists who helped pave the way for Charles Darwin’s 1859 publication of The Origin of Species and gave it backing in the ensuing furore.
The term “Darwinism” was first put in print by Thomas Henry Huxley in his favourable review of The Origin of Species, in the April 1860 issue of the Westminster Review.
The Nuttall Encyclopedia, published in 1907, notes that the Breeches Review was then a nickname for the journal on account of the fact that Francis Place, a breeches maker, was a major shareholder in the enterprise. (This refers to the Westminster Review in its early days and before John Chapman took over this publication).
Through the excellent work George Eliot did when she worked as assistant to publisher John Chapman at the Westminster Review, an influential social intelligentsia developed. Although John Chapman was the named editor, it was George Eliot who did much of the work in running the journal for the next three years, contributing many essays and reviews.
John Chapman was concentrating on his medical degree and writing:
John Chapman acquired the philosophical radical journal the Westminster Review in 1851, and provided a platform for emerging ideas of evolution.
His assistant George Eliot brought together authors including Francis William Newman, William Rathbone Greg, Harriet Martineau and the young journalist Herbert Spencer, and later John Stuart Mill, William Benjamin Carpenter, Robert Chambers, George Holyoake and Thomas Henry Huxley.
This network of social contacts grew wider. Beatrice Webb and her husband Sidney Webb were close friends of homeopathic supporter George Bernard Shaw and a life long friend of Herbert Spencer, whose publisher was John Chapman. Beatrice Webb also knew Thomas Henry Huxley.
John Chapman was enthusiastic about his contributions to homeopathic publications also, and he used the pages of the Westminster Review to lambast the Royal College of Physicians and the medical profession of the time.
John Chapman knew the editors of the British Journal of Homeopathy, **John James Drysdale and Richard Hughes, who published his articles. John Chapman was the inventor of the Spinal Ice Bag and he wrote about his spinal cold and heat cure in the British Journal of Homeopathy in 1864, and it was also advertised in The London and Provincial Homeopathic Medical Directory in 1866 (John Chapman MD MRCP).
The Westminster Review published Marmaduke Blake Sampson’s article Central America and the transit between the oceans in April 1850, the year before John Chapman took it over. Marmaduke Blake Sampson was the Chairman of the British Homeopathic Association, and the financial editor and city editor of the London Times. Marmaduke Blake Sampson was active in the London Phrenological Society and a colleague of George Combe.
John Chapman wrote to the Times to describe his use of ice packs to treat cholera patients in Southampton.
John Chapman’s entry in the Concise Dictionary of National Biography, (which incidentally contains a few errors - his date of birth is wrong, and ‘Life of Jesus’ translation 1846; Feuerbach translation 1854 - 8 years later, not 7) reads:
“Chapman, John (1822-1894) physician, author, publisher; apprencticed at Worksop and was in business in Adelaide; studied medicine in Paris and at St George’s Hospital, London; publisher and bookseller in London; editor and proprietor of Westminster Review, 1851; graduated in medicine at St Andrew’s University 1857, and practised as physician; wrote medical and other works”.
According to Emma Darwin’s diary, John Chapman visited Darwin on 20 May 1865. John Chapman was proprietor and editor of the Westminster Review, to which Thomas Henry Huxley had been a regular contributor.” For his woes, John Chapman had Charles Darwin using bags of ice applied to the spine.
From the Guardian review of 142 Strand: A Radical Address in Victorian London by Rosemary Ashton
“MR CHAPMAN, Bookseller and Publisher, begs to announce that he has REMOVED his Business from 121 Newgate Street, to more spacious premises on the South side of the STRAND, No 142, a few doors West of Somerset House; and requests, therefore, that all communications may be forwarded to the latter address.”
For the next seven years John Chapman’s “spacious premises” - consisting of the bookselling and publishing business, his family home, and rooms for literary lodgers - was the chief resort for writers with a radical or unorthodox book to publish.
The move to a handsome house on the Strand signalled John Chapman’s arrival in the heart of the metropolis. The Strand was the longest street in London and the city’s main east-west thoroughfare. It had long been one of London’s most important streets. From the middle ages until the later 17th century, its south side was lined with mansions built for lords and bishops who found its easy access to the Thames invaluable when they visited London from their country estates in order to attend court or Parliament. Their gardens ran down to the river, where boats were moored ready to take them to Westminster.
In the 19th century, the Strand retained its importance as the geographical link between court, Parliament and Westminster Abbey in the west and the financial centre, heart of the legal establishment and St Paul’s Cathedral in the east. But the character of the street had changed, as the grand mansions along the south side had decayed and were demolished when, from the later 17th century, courtiers chose to build their London homes in Whitehall and St James’s, closer to Parliament and the court. By the mid-19th century only two great houses remained on the Strand, Northumberland House near Trafalgar Square and Somerset House.
At this time the Strand was London’s foremost shopping street. A sense of its variety is given in John Tallis’s London Street Views, a series of cheap, handy booklets containing detailed line drawings of the buildings of London, published in 1847, soon after John Chapman moved to the Strand. The words “John Chapman Bookseller and Publisher” appear on Tallis’s plan alongside shoemakers, watchmakers, tailors, wax-chandlers, tobacconists, umbrella-makers, cutlers, linen-drapers, pianoforte-makers, hatmakers, wigmakers, shirtmakers, mapmakers, lozenge manufacturers and sellers of food of all sorts, including shellfish, Italian oil and Twining’s famous tea, sold at number 216, near Temple Bar.
Warren’s Blacking Manufactory was at number 30, on the south side. The name struck lifelong horror into Charles Dickens, who in 1823, when his father got into debt, was sent aged 11 to work in its shabby namesake round the corner, near the river, for six shillings a week. He never forgot the humiliation of his four months at Warren’s, and reproduced it feelingly in David Copperfield (1849-50), in which the young David endures a similar experience at Murdstone and Grinby’s wine warehouse.
Further east, at numbers 101-2, was Ries’s Grand Cigar Divan, a resort for gentlemen both respectable and bohemian who wanted a quiet place to smoke or play chess.
Charles Dickens’s rival William Makepeace Thackeray, who was both respectable, by virtue of his family and education, and bohemian, by inclination and habit, frequented a number of such all-male establishments on or near the Strand.
It was he who popularised, in Vanity Fair (1847-8), the term “bohemian” to mean, in the words of the Oxford English Dictionary, “a gipsy of society; one who either cuts himself off, or is by his habits cut off, from society for which he is otherwise fitted; especially an artist, literary man, or actor, who leads a free, vagabond, or irregular life, not being particular as to the society he frequents, and despising conventionalities generally.”
These establishments offered entertainment of a risqué kind. The Cider Cellars on Maiden Lane, described by another contemporary, the theatrical man-about-town John Hollingshead, as a “harmonious sewer”, specialised in “flash” or bawdy songs and ballet girls.
On the Strand itself the Coal Hole, positioned exactly opposite Exeter Hall, famous for its huge meetings of reforming and evangelical groups, including the Temperance League, had as its main attraction naked or near-naked women arranged in “poses plastiques” or “tableaux vivants”.
William Makepeace Thackeray’s “bohemian” set consisted of young men of varied backgrounds and education set loose in London to pursue a career. They gathered mainly in the Strand because many were journalists, working for some of the 30 or so newspapers and magazines that had their offices in or near the Strand; others were fledgling lawyers who lodged in bachelor chambers in the Inns of Court, just off Fleet Street.
Most of these men were radical in their social and political views. William Makepeace Thackeray himself was equivocal, never campaigning overtly for political reform and keeping his religious scepticism to himself. In June 1851 he confided to John Chapman on a visit to 142 Strand that, although his religious views were “perfectly free”, he did not “mean to lessen his popularity by fully avowing them”.
Of John Chapman’s other regular visitors, most were radicals, but hardly any could be described as bohemian. Even John Chapman himself, who kept a lover at 142 Strand in addition to his wife and children, was no urban vagabond, but a man who worked hard, loved his children (if not his wife) and took himself seriously as a radical thinker.
The people among whom John Chapman moved had a number of attributes in common with William Makepeace Thackeray’s bohemians. John Chapman’s friends were writers, many of them journalists; they were mainly young and mainly poor.
Unlike the bohemians, however, some of them were women, and none of them - ranging from Marian Evans, before she became famous as George Eliot, to Unitarian leaders such as James Martineau and his redoubtable sister Harriet Martineau, American authors and visitors including Ralph Waldo Emerson, the as yet unknown social philosopher Herbert Spencer and the young scientist Thomas Henry Huxley - could possibly be described as an idle saunterer or frequenter of taverns in the small hours.
George Henry Lewes, whom John Chapman introduced to George Eliot in 1851, was the nearest to a bohemian among John Chapman’s friends and colleagues. He consorted with the Punch writers and was well known in London’s literary circles for his “open” marriage.
George Henry Lewes’s miscellaneous journalism included many light-hearted sketches and dashed-off articles, but he also wrote serious books and essays on English and European literature, philosophy, history and science; in 1854 he settled into a happy, monogamous and lifelong relationship with George Eliot.
John Chapman published works by all these young writers, each at the beginning of a career that would become illustrious. He was their enabler, the man who gave them their start. Herbert Spencer despaired of getting his sociological writings published until John Chapman took him on. (It was he, not Charles Darwin, who coined the phrase “the survival of the fittest”).
Thomas Henry Huxley, later famous as the most ardent supporter of Darwinism, calling himself Darwin’s bulldog and cheerfully going into battle with bishops over The Origin of Species while Charles Darwin lay low at his home in Kent, was plucked from poverty and obscurity by John Chapman. Charles Darwin’s first paid employment was as scientific reviewer on the Westminster Review, the radical quarterly periodical that John Chapman bought in 1851 and turned into the best journal of the century.
Most significant of all, John Chapman brought George Eliot from her home in Coventry to lodge at 142 Strand and edit the Westminster Review for him. John Chapman had already published her translation of David Friedrich Strauss’s sceptical Life of Jesus, and he gave her free rein on the journal, for which she wrote some of the best literary and historical criticism of the century before turning her hand to fiction under the pseudonym George Eliot. She was living with the married George Henry Lewes and was known as the “strong-minded woman” of the Westminster Review.
Others whom John Chapman encouraged and employed were a set of young men from Oxford, many of them destined for the church as a career until they found themselves unable to sign the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England, an act required not only in order to be ordained, but also in order to graduate or take a fellowship.
The poet Arthur Hugh Clough, the historian and biographer James Anthony Froude and Francis William Newman, the younger brother of John Henry Newman, were three such Oxford exiles; all of them found in John Chapman a willing publisher of their books and articles.
European exiles, too, gravitated towards 142 Strand on their arrival in England from repressive regimes. Refugees of many nationalities fled to London, especially after the failed uprisings in European capitals, from Paris to Vienna, in 1848. A number of them, including the Italian nationalist Giuseppe Mazzini, who had found refuge in London several years before, and Karl Marx, who arrived in 1849, became acquainted with John Chapman, attending his soirées at number 142 and in some cases publishing their books and articles with him. (Karl Marx tried unsuccessfully to borrow money from John Chapman, who was almost as hard up as Karl Marx himself, since his kind of publishing did not pay).
John Chapman was keen to play a part in the reforming of British society and institutions. The distinguished Unitarian lawyer Henry Crabb Robinson described him in 1849 as “the U [ie Unitarian] - & worse publisher”, thus suggesting the two sorts of books for which John Chapman was known, those that were unorthodox because Unitarian in opposition to the Trinitarianism of the Church of England, and those that were unorthodox because unbelieving.
With George Eliot’s (anonymous) Strauss translation chiefly in mind, a writer in The Critic in 1852 referred to John Chapman as the chief publisher in England of “German rationalism”; Thomas Carlyle summed him up perhaps best of all when he called him, in a letter to Robert Browning in October 1851, a “Publisher of Liberalisms, ‘Extinct-Socinianisms’ [ie Unitarianism], and notable ware of that kind, in the Strand”.
The novelist and critic Eliza Lynn Linton, who lodged with John Chapman and his wife, referred to him in her autobiography as “the Raffaelle bookseller” on account of his striking good looks, which often drew comparisons with Byron.
John Chapman’s adventures with women other than his wife were many; unlike Charles Dickens and other respectable married men of the time, he did nothing to hide them. Indeed, he wrote articles in favour of liberalising the divorce laws to give women equality with men, and published pamphlets advocating reforms to women’s education and property rights by early feminists such as Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon, later the founder of Girton College, Cambridge.
The activities John Chapman pursued during the best part of a decade at 142 Strand represented a challenge to conservatism in all its forms. His intelligent curiosity, his energy and the usefulness to others of his chosen profession ensured that he was at the centre of Victorian radicalism.
Through him a number of important writers and thinkers from different backgrounds came together. Nowhere was the speech freer and the speculation more serious and intelligent than among the authors who gathered round John Chapman in his headquarters at 142 Strand.
After his death, the editorship of the Westminster Review passed to John Chapman’s second (common law) wife Hannah.
From: 142 Strand: A Radical Address in Victorian London by Rosemary Ashton:
John Chapman is buried in Highgate Cemetery in the Dissenters Section.
**Charles Robert Drysdale delivered a short address.
**John James Drysdale (the elder brother of Charles Robert Drysdale) was the editor of the British Journal of Homeopathy and had died in 1890. It is intriguing that Charles Robert Drysdale attended publisher John Chapman’s funeral and one wonders what the connection is? *John Chapman MS Cantab was a close homeopathic collegue of John James Drysdale.
William Hale White wrote an appreciation of John Chapman in the Athenaeum, and the Westminster Review paid tribute to this astonishing man.
John Chapman’s son Ernest was a chemist and he co-authored a book on drinking water in 1870, but he died tragically at the age of 26 in a laboratory accident in Germany.
John Chapman’s deaf and dumb son Walter, brought up by Susanna’s brother in the West Country, lived until 1922.
His daughter Beatrice married and had three children (his grandson John Wallis Chapman compiled Beatrice Chapman’s memories into an article John Chapman’s Children) and she died in 1914.
His first wife Susanna died in 1892 at the age of 84.
His second wife Hannah died in poverty in 1916 when she apparently set fire to herself accidentally.
John Chapman wrote Diarrhœa and cholera: their nature, origin, and treatment through the agency of the nervous system, The medical institutions of the United Kingdom: a history exemplifying the evils of over-legislation, Neuralgia and kindred diseases of the nervous system: their nature, causes, and treatment: also, a series of cases, preceded by an analytical exposition of them, exemplifying the principles and practice of neuro-dynamic medicine, Cases of Neuralgia and of Other Diseases of the Nervous System, Cholera curable: a demonstration of the causes, non-contagiousness, and successful treatment of the disease, Chloroform and Other Anæsthetics: Their History, and Use During Childbirth, Prostitution: Governmental Experiments in Controlling It, Functional Diseases of Women and their treatment by cold and heat, Sea-Sickness and how to Prevent it, Functional Diseases of the Stomach: Part I. Sea-sickness, Cheap Books and how to Get Them: Reprint from the Westminster Review, and in 1940 Gordon S. Haight wrote George Eliot & John Chapman: with Chapman’s Diaries.
Of interest:
The Chapman surname seems to have originated in Whitby about 1400 AD, and therefore they become quite numerous by the 19th Century. There are branches of this family in Yorkshire, Dublin, Hitchin, Kent and Surrey, with references to Tooting also in the records. Another branch of the family lived in Snettisham Norfolk and they were all millers.
There was obviously an immigration to America and Canada as numerous mentions of the American and Canadian Chapmans can be found. The Chapmans also immigrated to New Zealand. History of Chapman family in England and America. Chapman entries in the National Biography Dictionary.
Alternatively, he may be related to this branch:
John Chapman Durham 1767 - 1849 (buried with Joseph Chapman (4th and youngest son of John and Mary Chapman) who died 1828 aged 27, and George Chapman who died 1836 aged 36, and Margaret Chapman died 1836 aged 32, and of Mary Chapman herself aged 68) married 1795 to Mary Robinson (copy of Will) children John Robinson Chapman, William Chapman (^see below), George Chapman (had 3 sons), Mary Chapman (spinster), Margaret Chapman 1795 - . Grandsons Joseph Chapman, William Chapman (son of John Robinson Chapman), Margaret Chapman.
John Chapman 1767 - 1849 seems to have rented a farm from the Maire family of Lartington. In 1800 he moved to Hedlam Hall (also rented from the Maire family) and ran a ‘School for the sons of gentlemen’. By 1834 John Chapman had moved from Headlam Hall to a house in Headlam rented from William Clarke. By 1840 he had purchased the Alwent Hall estate. The Alwent estate also contained a watermill which may have been the place where Richard Wilson Chapman, his grandson, learnt his trade as a miller.
In the 1849 issue of The concluding task of the disciples of homœopathy, an address by Marmaduke Blake Sampson, a Captain Chapman RA FRS is recorded as a subscriber to the London Homeopathic Hospital at 32 Golden Square.
James Chapman MA Cantab Esq. In 1850 Jas Chapman MA Cantab is mentioned in the London Medical Gazette as a Medical Officer at the Hahnemann Hospital at 39 Bloomsbury Square, and he is mentioned again in 1851 in The British Journal of Homeopathy.
*John Chapman MA Cantab at the moment it is not possible to determine who John Chapman MA Cantab is and if there is any connection to publisher John Chapman. However, what we do know about homeopath John Chapman MA Cantab is below:
In 1841, a Dr. Chapman and John James Drysdale opened the Liverpool Homeopathic Dispensary at 14 Benson Street. Dr. Chapman was an orthodox physician who converted to homeopathy and who had been practicing in Liverpool for several years, but he decided to be exclusively homeopathic in 1841 when he joined John James Drysdale at the Liverpool Homeopathic Dispensary. Shortly thereafter, he left Liverpool to practice in London.
In 1845, a Dr. Chapman MA Cantab of Liverpool submitted papers to the British Journal of Homeopathy.
A John Chapman MD Cantab is mentioned in the Homeopathic Medical Directory of Great Britain and Ireland in 1845 and it is clear that he is a competent homeopath.
In 1846, a J Chapman of Liverpool is mentioned in the British Journal of Homeopaths.
J Chapman MD was the Vice President of the British Homeopathic Society in 1849 (President Frederick Hervey Foster Quin), and a radical campaigner for the establishment of the London Homeopathic Hospital and campaigner for the relief of the poor.
Reading this John Chapman’s speeches in The concluding task of the disciples of homœopathy, an address by Marmaduke Blake Sampson, it is quite clear he shares the same radical ideology as publisher John Chapman. The homeopathic John Chapman mentions again and again how women are essential to effect these radical changes.
This J Chapman MA Cantab is again mentioned by John Epps in his Homeopathy and Its Principles Explained in 1850.
in 1850 John Chapman treated Charles Darwin alongside James Manby Gully. Charles Darwin wrote to William Darwin Fox on 4.9.1850, confirming that John Chapman was a homeopath who worked alongside James Manby Gully, Charles Darwin’s other homeopath.
J Chapman MA Cantab is known to be a colleague of James Manby Gully from the British Homeopathic Society in 1849.
The same homeopathic John Chapman was on the Committee for the Association for the Protection of Homeopathic Practitioners and Students founded in 1851.
And the same homeopathic John Chapman, George Atkin, Frederick Hervey Foster Quin and Robert Ellis Dudgeon, John Rutherford Russell, James W Metcalfe and an anonymous ‘friend’ put together a Directory of British and Foreign Homeopaths and their supporters to counter the suppression of all mention of homeopaths and their supporters by the editors of the London and Provincial Medical Directory in 1853.
This homeopathic John Chapman was again working alongside John James Drysdale when together they formed the Committee for the Association for the Protection of Homeopathic Practitioners and Students.
In 1853, Dr J Chapman writing to the London Homeopathic Times says ‘My reason for addressing you is to prove what was the actual practice of Hahnemann during his residence in Paris, and to the close of his life. I have before me, while I write, the box of medicines he carried about with him…’ … `Since my last letter I have seen two boxes of homeopathic medicines which Hahnemann selected for a patient in the years 1841-42… among them is Arnica and Euphrasia 6 and other low dilutions. None is higher than thirty… the dilutions are 6, 9, 12, 18, 24 and 30. I have what I consider the best possible authority for stating that Hahnemann used no medicine beyond thirtieth dilution.’
This original Homeopathic kit belonging to Samuel Hahnemann is still on display at the Royal London Homeopathic Hospital today - John Chapman visited Paris sometime in the 1840s and either met Samuel Hahnemann - or it was just after Samuel Hahnemann died - to bring this case back to England.
However, this John Chapman’s name is missing from the The British and Foreign Homeopathic Medical Directory and Record in 1855.
^^John Chapman 1801 - 1854 was publisher John Chapman’s cousin who was a political agitator and writer in Loughborough originaly until he moved to London.
He was married to Mary Wallis and left three surviving children. He died of cholera in 1854 and his unfinished paper on Humboldt’s Sphere and the Duties of Government and the Government of India was published in the Westminster Review the same year.
With thanks to Rosemary Ashton who wrote 142 Strand: A Radical Address in Victorian London:
There’s a 50 page biography of him by John Wallis Chapman, published in 1983 - ‘Philosopher John: John Chapman of Loughborough 1801-1854, Engineer, Inventor, Political Writer’.
He came to London some time after 1834, when his firm making bobbin machines failed in Loughborough. He wrote for the ‘Railway Times‘ and became involved in making improvements to Hansom cabs, registering a patent cab in the name of Gillett and Chapman in December 1836. Quarrels ensued and he resigned from the partnership in 1840. Worked on an ‘aerial steam carriage’. Was involved in promoting Indian’s first railway in 1844 and went to India in August 1845. Left again for home September 1846. Quit the Railway Board in August 1848. Publisher John Chapman published his book ‘the Cotton and Commerce of India’ in 1851.
He lived off journalism and writing, in Westbourne Park Road in London. Got compensation from Great Indian Peninsular Railway in July 1852 (seems to have fallen out over salary etc earlier). Was Deacon of Baptist church in Praed Street, Paddington. Died suddenly of cholera 11 September 1854 while writing an article for publisher John Chapman’s ‘Westminster Review‘ on ‘The Sphere and Duties of Government’.
Publisher John Chapman introduced it, explaining the circumstances, in Westminster Review October 1854. This John Chapman’s son, John Wallis Chapman (the first), an architect, married publisher John Chapman’s daughter Beatrice in 1879. The John Wallis Chapman who wrote the little book is/was the great-grandson of both publisher John Chapman and the Loughborough one. Complicated!
Chapman and Hall Publishers Edward and Frederick Chapman. This branch of the Chapman family come from Hitchin originally but they do not seem related to John Chapman, though their publishing firm was just down the road at 186 Strand, and they were in operation at the same time as John Chapman and shared quite a few authors between them.
Matthew James Chapman - 1865 MD Edin 1820 BA MA Cambridge 1835 married Mary Anna Reed in 1837 was also a poet who wrote The Idylls of Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus, Jephtha’s Daughter, Hebrew Idyls and Dramas, Barbadoes, and Other Poems.
Matthew James Chapman is listed as a Fellow of the British Homeopathic Society in 1845 alongside Frederick Hervey Foster Quin. He was a colleague of Mathias Roth, and Matthew James Chapman also wrote a book on Pehr Henrik Ling called Ling’s educational and curative exercises in 1875.
Matthew James Chapman MA Cantab MD Edinburgh is mentioned in the The British and Foreign Homeopathic Medical Directory and Record in 1853 as a contributor of several articles to the British Homeopathic Journal and the Homeopathic Times, and an article on Glycerine and another article on electricity by a Dr. Chapman is printed in the The British Journal of Homeopathy in 1857.
M J Chapman is listed in The Journal of the British Homeopathic Society in 1863 as Vice President, and again he is acting as Chairman and was in the 25th year of his practice as a homeopath, so he would have qualified in 1838.
Also in 1863, M J Chapman is the chairman of the discussions in the Journal of the British Homeopathic Society, presiding at charity dinners in support of the Society.
Matthew James Chapman reported that in 1863, the British Homeopathic Society boasted between 200 - 300 recognised and registered members.
Matthew James Chapman of 25 Albermarle Street, Picadilly, doctor educated at Trinity College Cambridge, author of Greek Pastoral Poets: Theocrites, Bion and Moschus, homeopath for the last twenty five years of his life, obituary and Memorial Fund published in the British Homeopathic Review in 1866.
Matthew James Chapman’s Obituary is in The British Journal of Homeopathy in 1865, an event widely reported in America.
^William Chapman MD Member of Royal College of Surgeons 1823, homeopath practicing in London until 1851 when he emigrated to New Zealand on the Labuan (possibly to join the ‘first Government Officer of the colony on the island of Labuan in New Zealand who was an ‘earnest member of the British Homeopathic Association‘ mentioned by Marmaduke Blake Sampson in 1849?):