Page:Protestant Exiles from France Agnew vol 2.djvu/476

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
462
french protestant exiles.

Miss Demainbray, the daughter, died in 1884, aged eighty-nine, and left money for the poor of the parish. The elder son, Stephen Triboudet Demainbray, Esq., now resides in Cheltenham.

Rigaud. — The surname of Demainbray was perhaps eclipsed in fame by that of Rigaud, which may have been said to have been brought into notice by Dr. Triboudet Demainbray. A satisfactory pedigree of this good Huguenot family does not exist. As formerly stated, the first Rigaud refugee is said to have been a brother-in-law of Rev. Alexandre Descairac, of Bristol, one of whose daughters was Dr. Demainbray’s mother; Mr. Rigaud probably was a refugee in Holland in the first place. A conjectural pedigree is —

Rigaud (refugee) = _____ La Brue.
Pierre Rigaud = Anne Unice Mester.
Stephen Rigaud
(the fifth son in a family
of seven sons and
two daughters).
= Mary Triboudet Demainbray.

The last-named was appointed the Observer in the Royal Observatory at Richmond, and died in 1814; Mary, Mrs. Rigaud, died in June 1807. The son of the Richmond Astronomical Observer brought an extensive and deserved renown upon his name. Stephen Peter Rigaud was born in 1775, and matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford, on 15th April 1791; he become B.A. in 1797, M.A. 21st November 1799. So brilliant was his University career, that he was elected a Fellow of his College before he was of sufficient standing for a degree. His whole life was spent in Oxford. In 1810 he became Savilian Professor of Geometry, which he relinquished in 1827 for the Savilian Professorship of Astronomy. At the latter date he also became the Radcliffe Observer, having previously, since 1814, been observer to the king. In addition to his abundant and successful professorial labours, he discharged the duties of Senior Proctor, Delegate of the University Press, and Examiner in Mathematics and the Physical Sciences. He also contributed articles to the learned journals, to the Transactions of the Royal Society (of which he was elected Vice-President in 1837-8), and to the Transactions of the Ashmolean Society. Among the latter will be found the following papers by him:— “Remarks on the proportionate quantities of rain at different seasons in Oxford,” “On the Arenarius of Archimedes,” “Account of some early proposals for Steam Navigation,” “Captain Savery and his Steam Engine.” He has a Paper in the Cambridge Philosophical Society Transactions on “The relative quantities of land and water on the surface of the terraqueous globe.” He also issued his Astronomical Observations with painstaking fidelity. In 1834 he communicated to the Royal Astronomical Society some facts in the life of Halley, from a M.S. in the Bodleian Library. He devoted his leisure to research and authorship in the field of scientific biography. A well-informed friend has said of him, — “He had a peculiar delight in tracing the history of an invention, or illustrating the biography of those who, however eminent in their day, were in after ages known to have lived, flourished for a time, and died. To collect the materials for their lives, to throw light upon their habits, enumerate their works, and do justice to their merits, was a principal source of his amusement; and his perseverance in seeking for materials was exceeded only by the discrimination and impartiality which accompanied his researches and rendered them of permanent value.” Such researches resulted in the publication, in 1831, of “The Miscellaneous Works and Correspondence of Bradley;” in connection with this volume the following letter is worthy of preservation:—

Whitehall, January 21st, 1831. — My dear Sir, I offer you my best thanks for your kind attention in sending me the memoirs and correspondence of Bradley. Politics have not extinguished the deep interest I once took in those higher studies and pursuits to which the life of Bradley was devoted; and I shall turn with the utmost satisfaction from Schedules A and B to the Parallax of the Fixed Stars and the Reformation of the Calendar. Believe me, my dear sir, ever most truly yours, Robert Peel.

S. P. Rigaud, Esq.”

To this volume Professor Rigaud, in 1833, added a supplement on the astronomical papers of Thomas Harriot. In 1838 he published some valuable notices of the first publication of Newton’s Principia. He transcribed for publication a series of Letters of Scientific Men (from the Earl of Macclesfield’s collection) from 1706 to 1741, superintended the printing of volume first at the University Press, but left