He was born in
Islington in London on 11 May 1837 the eldest of 12 children of Benjamin Vincent (1818–1899), a colleague of
Michael Faraday, and his wife Janey Young. He was baptised in
Clerkenwell on 16 June. Benjamin became a
Sandemanian at the influence of Faraday in 1832. He joined the Royal Institution in 1851 as Assistant Librarian, under his father as Librarian. Aged 14 his role presumably was that of a trainee or apprentice. A second son Robert Vincent also joined as second assistant. Charles began lecturing at the Royal College of Chemistry in 1854 (aged only 17). He resigned as Librarian of the Royal Institution in 1857 to join the chemical industry. He became a member of the Sandemanian Church in 1859 but resigned in 1864. In 1875 he was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh for his contributions to chemistry. His proposers were
Andrew Pritchard,
William Rutherford,
George James Allman and
John Hutton Balfour. He became librarian to the Reform Club in 1879, replacing Henry Campkin.
Private life Charles William Vincent married Ann Baxter at Islington Register Office on 15 July 1864 They had 17 children: 9 sons and 8 daughters, ten of whom lived to adulthood The youngest was born when her mother was 47. Ann Vincent died four years later in
Edmonton on 5 November 1897. On 25 August 1900 Vincent married Florence Annie Barratt at St John the Evangelist, Finsbury Park. They had one child, Kathleen Phyllis Vincent, born in 1902. She died in 1971. Charles died on 11 September 1905 in
Stoke Newington. ==Publications==