William Cotton Oswell
![]() |
William Cotton Oswell (27 April 1818 – 1 May 1893) was an English explorer in Africa and other areas.
He was born in Leytonstone, Essex and attended Rugby School. In 1837 he secured a position with the East India Company in Madras through his uncle John Cotton, who was a director of the company. He spent ten years there, learning Tamil and other languages and studying surgery and medicine.[1]
He was sent to South Africa for health reasons, and explored the Kalahari desert in Bechuanaland (now Botswana) and located Lake Ngami. He participated in expeditions to the Zambezi river with David Livingstone; one of Livingstone's children, born in Botswana in 1851, was named William Oswell Livingstone. On another expedition he became the first European to see Mumbuluma Falls and Kalambo Falls in what has since become Zambia. He returned to England in 1853 and performed medical duties during the Crimean War. In 1855–56 he traveled in North and South America. In 1860, he married his wife Agnes, settled in Groombridge, Kent,[1] and had five children.
The species Rhinoceros oswellii was named for him[2][3] (this name is no longer used in modern taxonomy). Livingstone described Oswell as having had lucky escapes, having been tossed by a rhinoceros on two occasions.[1]
Family
Through his grandfather Joseph Cotton (1746–1825), William Cotton Oswell was a cousin of the judge Henry Cotton and a first cousin once removed of Henry John Stedman Cotton.[4][5]
William Cotton Oswell's wife's father's mother Willielmina Cornthwaite was[6] the sister of Ann Cornthwaite, the mother of the mother of Rev. Prof. Baden Powell, the father of the first Lord Baden-Powell, who wrote[7] about "my cousin William Cotton Oswell", who was actually the husband of his father's second cousin.
For more, see http://www.halhed.com/t4r/getperson.php?personID=I2171&tree=tree1
See also
References
- ^ a b c Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 42. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 330–331.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ "William Cotton Oswell 1818 – 1893". Halhed genealogy & family trees. Retrieved 20 February 2011.
- ^ Gray, J.E. (1853). "Notice of a presumed new species of rhinoceros, from South Africa". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London (1853): 46–47, fig. 1.
- ^ "Relationship Calculator: William Cotton Oswell relationship to Henry Cotton". Halhed genealogy & family trees. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
- ^ "Relationship Calculator: William Cotton Oswell relationship to Henry John Stedman Cotton". Halhed genealogy & family trees. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
- ^ http://www.halhed.com/t4r/relationship.php?altprimarypersonID=&savedpersonID=I7564&secondpersonID=I10893&maxrels=1&disallowspouses=0&generations=15&tree=tree1&primarypersonID=I2171
- ^ "Sketches in Mafeking and East Africa" (Smith, Elder & Co., 1907, p. 87)
External links
- CS1 errors: access-date without URL
- Articles incorporating Cite DNB template
- Articles with short description
- Short description with empty Wikidata description
- Use dmy dates from October 2019
- Articles needing cleanup from April 2022
- Articles with bare URLs for citations from April 2022
- All articles with bare URLs for citations
- Articles covered by Project Wikify from April 2022
- Articles with invalid date parameter in template
- AC with 0 elements
- 1818 births
- 1893 deaths
- English explorers
- English hunters
- People from Leytonstone
- People educated at Rugby School
- People from Groombridge
- Nathaniel Cotton family