William Spence (entomologist)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Spence (1783–January 6, 1860) was a British entomologist.
He was one of the founders of the Society of Entomologists of London in 1833, the year of its foundation and became president in 1847.
He wrote, with his friend William Kirby, Introduction to entomology (1815–1826).
Spence was born in Bishop Burton but little else is known about his early life except that at the age of ten he was in the care of a clergyman who taught him botany. He became interested in entomology when he was 22 and immediately began a correspondence with Kirby. Ten years later he suggested the Introduction to Kirby.
Spence published some 20 notes on entomology.
He was made an 'Honorary English Member' of the Entomological Society at the same time as Kirby was made Honorary Life President and was President 1847-48 and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1834.
His father Robert was a farmer in Burton Bassett and William was the oldest of 4 children - he was Apprenticed to Rusian merchants & shipowners Carhill, Greenwood & Co.
He married elizabeth Blundell in Hull on 30th Jun 1804 and very soon supported her brother Henry to set up the hisghly sucessful oil & colour company Blundell Spence.
Sufferred from awful headaches
Wrote on Political economy edited a Hull newspaper the Rocckingham.
There is a bust of him by Morochetti in the Hull museum.
He was the father of artist and art dealer William Blundell Spence

