MOXON, WALTER (son of an inland revenue officer, Somerset
house). _b._ Midleton, co. Cork 27 June 1836; clerk in a
merchant’s office in London; entered Guy’s hospital 1854;
M.B. London 1859, M.D. 1864; demonstrator of anatomy at Guy’s
1859–66, assistant physician and lecturer on comparative anatomy
1866, lecturer on pathology 1869, lecturer on materia medica,
physician to the hospital 1873, lecturer on medicine 1882;
F.R.C.P. 1868, Croonian lecturer 1881; a medal to commemorate
his attainments in clinical medicine is awarded every year by
the college; author of Lectures on pathological anatomy 1875;
Pilocereus senilis and other papers 1887. _d._ 6 Finsbury
circus, London 21 July 1886 after drinking a dose of hydrocyanic
acid. _bur._ Highgate cemet. 24 July. _British medical journal
1886 vol. ii_ 178, 234, 392, 434.
MOYLAN, DENIS. Rectifying distiller and wine and spirit merchant
at 9 and 10 John st. Dublin; lord mayor of Dublin 1862;
collector general of rates 1870. _d._ 46 Leeson st. Dublin 25
July 1878.
MOYLE, JOHN GRENFELL (2 son of Richard Moyle, surgeon
1756–1828). _b._ Marazion, Cornwall 1787; M.D.; F.R.C.S.;
assistant surgeon Bombay army 15 Sept. 1808, surgeon 1 Jany.
1820, superintending surgeon 1831; member of the medical board,
Bombay 1835, then president; retired 3 Jany. 1838. _d._ 23
Blomfield terrace, Harrow road, London 3 Jany. 1860.
MOYLE, MATTHEW PAUL (2 son of John Moyle). _b._ Chacewater,
Cornwall 4 Oct. 1788; ed. at Guy’s and St. Thomas’s hospitals;
M.R.C.S. 1809; practised at Helston, Cornwall 1809–78; wrote
papers in Thomson’s Annals of philosophy 1814, &c; author of
a paper On the formation of electro-type plates independently
of any engraving, in Sturgeon’s Annals of Electricity 1841;
author with Robert Were Fox of An account of the observations
and experiments on the temperature of mines, which have recently
been made in Cornwall and the North of England, in Tilloch’s
Philosophical Magazine 1823. _d._ Cross st. Helston 7 Aug. 1880.
MOYSEY, CHARLES ABEL (son of Abel Moysey of London, M.P., _d._
1831). _b._ 26 Nov. 1779; ed. at Westminster and Ch. Ch. Oxf.,
B.A. 1802, M.A. 1805, B.D. and D.D. 1818; Bampton lecturer
1818; P.C. of Southwick, Hants. and V. of Hinton Parva, Wilts.
1808–39; R. of Martyr Worthy, Hants. 1810–39; R. of Walcot near
Bath 1817–39; archdeacon of Bath 17 June 1820 to 6 March 1839;
prebendary of Wells 1 Feb. 1826 to 6 Oct. 1832; had a paralytic
stroke 1839; author of The doctrines of unitarians examined,
Bampton lectures 1818; Eighteen lectures on important points of
doctrine and practice from the gospel of St. John 1823; Lectures
on St. Paul’s Epistle to the Romans 1830. _d._ Batheaston court,
Bath 17 Dec. 1859.
MOZLEY, ANNE (dau. of Henry Mozley of Gainsborough, bookseller).
_b._ Gainsborough 17 Sept. 1809; resided at Derby 1815–32, then
at Barrow on the Trent, but returned to Derby; she published
anonymously Passages from the poets 1837; Church poetry or
christian thoughts 1843, 4 ed. 1857; Days and seasons or
church poetry for the year 1845; Poetry, past and present
1849; reviewed books for the Christian Remembrancer 1847–68,
and contributed to the Saturday Review 1861–77; wrote for
Blackwood’s Mag. from 1865; edited The letters of J. B. Mozley
1885; The letters and correspondence of Cardinal Newman, 2
vols. 1891. _d._ Derby 27 June 1891. _A. Mozley’s Essays from
Blackwood_ (1892) _memoir pp. vii–xx_; _I.L.N. 4 July 1891 p._ 3
_portrait_.
MOZLEY, HARRIET ELIZABETH (elder sister of John Henry Newman,
cardinal, _d._ 11 Aug. 1890). _m._ at St. Werburgh’s, Derby 27
Sept. 1836 Thomas Mozley, divine and journalist 1806–93; author
of The fairy bower or the history of a month 1841; The lost
brooch 1841; Louisa, or the bride 1842; Family adventures 1852.
_d._ 71 Guilford st. Russell sq. London 17 July 1852.
MOZLEY, JAMES BOWLING (brother of Anne Mozley 1809–91). _b._
Gainsborough 15 Sept. 1813; ed. at Grantham gr. sch. 1822–8;
matric. from Oriel coll. Oxf. 1 July 1830; B.A. 1834, M.A.
1838, B.D. 1846, D.D. 1871; fellow of Magdalen coll. 1840–56;
joint editor of the Christian Remembrancer, the organ of the
high church party about 1845–55; V. of Old Shoreham, Sussex
1856 to death; select university preacher 1869; canon of
Worcester 1869–71; regius professor of divinity at Oxford
and canon of Ch. Ch. 7 Oct. 1871 to death; author of On the
Augustinian doctrine of predestination 1855, 2 ed. 1878; The
primitive doctrine of baptismal regeneration 1856; A review of
the baptismal controversy 1862, 2 ed. 1883; Eight lectures on
miracles; Bampton lectures 1865, 6 ed. 1883; Ruling ideas in
early ages and their relation to the Old Testament faith 1877, 4
ed. 1889; The theory of development, a criticism of Dr. Newman’s
essay 1878; Sermons, parochial and occasional 1879, 2 ed. 1882;
Lectures and other theological papers 1883. _d._ Old Shoreham
vicarage 4 Jany. 1878. _J. B. Mozley’s Essays_, 2 _vols._ (1884)
_introduction pp. xi–xlvii_; _J. B. Mozley’s Letters_ (1885)
_introduction pp._ 1–30; _I.L.N. lxxii_ 108 (1878) _portrait_.
MOZLEY, THOMAS (brother of the preceding). _b._ Gainsborough
1806; ed. at Charterhouse and Oriel coll. Oxf.; pupil of John
Henry Newman; B.A. 1828, M.A. 1831; fellow of Oriel April 1829
to 27 Sept. 1836, junior treasurer 1835; C. of Buckland near
Oxford 1831; P.C. of Moreton-Pinkney, Northamptonshire 1831–6;
R. of Cholderton, Wiltshire 1836–47, rebuilt the church;
advocated the tractarian movement from 1833; edited the British
Critic 1841–3; wrote leading articles for The Times from 1844
for more than 40 years; R. of Plymtree, Devon 1868–80; rural
dean of Plymtree 1874, and of Ottery St. Mary 1876; author
of Reminiscences, chiefly of Oriel college and the Oxford
movement, 2 vols. 1882, 2 ed. 1882; Reminiscenses, chiefly of
towns, villages and schools, 2 vols. 1885; The Word 1889; The
Son 1891; Letters from Rome on the occasion of the Œcumenical
council 1869–70, 2 vols. 1891; The creed, or a philosophy
1893, with autobiographical preface. _d._ 7 Lansdowne terrace,
Cheltenham 17 June 1893.
MUDGE, HENRY (son of Thomas Mudge). _b._ Tower Hill house,
Bodmin 29 July 1806; ed. at St. Bartholomew’s hospital, London;
L.S.A. 1828, M.R.C.S. 1829; practised at Bodmin to his death;
advocated strict temperance principles; mayor of Bodmin twice;
edited The Western temperance luminary, 12 numbers 1838; The
Bodmin temperance luminary, 12 numbers 1840–1; The Cornwall and
Devon temperance journal, 8 vols. 1851–8; author of An exposure
of Odd-fellowship 1845; Rescued texts or teetotalism put under
the protection of the gospel 1853, 3 ed. 1856; Alcoholics, a
letter to practitioners in medicine By one of themselves 1856;
Dialogues against the use of tobacco 1861. d. Fore st. Bodmin 27
June 1874. _Boase & Courteney’s Bibl. Cornub. i_ 377–8 (1874),
_iii_ 1290 (1882).
MUDGE, RICHARD ZACHARIAH (eld. son of major general Wm. Mudge,
col. R.A. 1762–1820). _b._ Plymouth 6 Sept. 1790; ed. at
Blackheath and R.M. academy, Woolwich; 2 lieut. R.E. 4 May
1807, lieut. col. 10 Jany. 1837, retired on full pay 7 Sept.
1840; in charge of the drawing department, Tower of London,
some years; superintended the ordnance survey of Lincolnshire
1818; appointed comr. by the British government to examine the
boundary between Maine and New Brunswick 1838, the survey was
made by Mr. Featherstonehaugh and himself Aug. to Oct. 1839,
the boundary was settled by the treaty of Washington 1842;
author of Observations on railways with reference to utility,
profit and the obvious necessity of a national system 1837. _d._
Teignmouth, Devon 25 Sept. 1854. _bur._ Denbury. _S. R. Flint’s
Mudge memoirs_ (_Truro_ 1883) 177–239.
MUDGE, _Zachary_ (son of John Mudge, physician 1721–93). _b._
Plymouth 22 Jany. 1770; entered navy 1 Nov. 1780; captain 15
Nov. 1800; captain of Blanche 32 gun frigate 23 Sept. 1802
in the West Indies, where he captured many French merchant
ships and privateers; lost his ship in an action with a French
squadron 19 July 1805, tried by court martial 14 Oct. when
acquitted of all blame; commanded the Phœnix in the Bay of
Biscay 1805–10, and the Valiant, 74 guns 1814–5; admiral 15
Sept. 1849. _d._ Sydney near Plympton 26 Oct. 1852. _bur._
Newton Ferrers. Memorial window in St. Andrew’s church, Plymouth.
MUDIE, CHARLES EDWARD (son of Thomas Mudie, second-hand
bookseller). _b._ Cheyne Walk, Chelsea 18 Oct. 1818; assisted
his father until 1840; stationer and bookseller at 28 Upper
King st. (now Southampton row), Bloomsbury; published Poems by
James Russell Lowell 1844, and R. W. Emerson’s Man thinking, an
oration 1844; commenced lending books 1842; removed to 510 New
Oxford st. 1852, where he opened a large new hall and library
17 Dec. 1860; established branches in London, Birmingham and
Manchester; made over the library to a limited company 1864, in
which he held half the shares and remained manager, there were
over 25,000 subscribers to his library; member of London school
board for Westminster 1870–3; author of Stray Leaves 1872, a
vol. of poems, 2 ed. 1872. _d._ 31 Maresfield gardens, Hampstead
28 Oct. 1890. _Curwen’s Booksellers_ (1873) 421–32 _portrait_;
_Cartoon portraits_ (1873) 72–3 _portrait_; _I.L.N. 3 Nov. 1890
p._ 583 _portrait_.
MUDIE, CHARLES HENRY (son of the preceding). _b._ Adelaide road,
Haverstock hill 26 Jany. 1850; ed. at Univ. college school,
London; took part in management of his father’s business 1871
to death; a good musician, an amateur actor, and a lecturer; he
devoted much time to improvement of the poorer classes. _d._ 13
Jany. 1879. _C. H. Mudie_ [_by Mary Mudie his sister_] (1879)
_portrait_; _Athenæum i_ 90 (1879).
MUDIE, JAMES. Second lieutenant royal marines 10 May 1799, first
lieut. 18 Aug. 1804 to 1810 or 1811; manufactured medals of
principal persons engaged in Peninsular and Waterloo campaigns;
became insolvent 22 Aug. 1821; in New South Wales July 1822
to March 1836; owner of Castle Forbes station near Maitland,
N.S.W. where there was an insurrection of the convicts in
1833, when he was removed from the commission of the peace
together with 32 other magistrates; gave evidence in London
before select committee appointed to inquire into the system of
transportation, April and May 1837; author of An historical and
critical account of a grand series of national medals, published
under the direction of J. Mudie 1820; The felonry of New South
Wales being a picture of the real romance of life in Botany bay