(1886).
PEACH, WILLIAM. _b._ 1796; educ. St. John’s coll. Camb., B.A.
1818, M.A. 1821; Hulsean prizeman 1818; fellow of St. John’s 20
March 1820 to 1823; P.C. of Brampton, Derbyshire 7 Jany. 1826
to death; rural dean of Brampton 1836; author of The probable
influence of revelation on the writings of heathen philosophers,
Hulsean essay 1819; Themis, a satire 1853; Cwm Dhu or the Black
Dingle, and other poems 1853. _d._ Brampton 31 Jany. 1867.
PEACOCK, SIR BARNES (3 son of Lewis Peacock of 38 Lincolns Inn
Fields, London, solicitor and messenger to the great seal, _d._
1839). _b._ 1810; practised as special pleader 1831–6; barrister
I.T. 30 Jany. 1836, bencher 10 May 1850 to death, reader 1864;
one of the counsel for Daniel O’Connell in his appeal to the
house of lords Aug. 1844; Q.C. 28 Feb. 1850; legal member of
supreme council of the viceroy of India at Calcutta 2 April
1852 to April 1859; chief justice of supreme court of Bengal
1859–70; vice-president of legislative council of India June
1859; knighted by patent 26 May 1859; P.C. 6 July 1870; a paid
member of judicial committee of privy council 10 June 1872 to
death. _d._ 40 Cornwall gardens, Kensington, London 3 Dec. 1890.
_Escott’s Pillars of the empire_ (1879) 250–7; _I.L.N. 20 Dec.
1890 p._ 771 _portrait_; _Pictorial world 18 Dec. 1890 p._ 772
_portrait_; _Saturday Review lxx_ 675 (1890); _Times 4 Dec. 1890
pp._ 8 _and_ 14.
PEACOCK, DIMITRI RUDOLF (son of Charles Peacock, estate
manager). _b._ village of Shakmanovka, district of Kozlov in the
government of Tambov, Russia 26 Sept. 1842; educ. at a school
in England and univ. of Moscow; British vice-consul at Batoum
25 Oct. 1881, consul 27 Jany. 1890, consul general at Odessa 14
Oct. 1891 to death; author of Original vocabularies of five west
Caucasian languages, Georgian, Mingrelian, Lazian, Svanetian,
and Apkhazian in the Journal of Royal Asiatic society for 1877,
pp. 145–56; wrote a book on the Caucasus, which has not been
published. _d._ Odessa 23 May 1892. _Times 17 June 1892 p._ 8.
PEACOCK, ELIZABETH, who was a Miss Stone. _b._ 1772; _m._ John
William Peacock, cooper; successor to Johanna Southcott 1814;
issued a proclamation to the believers in the divine mission
of Johanna Southcott to attend their parish churches 3 June
1864; issued one number of The Morning Star Dec. 1864. _d._ 49
Westmoreland road, St. Peter’s, Walworth, Surrey 10 March 1875,
aged 103.
PEACOCK, FREDERICK BARNES (eld. son of sir Barnes Peacock
1810–90). _b._ 1836; educ. Haileybury; entered Bengal civil
service 1 Feb. 1857, registrar of the high court May 1864;
student I.T. 16 April 1866, barrister 9 June 1880; officiating
secretary to board of revenue Bengal Nov. 1871; a magistrate
and collector July 1873; comr. of the Dacca division April 1878
to 1881, and of the Presidency division May 1881 to 1883; chief
secretary to government of Bengal for the judicial, political
and appointments departments March 1883 to 1890; an acting
member of board of revenue 1884, member 1887–90, when he retired
on annuity; C.S.I. 21 May 1890. _d._ on board the Britannia off
Sicily 14 April 1894. _Times 25 April 1894 p._ 10.
PEACOCK, GEORGE (youngest son of Thomas Peacock 1756–1851,
perpetual curate of Denton, near Darlington 50 years). _b._
Thornton hall, Denton 9 April 1791; a sizar at Trin. coll.
Camb. 21 Feb. 1809, scholar 12 April 1812, fellow 1814–39;
second wrangler and second Smith’s prizeman 1813; B.A. 1813,
M.A. 1816, D.D. 1839; lecturer in mathematics at Trin. coll.
1815, joint tutor 1823–35, sole tutor 1835–9; moderator
1816–7, 1818–9 and 1820–1, and introducer of the symbols of
differentiation into the papers set in the senate house 1816–7;
one of the syndics for building the new observatory 1817, and
for building the Fitzwilliam museum 1835; F.R S. 29 Jany.
1818, member of council 30 Nov. 1836, vice-president; F.R.A.S.
1820, F.G.S.; Lowndean professor of astronomy and geometry at
Cambridge Jany. 1837 to death; dean of Ely 7 May 1839 to death,
installed 22 May, raised a large sum of money for restoration
of the cathedral; prolocutor of the lower house of convocation
1841–7 and 1852–7; R. of Wentworth, near Ely 1847 to death;
member of commission of enquiry into statutes of Cambridge
university 1850, and of commission for making new statutes for
the univ. and colleges 1855; author of A collection of examples
of applications of the differential and integral calculus 1820;
A treatise on algebra 1830; Syllabus of a course of lectures
upon trigonometry and the application of algebra to geometry
1833, 2 ed. 1836; A treatise on algebra, 2 vols. 1842–5; Life of
Thomas Young, M.D. 1855; edited vols. 1 and 2 of Young’s works