Sir Leslie Stephen - Highgate East Cemetery, London, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Master Mariner
N 51° 34.015 W 000° 08.723
30U E 697837 N 5716733
Sir Leslie Stephen's grave is on the northern edge of Highgate East Cemetery close to the fence separating the cemetery from Waterlow Park. Sir Leslie was an author.
Waymark Code: WMHB6D
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/18/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member rangerroad
Views: 2

There is a simple granite gravestone on which is inscribed:

Julia Prinsep Stephen
7th February 1846
5th May 1895

Sir Leslie Stephen
20th November 1832
22nd February 1904

also
Julian Thoby Stephen
8th September 1880
20th November 1906

The Britannica website tells us:

A member of a distinguished intellectual family, Stephen was educated at Eton, at King’s College, London, and at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where he was elected to a fellowship in 1854 and became junior tutor in 1856. He was ordained in 1859, but his philosophical studies, combined probably with the controversy that followed the publication of Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species (1859), caused him to lose his faith; in 1862 he resigned his tutorship and two years later left Cambridge to live in London.

Through his brother, James Fitzjames Stephen, a contributor to the Saturday Review, Stephen gained entry to the literary world, contributing to many periodicals. From 1871 to 1882 he edited The Cornhill Magazine, for which he wrote literary criticism (republished in the three series of Hours in a Library, 1874–79). Stephen was one of the first serious critics of the novel. Thomas Hardy, Robert Louis Stevenson, Edmund Gosse, and Henry James were among those whom Stephen, as an editor, encouraged.

His greatest learned work was History of English Thought in the Eighteenth Century (1876). His philosophical study The English Utilitarians (1900) was somewhat less successful, though it is still a useful source. His philosophical contribution to the rationalist tradition, Science of Ethics (1882), attempted to wed evolutionary theory to ethics, and An Agnostic’s Apology appeared in 1893. Stephen’s most enduring legacy, however, is the Dictionary of National Biography, which he edited from 1882 to 1891; he edited the first 26 volumes and contributed 378 biographies. In recognition of this service to letters he was knighted in 1902. Stephen’s English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth Century (1904) was a pioneer work in the sociological study of literature.

Stephen was shy and given to silence, the more so after the death in 1875 of his first wife, Harriet Marian (“Minny”), the second daughter of William Makepeace Thackeray. In 1878 he married Julia Jackson, a widow, and among their four children were the painter Vanessa Bell and the novelist Virginia Woolf.

Description:
Se the detailed description.


Date of birth: 11/28/1832

Date of death: 02/22/1904

Area of notoriety: Literature

Marker Type: Horizontal Marker

Setting: Outdoor

Visiting Hours/Restrictions: M-F 10am to 5pm / S&S 11am to 4pm

Fee required?: Yes

Web site: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
To post a visit log for waymarks in this category, you must have personally visited the waymark location. When logging your visit, please provide a note describing your visit experience, along with any additional information about the waymark or the surrounding area that you think others may find interesting.

We especially encourage you to include any pictures that you took during your visit to the waymark. However, only respectful photographs are allowed. Logs which include photographs representing any form of disrespectful behavior (including those showing personal items placed on or near the grave location) will be subject to deletion.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Grave of a Famous Person
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
There are no logs for this waymark yet.