William Chester Minor
William Chester Minor | |
---|---|
Born |
June 1834 Ceylon |
Died |
March 26, 1920 85) Hartford, CT | (aged
Alma mater | Yale University |
Known for | Contributions to the Oxford English Dictionary |
Relatives | Thomas T. Minor, Mayor of Seattle (half-brother) |
Military career | |
Allegiance | Union (United States) |
Service/branch | Union Army |
Years of service | 1863/1864 to 1871 |
Rank | Commissioned officer (surgeon) |
Battles/wars | Battle of the Wilderness |
William Chester Minor, also known as W. C. Minor (June 1834 – March 26, 1920) was an American army surgeon and one of the largest contributors of quotations to the Oxford English Dictionary. He was held in a lunatic asylum for murder at the time.
Life
Early life
Minor was born on the island of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), the son of Congregationalist Church missionaries from New England. He had numerous half-siblings, among them Thomas T. Minor, mayor of Seattle, Washington.[1] At 14 he was sent to the United States. He subsequently attended Yale Medical School, graduating with a degree and a specialization in comparative anatomy in 1863.
Military career
He was accepted by the Union Army as a surgeon and served at the Battle of the Wilderness in May 1864, which was notable for the terrible casualties suffered by both sides. Minor was also given the task of punishing an Irish soldier in the Union Army by branding him on the face with a D for "deserter"[2] and his nationality later played a role in Minor's dementia delusions.[2]
After the end of the American Civil War, Minor saw duty in New York City. He was strongly attracted to the red-light district of the city and devoted much of his off-duty time to going with prostitutes. By 1867, his behavior had come to the attention of the Army and he was transferred to a remote post in the Florida Panhandle. By 1868, his condition had progressed to the point that he was admitted to St. Elizabeths Hospital, a lunatic asylum in Washington, D.C. After eighteen months he showed no improvement.
Move to England
In 1871 he went to London, settling in the slum of Lambeth, where once again he took up a dissolute life. Haunted by his paranoia, he fatally shot a man named George Merrett, who Minor believed had broken into his room, on February 17, 1872. Merrett had been on his way to work to support his family of six children, himself, and his pregnant wife, Eliza. After a pre-trial period spent in London's Horsemonger Lane Gaol, Minor was found not guilty by reason of insanity and incarcerated in the asylum at Broadmoor in the village of Crowthorne, Berkshire. As he had his US army pension and was not judged dangerous, he was given rather comfortable quarters and was able to buy and read books.[3][4]
Contributor to Oxford English Dictionary
It was probably through his correspondence with the London booksellers that he heard of the call for volunteers from what was to become the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). He devoted most of the remainder of his life to that work.[5] He became one of the project's most effective volunteers, reading through his large personal library of antiquarian books and compiling quotations that illustrated the way particular words were used. He was often visited by the widow of the man he had killed, and she provided him with further books. The compilers of the dictionary published lists of words for which they wanted examples of usage. Minor provided these, with increasing ease as the lists grew. It was many years before the OED's editor, Dr. James Murray, learned Minor's background history, and visited him in January 1891. In 1899 Murray paid compliment to Minor's enormous contributions to the dictionary, stating, "we could easily illustrate the last four centuries from his quotations alone."[6][7]
Minor's condition deteriorated and in 1902, due to delusions that he was being abducted nightly from his rooms and conveyed to places as far away as Istanbul, and forced to commit sexual assaults on children, he cut off his own penis (autopeotomy) using a knife he had employed in his work on the dictionary.[8] His health continued to worsen, and after Murray campaigned on his behalf, Minor was released in 1910 on the orders of Home Secretary Winston Churchill.[8] He was deported back to the United States and resided at St. Elizabeths Hospital where he was diagnosed with dementia praecox. He died in 1920 in Hartford, Connecticut after being moved in 1919 to the Retreat for the Elderly Insane there.[9]
In popular culture
The book The Surgeon of Crowthorne (published in America as The Professor and the Madman), by Simon Winchester, was published in 1998 and chronicles both Minor's later life and his contributions to the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary.
References
- ↑ Winchester 1998, p. 47.
- 1 2 Winchester 1998, ch 3.
- ↑ "Broadmoor Asylum", Asylums, UK: Institutions, archived from the original on 2010-04-17.
- ↑ "William Chester Minor", Documents (PDF) (biography), Berkshire, UK: Record office, archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-11-28.
- ↑ "William Chester Minor", Contributors, Oxford English Dictionary.
- ↑ Winchester, Simon (2004). The Meaning of Everything: The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary. OUP. p. 201.
- ↑ Murray, Katharine Maud Elisabeth (2001). Caught in the Web of Words: James A.H. Murray and the Oxford English Dictionary. Yale University Press. p. 306.
In 1899 alone, Minor provided 12,000 quotations for the OED.
- 1 2 Forsyth, Mark (November 2011), The Etymologicon: A Circular Stroll through the Hidden Connections of the English Language
- ↑ Winchester, Simon. "Minor, William Chester". ODNB.
Other sources
- Winchester, Simon (1998), The Surgeon of Crowthorne: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the love of words (1st ed.), UK, ISBN 0-14-027128-7, OCLC 42083202 (The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary, New York: Harper Perennial, ISBN 0-06-017596-6, OCLC 38425992).
- Aurandt, Paul (1984). "14. Pen Pals". Paul Harvey's the Rest of the Story. London: Bantam. pp. 31–33t. ISBN 0-553-25962-8.