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  1. Henry Fawcett was born in Salisbury, and educated at King's College School and the University of Cambridge: entering Peterhouse in 1852, he migrated to Trinity Hall the following year, and became a fellow there in 1856, the year he graduated BA as 7th Wrangler.

  2. In April 1867 Millicent married Henry Fawcett, a radical politician and professor of political economy at Cambridge. She helped him to overcome the handicap of his blindness, while he supported her work for women’s rights, beginning with her first speech on the subject of woman suffrage (1868). Read More.

  3. In 1867, Millicent married Henry Fawcett. He was a strong supporter of women’s suffrage. Millicent became a well-known writer and speaker, not only on women’s right to vote, but also their right to education, employment and divorce, as well as on political and academic subjects.

  4. Fawcett’s career at the bar was cruelly short, terminated by the accident that left him totally and permanently blind—yet an accident that paradoxically changed everything and nothing for him. Ironically, Fawcett had serious problems with his eyes before the accident.

  5. Professor of Political Economy at Cambridge, MP and Postmaster General, Henry Fawcett (1833–84) was a radical supporter of both feminism and class equality. He campaigned for the widening of access to universities and the preservation of public open spaces, and oversaw the development of the telephone network.

    • Leslie Stephen Stephen
    • 2009
  6. Jun 24, 2020 · A dogged single-mindedness drove Henry Fawcett’s personality, and this was displayed when he was awarded a place at Peterhouse College, Cambridge. Two figures loomed large in his academic activities.

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  8. Feb 21, 2017 · Fawcett was to occupy this post, chiefly addressing an undemanding, because mainly conscripted, audience composed of those sitting for pass degrees, until his death in 1884 (Winch 2009: 243). Indeed, Winch’s is one of the more balanced and judicious accounts of Fawcett’s place in the history of economics.