Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Julia_HuxleyJulia Huxley - Wikipedia

    Julia Huxley (née Arnold; 1862–1908) was a British scholar. She founded Prior's Field School for girls, in Godalming, Surrey in 1902.

  2. Leonard Huxley (1860–1933), married Julia Arnold. Rachel Huxley (1862–1934) married civil engineer Alfred Eckersley in 1884. Portrait of Marion Roller (or Madge or Marian), Nettie and Harold's daughter (John Singer Sargent, 1893) Henrietta (Nettie) Huxley (1863–1940), married Harold Roller, travelled Europe as a singer.

  3. Name variations: Mrs. Leonard Huxley, Judy Arnold. Born Julia Frances Arnold in 1862; died of cancer on November 30, 1908; granddaughter of the famous headmaster Thomas Arnold of Rugby (1795–1842, an English educator and headmaster of Rugby); daughter of Thomas Arnold (1823–1900), a professor of English literature, and Julia Sorell (1826 ...

  4. Julia Huxley was a feminist and freethinker, who profoundly influenced a generation of girls who attended the school she founded with her husband, Leonard Huxley. Unlike others who bore the Huxley name, the humanism of Julia Huxley has been comparatively underexplored.

  5. Mar 27, 2022 · As you can see, Julian and Aldous Huxley were the product of the intersplicing of two intellectual pedigrees — the genius of their paternal grandfather, Thomas Henry Huxley, and the Arnold family, who produced the Reverend Thomas Arnold, the most famous headmaster of the 19th century; Matthew Arnold, the leading British literary critic of the Vi...

  6. Nov 7, 2022 · 07 November 2022. Huxley: the family that championed evolution. A multigenerational biography illuminates a dynasty’s vexed influence on science and society. By. Stuart Mathieson. Julian...

  7. People also ask

  8. Julia Arnold met Leonard Huxley when they were both studying at Oxford in the 1880s. Julia and Leonard married in 1885 and moved to Godalming where Leonard had been appointed a junior classics master at Charterhouse. The Huxleys marriage brought together two of the most pre-eminent intellectual families of late Victorian England.