Charles Darwin, the mild mannered son of a
physician, was once described as the most
dangerous man in England.
In fact many people considered him to be the
agent of the Devil himself, come to sow seeds
of corruption among the faithful.
His ideas struck like a storm at the very
foundation of society, turning conventional
religious thought on its head.
Yet just a few years earlier he had his sights
set on becoming priest and devoting his life
to God.
In this week’s Biographics we investigate
the life and ideas of Charles Darwin.
Early Years
Charles Robert Darwin was born in Shrewsbury,
England on February 12th, 1809.
His father, Robert, was a doctor, and his
mother Susannah was the daughter of the famous
potteries owner, Josiah Wedgwood.
Charles’ grandfather was Erasmus Darwin,
well known in his time as a scientist with
unusual ideas.
He wrote on a range of subjects including
travel by air, exploring by submarine and
evolution.
Despite his learned father and eminent grandfather,
Charles’ early years were not outstanding.
He attended Shrewsbury School, where the main
lessons were in the classics, such as Latin.
His school masters, and his father, considered
him to be a boy of very ordinary intelligence.
Despite his apparent lack of promise, Charles
showed a great interest in learning.
But, rather than studying Greek and Latin
like most students of the time, he was taken
with the English poetry of William Wordsworth
and Lord Byron.
When Charles was a teenager, science began
to captivate him, so much so, in fact, that
he and his brother Erasmus built a chemistry
lab in a garden shed.
In 1825, Charles attended Edinburgh Medical
School in Scotland, but he was not a good
medical student.
He found the lectures dull, and he had to
leave the operating theatre because he could
not stand the horrors of surgery.
One thing he did enjoy was the study of taxidermy,
which he learned from a former African slave
named John Edmonstone.
A Growing Fascination
During his second year in Scotland, Darwin
joined the Plinian Society, a club for naturalists.
He was taken with their intellectual debates,
which exposed him to ideas of how man was
created, not by God, but by gradual changes
in form over time.
These ideas had been espoused by Charles’
own grandfather, Erasmus Darwin.
While at the university, Darwin met a zoologist
named Robert Grant, and the two became close
friends.
Grant has been credited with being the first
person to interest Darwin in the theory of
evolution.
At this time, Charles began collecting fossils
and learning more about animal life.
To the great disappointment of his father,
Charles quit Medical School in 1827.
He joined his uncle, Josiah Wedgwood II for
a trip to Paris.
As he vacationed, his father, still fretting
over his son dropping out of medical school,
made plans for Charles to study for the clergy,
enrolling him at Christ’s College at Cambridge
University.
Despite the evolutionary ideas that had been
filling his mind during his time at Edinburgh,
Charles still held to a belief in creation.
Later he wrote, “I did not then in the least
doubt the strict and literal truth of every
word in the Bible.”
During the summer, before his studies began,
Charles fell in love with a girl by the name
of Fanny Owen, the sister of one of his friends.
They spent long hours talking, riding horses
and playing cards.
Darwin’s theological studies at Cambridge
began towards the end of 1827.
But, rather than getting immersed in the Bible,
he developed a fondness for collecting beetles.
He attended lectures on botany given by the
Reverend John Stevens Henslow.
Darwin saw this as a possible career path,
and he pursued his studies with enthusiasm.
By 1829, it became clear that Darwin had no
interest in joining the clergy.
He spent that spring break with the Reverend
Frederick Hope, a noted entomologist.
His obsession with the study of beetles saw
no time for his budding romance with Fanny
and they broke up the following spring.
Despite his general lack of interest in his
clerical studies, Darwin passed his final
exams in January, 1831, placing tenth in his
class.
Finished with school he was all set to become
a countryside clergy, albeit one with deep
scientific interest.
But, Reverend Henslow, who had become a mentor
to Charles, suggested that he should see some
of the world before settling down to a clergical
posting.
Darwin decided to take a trip to the Canary
Islands, off the coast of Spain.
He planned to go with his friend Marmaduke
Ramsay.
They intended to study the geological formations
on the islands.
But, before they could set sail, Ramsay died
suddenly.
Darwin was stricken with grief and could not
travel to the islands.
A few weeks later, though, he received a letter
from Reverend Henslow, informing him that
there was an opening on a ship that may interest
him - the HMS Beagle, which was bound for
South America.
A 5 Year Voyage
The Beagle was being prepared as one of several
ships scheduled to map South America.
Robert Fitzroy, the captain of the Beagle,
recognized that the long voyage would require
that a variety of men be onboard for companionship.
He was keen to have a scholar-gentleman who
could help describe the areas that were being
charted, as well to relieve the tedium between
ports of call.
When the opening presented itself, Darwin
was keen to fill the spot.
However, his father, Robert, refused to give
his adult son permission to embark on the
voyage.
Robert continued to believe that Charles’
interest in science was merely a passing fad
and that the young man remained adrift.
It was left to Charles’ uncle, Josiah, to
step in and persuade his brother to give permission
for his son to join the expedition.
Charles then hastened to London to meet with
Captain Fitzroy in the hope that the offer
was still available.
He was in luck, with plans for a September
departure gradually moved back.
The ship finally set sail on Tuesday, December
27th, 1831.
Darwin found himself in a small cabin that
was was nine by eleven feet long and only
five feet high.
Part of the cabin was taken up with one of
the masts rising through it.
From the start he was seasick, a condition
that remained over the next five years.
On January 16, 1832, the Beagle stopped at
the Cape Verde Islands, off the western coast
of Africa.
Here Darwin found a band of fossil shells
forty-five feet above sea level.
How, he wondered, could the fossils rise so
high.
After twenty-three days, the crew set out
for Brazil, arriving in the port city of Salvador
at the end of February 1832.
Throughout the spring, the Beagle traveled
along the Brazilian coast, stopping in many
ports.
At each stop, Darwin took long hikes, collecting
many specimens.
He collected a huge number of specimens which
he carefully catalogued and protected onboard.
Fitzroy and the crew considered his work worthless
and his growing collection a load of junk,
but to Charles they were precious scientific
discoveries.
Every few months he arranged for shipment
to be sent back to Reverend Henslow in Cambridge
for safekeeping.
From Brazil the Beagle sailed to Patagonia,
a large region of South America that is now
Argentina.There Darwin collected fossils,
bits of bone, and feathers that he had never
before encountered.
He struggled to accurately record their features
in the hopes that more experienced naturalists
could later help to identify them.
From Patagonia, the Beagle went further south
to Tierra del Fuego.
It was here that Darwin encountered native
people who still dwelled in the jungle and
were considered to be savages by the Europeans.
My March, 1833, the crew of the Beagle began
mapping the Falkland Islands, which the British
had claimed from Argentina just months earlier.
Fascinated by bird and animal fossils found
there, Darwin spent his time comparing the
specimens with everything he had collected
to date.
The work that Darwin was immersed in was becoming
so exhaustive that he recognized the need
to take on a servant.
He wrote home to his father asking for the
money to hire someone.
When permission came back, he asked the ship’s
odd-job man, Syms Covington, to take the role.
Meanwhile, the letters that Charles had been
sending back to Reverend Henslow, were being
read aloud to the Philosophical Society of
Cambridge.
This earned Darwin an early reputation as
an excellent naturlaist and observer.
On Darwin’s twenty-fifth birthday, Captain
Fitzroy named the highest mountain in the
Terra del Fuego region Mount Darwin, in Charles’
honor.
By April, 1834, the ship had sailed round
Cape Horn at the southern tip of South America
and crossed from the Atlantic to the Pacific
Ocean.
During the summer, Darwin became quite ill.
He was deemed too sick to continue the voyage
and spent four frustrating months in Tierra
del Fuego recovering.
Historians believe that he had Chagas Disease,
which is a form of sleeping sickness.
Darwin returned to the Beagle in November,
1834.
The ship rounded Cape Horn and sailed up South
America’s west coast.
On February 20th 1835, a great earthquake
shook the region.
Entering the port of Concepcion, Chile, Darwin
saw the appalling damage.
He also noted that the rocks around the harbor
had been lifted almost a metre by the earth
movements.
Shellfish and seaweeds which were normally
near the water were now high and dry.
Could such catastrophic changes in the surroundings
be linked to changes in plants and animals,
he wondered.
The Beagle now left South America and set
sail across the Pacific Ocean.
Almost 1,000 kilometers from the mainland
it anchored at a group of about 13 small rocky
islands on the Equator.
These were the Galapagos Islands.
Darwin was immediately struck by the strange
nature of the birds, reptiles and other others
he found there.
They seemed unique to these islands, yet they
had many similarities to species found on
the South American mainland.
Stranger still, each island had its own kind
of the animal in question.
One example was the giant tortoises, weighing
more than 200 kilograms, which the ship’s
crew rode like horses.
The local people could tell which island a
tortoise come from by the shape of its shell.
Darwin was especially intrigued by one group
of birds, the finches.
They were mostly small and drab brown in color.
But each species had a slightly different
size and shape of beak, allowing it to tackle
a certain kind of food.
Darwin noted in his notebook . . .
One might really fancy that from an original
paucity of birds in the archipelago one species
had been taken and modified for different
ends.
The idea of evolution was taking root.
The Beagle sailed on across the Pacific to
Tahiti, where Darwin fell in love with the
misty peaks, tropical plants, colorful animals
and the simple, natural lifestyle of the local
people.
The journey continued on towards New Zealand
and then Australia.
He was shocked at the terrible living conditions
of the local people.
In their own lands, they were ruled over and
made slaves by the European settlers.
This seemed to support his observations from
the animal world, that the stronger always
took over from the weaker.
A Theory Evolves
The Beagle returned to Falmouth, England on
2nd October, 1836.
They had been away for five years.
Darwin spent the next few years organizing
and cataloguing his vast collection of plants,
animals,rocks and fossils.
By the summer of 1838, Darwin felt bold enough
to share his radical ideas with his father,
who took them in his stride.
During the last several months, Charles had
struck up a close relationship with his cousin,
Emma Wedgwood.
However, when he brought up the subject of
marrying Emma, his father warned that she
came from a very strict family - Emma’s
family would never consider Darwin’s theories
as anything but heresy.
Deeply in love, Darwin ignored his father’s
advice to curtail the romance.
He mentioned some of his notions regarding
religion and nature to Emma, who was surprisingly
understanding.
Darwin juggled numerous tasks, from writing
books to studying more fossils, to watching
apes and orangutans at the London Zoo.
As he worked, he also continued his relationship
with Emma.
He proposed to her on November 11th, 1838.
The proposal was well received by both sides
of the family.
Arrangements were made for Darwin to receive
a handsome annual sum of money from his father.
This would allow the couple to live comfortably,
while Darwin continued retaining Covington’s
services, since research on his theory of
evolution was still incomplete.
Charles and Emma were married on january 29th,
1839.
The couple settled into a home in London,
which was already filled with scientific material.
Shortly thereafter, Covington left Darwin’s
employment to make his own fortune.
He was replaced by a man named Joseph Parslow.
During the spring of 1839, Darwin carried
out research on cross-breeding.
He asked various experts, including farmers,
questions about how they crossbred their animals.
He filled page after page with his correspondences.
In May, the multi-volume collection he wrote
with Captain Fitzroy, Narrative of the Surveying
Voyages of HMS Beagle, was finally released
to the public.
This celebration of the Beagle’s voyage
became a bestseller.
Charles was now a respected scientist and
author and a member of the Royal Society.
A Respected Scientist
During the 1840’s and 1850’s, Darwin continued
his research and writing.
In 1842, he wrote a geology book entitled
The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs,
with two more geology books following in the
next few years.
As time went on his health began to fail.
He could only do a few hours’ work each
day.
His illness was never identified, but it could
have been the after effects of his tropical
sickness while on his five year voyage.
Despite his illness, he continued his research
into the idea of evolution.
He was becoming more convinced that species
were not fixed and immutable.
He had written a short version of his ideas
in 1842, but decided to collect every scrap
of information he could and write a lengthy
book with masses of evidence for his theory.
For many years, Darwin was reluctant to publish
his ideas on evolution by natural selection.
It meant that animals and plants evolved naturally.
He now believed that God had not created them.
However, most people at the time- including
many scientists - still believed in the truth
of the Bible.
He knew that speaking out against the accepted
teachings of the Bible was certain to offend
and cause a storm of protest.
The Book That Shocked the World
Darwin may have never finished his work on
evolution but for a letter which arrived at
his home in Kent in June, 1885 from Malaysia.
It was from another English naturalist, Alfred
Wallace.
Wallace knew that Darwin was interested in
evolution.
So, with his letter he sent his summary of
the theory.
Darwin was amazed.
All the work he had done so patiently over
the past twenty years was neatly described
by Wallace.
At a scientific meeting at the Linnean Society
in London, the works of both Wallace and Darwin
were read out in July, 1858.
After that, Wallace agreed that Darwin, who
had gathered far more evidence to support
their joint theory, should carry on with the
idea while he stood aside.
Darwin did so, quickly finishing his great
book.
It was published on 24th November 1859 and
called The Origin of Species.
The publisher of Darwin’s book, John Murray,
read it before printing, and realized a great
outcry would follow.
As a result he only printed 1,250 copies.
These sold out almost at once, and a second
edition was quickly produced.
People were indeed outraged.
Darwin was denying the truth of the Bible!
Scientist lined up to have their say, with
many criticizing Dawin.
One clergyman called the quiet, mild-mannered
Darwin ‘the most dangerous man in England.’
But others quickly recognized the good science
in Darwin’s ideas, and the vast amount of
evidence which supported them.
The biologist Thomas Huxley spoke for him
in England, while professor of botany at Harvard
University, Asa Gray, was his great supporter
in North America.
Darwin himself stayed in Kent and took little
part in the arguments.
So what did Darwin actually postulate in his
famous book?
The Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection or the Preservation of Favoured
Races in the Struggle for Life is a long but
very readable book.
It begins by looking at variation under domestication,
including pigeons, horses and garden flowers.
Then it covers variation in nature and the
problems of identifying a species.
It shows how the offspring of parents are
all similar, but slightly different.
These slight differences might give an individual
a better chance of succeeding and staying
alive.
Later chapters deal with animal instincts,
fossils and the geographical manner of animals
and plants, from mice to elephants, asparagus
to furze bushes.
Yet he never explains the origin of any one
species.
The Origin of Species shocked and angered
many people, including Darwin’s own family.
To accept the theory of evolution meant accepting
that the account in the Bible of creation
of animal and plant species could not be true.
Many scientists struggled to believe in both.
Gradually, however, the theory of evolution
by natural selection gained ground, and most
scientist came to believe that Darwin was
right.
Darwin did not retire after The Origin of
Species was published.
He kept up his studies and researches, and
carried on with his experiments and nature
observations.
In 1871 he published Descent of Man and Selection
in Relation to Sex.
In this work he concluded that humans are
not the result of special creation, but that
they have evolved, along with other animals.
Their ancestors could be traced far back into
prehistory.
In the 1870’s Darwin’s health improved,
and in 1877 he was awarded a special degree
by Cambridge University.
He continued to write books, about insect
eating plants, how plants grow and move, and
how they encourage decay and enrich the soil.
With Descent a huge success as well, Darwin
divided his time between revising the two
works.
In April, 1874, he completed work on Descent’s
second edition.
This was the last time he wrote about evolution.
Between projects and illnesses, Darwin continued
to refine his work.
A decade after its first publication, the
fifth Edition of Origin was released.
The sixth edition, published in 1871, used
the word evolution for the first time.
After a mild heart attack in December, 1881,
Charles Darwin died peacefully at Down House,
his home of nearly 50 years.
He was 73 years of age.
By this time the storm of protest over The
Origin of Species had died away and Darwin
had become a national figure and one of the
best-known scientific names of all time.
He was laid to rest at Westminster Abbey,
London, next to the great Isaac Newton.
The funeral was attended by dozens of politicians,
inventors, explorers, scientists and artists,
along with members 
of the scientific communities of many countries.
