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Edward Binns

Portuguese: Edward Binus
Birthdate:
Death: 1851 (46-47)
Immediate Family:

Son of James Keighly Binns, Esq. and Sarah Haughton Binns
Husband of Charlotte Elisabeth Mary Smith
Father of Ellen Binns and Amalie Trafford Haughton Binns
Brother of James K. Binns and Samuel Leigh Heatley Binns

Managed by: Private User
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About Edward Binns

Edward Binns was the son of James K and Sarah H Binns and was born on 23rd June 1804 in Lucea, Cornwall County, Jamaica, where in 1823 he is recorded in the census aged 19 years. In 1828 he graduated in medicine from the University of Edinburgh and it seems probable that it was about this time that he would have met with the Duc de Saldanha, probably in London. However he certainly returned to Jamaica soon after graduation and reportedly took a leading and violent part in anti-Baptist riots in Lucea in 1831. He appears to have been active in the anti-slavery movement and Thomas Clarkson wrote, "Dr. Binns, a respectable physician belonging to the religious Society of the Quakers and to whom Isaac Hadwen [a Quaker] had introduced me, was near falling into a mischievous plot, which had been laid against him because he was one of the subscribers to the Institution for the Abolition of the Slave-trade and because he was suspected of having aided me in promoting that object." This quotation is from an edition of The History, Rise and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave-trade by the British Parliament published in 1836. In 1836 he was reported as being the editor of The Herald newspaper in Kingston, Jamaica. Evidence that he returned from Jamaica to London is provided by his authorship of the following testimonial for Holloway's Universal Family Ointment published in The Times in 1837 "My Dear Sir, After reading the very strongly worded testimonials of Sir Benjamin Brodie and Mr Mayo (names that would confer an immortality on any remedy), I was predisposed in favour of your ointment and made many trials in consequence, in cases of chronic ulcers, which a six years experience in the West Indies had taught me to consider as incurable by the ordinary methods resorted to. I am now happy to say that in all cases it was, to my utter astonishment, really and truly efficacious; and that I have not the slightest hesitation in adding that I place the most entire reliance on it in all diseases of the epidermis, in enlarged glands, and long standing ulcers. In sore nipples it is an excellent remedy. (Signed) Edward Binns, London, Dorset Square, September 14th, 1837" Whether he was rewarded with money for the testimonial we will probably never know but certainly the ointment earned for Thomas Holloway, its manufacturer, the fortune that allowed him to establish the Royal Holloway College in West London. In 1842 he became a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries Scotland and it seems probable that in the 1840's he divided his time between London and Jamaica since, for instance, he gave his address as Bellevue, Hounslow in connection with an article he wrote entitled "Available Resources Of The West Indies, Recommended For The In-Vestment Of Surplus British Capital" that was published in Simmonds Colonial Magazine, and in August 1840 he wrote to The London Medical Gazette from an address in New North Street, Red Lion Square, London. His first stand alone publication "Prodomus: Towards a philosophical inquiry into the intellectual powers of the Negro" was published by John Churchill in 1844 and is reputed to be the first book printed from machine-set type. Some other articles he had published during the 1840's were titled; "On The Culture Of Cotton In Jamaica", "On The Sugar Duties", "Cocoa and Chocolate", and "The Introduction of Hill Coolies to Jamaica". However his magnum opus, published in London in 1845 was "The Anatomy of Sleep, or, the Art of Procuring Sound and Refreshing Slumber at Will", in which he related a story of "the beautiful quadroon girl" as an example of how two men separated by many miles can experience similar dreams simultaneously. Again in The Times in 1846 there appeared this further testimonial to Holloway's Ointment, "Dr Binns, who is one of the principal physicians in the island of Jamaica has expressed himself in the following manner respecting the surprising healing properties of Holloway's Ointment "I have made many trials of this ointment in case of chronic ulcers, which several years experience in the West Indies taught me to consider as incurable. I am now happy to say that in all cases it was really and truly efficacious" Signed E Binns M. D., F.S.S. Sco." An interesting source of information on Edward's family is the obituary of his brother Samuel who died at Lucea on 9th September 1844; "Samuel Leigh Heatley Binns, Esq. Aged 34, youngest son of James Kitelee Binns, Esq. Of the Beans Estate and Ware Park, in Hanover, Jamaica, and was of lineal descent of the Haughtons of Haughton Town in Lancashire, and the Leighs (now Traffords), of Outrington Hall, Cheshire, a family that dates back to the Conquest. He was also brother to Dr Binns the author of "The Anatomy of Sleep" and other works. His loss will be long felt in Hanover where he was born, lived, and died." Edward Binns died on 10 Feb 1851 at Lucea, Jamaica, probably as a consequence of dealing with a severe cholera outbreak that was raging at the time. Unfortunately it has not been possible to find a contemporary obituary. Other genealogical information we can glean is that his wife was Charlotte Smith and they had two daughters; Ellen died young in Paris where she was continuing her education; and Amalie Trafford Haughton Binns whose birth was registered in Holborn, London in 1841 and who married to Mr Frederick Goulburn Walpole in Rome on 15 January 1864. Amalie died 7 Oct 1895