The geologist Adam Sedgwick was born on 22 March 1785 in Dent, Yorkshire. He was educated locally in Dent then at Sedburgh, before studying at Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1808 he was awarded a degree in Mathematics with distinction, and in 1810 he was elected a Fellow of Trinity College. In 1817, Sedgwick was ordained, and in 1818 he was elected as the Woodwardian Professor of Geology, University of Cambridge. The same year he became a Fellow of the Geological Society of London. Sedgwick's lectures on Geology proved extremely popular despite being optional and this had a large impact on the shaping of English educated opinion on Geology. He expanded a geological collection at the University and made it into one of the finest museums in the world. The present museum was erected as a memorial to him. Sedgwick was an excellent field geologist and he worked with Roderick Impey Murchison on the Eastern Alps and believed that Lyell's principles of uniformity should be tested by empirical observation and not assumed a priori. His most important geological work led to the foundation of the Cambrian system. This arose out of a desire to penetrate the fossil record back to its farthest limits. Between 1829 and 1831 he was President of the Geological Society of London. Professor Adam Sedgwick died on 27 January 1873.
From the guide to the Letters of Professor Adam Sedgwick (1785-1873), 1843-1861, (Edinburgh University Library)