Fox was born at Uggeshall Farm, Wrentham, near Southwold, Suffolk on 1 March 1786.[1] His parents were strict Calvinists. When he was still young, his father quit farming. After time at a chapel school, Fox became a weaver's boy, an errand-boy, and in 1799, a bank clerk. An autodidact, he entered prize competitions.[2]
Fox's position as a leading Unitarian minister was jeopardized in 1834 when he left his wife for one of his wards, and became an advocate of freer divorce. The Chapel's committee, led by Thomas Field Gibson's father Thomas Gibson, accepted Fox's resignation, which led to Fox's removal from the British Unitarian ministry and a secession of fifty families from the Chapel.[7][8] He set up a new household in the Craven Hill area of Bayswater and re-established himself as a preacher of rationalism. Charles Hardwick grouped Fox with Theodore Parker and Robert William Mackay as proponents of "absolute religion".[9] Fox's public presence became increasingly that of a commentator on social and political matters. The South Place chapel itself eventually lost its identification with Unitarianism, becoming the South Place Ethical Society.
Politician
As a supporter of the Anti-Corn-Law movement, Fox won celebrity as an impassioned orator and journalist, and from 1847 to 1862 he intermittently represented Oldham in Parliament as a Liberal.[10]
Fox was a friend of radical journalist Benjamin Flower. On Flower's death in 1829, his two daughters, Eliza Flower and Sarah Fuller Flower Adams, became Fox's wards.[12] Fox separated from his wife Eliza nee Florance, a daughter of James Florance, in the 1830s, and, causing much scandal, apparently set up home with Eliza Flower and his children.[12] Following the separation from his wife, Fox brought up his ward himself, living first in Stamford Hill and later Bayswater. After 1846, William J. Fox and his wife Eliza nee Florance were reunited for a time before his death on 3 June 1864. [13] One of Fox's daughters, also named Eliza, married Frederick Lee Bridell. Both were accomplished artists.
References
^Memorial Edition of the Works of W. J. Fox. Charles Fox, Publisher. London. 1868. pp. 355-359
^Craig, F. W. S. (1989) [1977]. British parliamentary election results 1832–1885 (2nd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. ISBN0-900178-26-4.