[Class of ....]
1837.
JAMES DAVENPORT WHELPLEY was born in N. Y. City, 23
Jan., 1817. His father was Rev. Philip M. Whelpley, pastor of
the 1st Presbyterian Church in N. Y. City, and his mother was
Abigail Fitch Davenport, a descendant of the first minister of
New Haven.
After graduation he acted as assistant in Rogers' Geological
Survey of Penn., for two years, and then entered the Medical
Department of this College, where he graduated in 1842.
He remained in New Haven until 1846, engaged in the study
of the sciences, and in literary pursuits. He then went to Brooklyn,
N. Y., and began to practice his profession, but was soon
obliged to relinquish it from ill-health. In 1847, he removed to
N. Y. City, and became the editor and one of the owners of the
"American Whig Review," to which he had been a frequent
contributor from 1845. While thus engaged, in 1849, he formed a
project of establishing a commercial colony in Honduras, and in
furtherance of this enterprise, spent two years in San Francisco,
purchasing and editing one of the daily papers there. His
arrangements were disturbed by the presence of the filibuster
Walker in Honduras, and on going thither he was detained by
Walker for nearly a year, enduring great privation, and being
impressed into service as a surgeon. Escaping to San Francisco,
he returned early in 1857 to the East, and again devoted himself
to literature, and to scientific studies. For the last ten years of
his life he was a great sufferer from asthma, which gradually
developed into consumption of the lungs, of which disease he died,
at his residence in Boston, 15 April, 1872.
Dr. Whelpley's publications show a most original mind, and
his unpublished papers are even more remarkable. He was a
member of the American Academy. His scientific researches
were chiefly in physics and in metallurgy.
He married first, in Jan., 1848, Miss Anna M. Wells, of
Roxbury, Mass., who died 29 July, 1859, leaving one daughter, still
living. His second wife was Miss Mary L. Breed, of Virginia,
whom he married in the autumn of 1861, and who survives him,
with her three children.
(THE END)