Leonard Huxley (1860–1933), the most prominent of T. H. Huxley's children, had six children, several of whom left their mark on the twentieth century. He was a teacher (assistant master) at
Charterhouse, then assistant editor and later editor of the
Cornhill Magazine. Huxley's major biographies were the three volumes of
Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley and the two volumes of
Life and Letters of Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker OM GCSI. His first wife was
Julia Arnold (1862–1908), founder in 1902 of
Prior's Field School a still existing girls' school in
Godalming, Surrey. Through her Leonard was connected to the intellectual family of the Arnolds: his wife's father was
Tom Arnold (1823–1900), who married Julia Sorell, granddaughter of a former governor of Tasmania. Julia Arnold's sister was the best-selling novelist
Mary (who wrote as Mrs Humphry Ward), her uncle the poet
Matthew Arnold, and her grandfather the influential
Rugby School headmaster
Thomas Arnold. In her youth she and her sister Ethel had inspired Charles Dodgson (aka
Lewis Carroll) to invent Doublets (now called
word ladder). Leonard and Julia had four children, including the biologist
Sir Julian Sorell Huxley and the writer
Aldous Leonard Huxley. Their middle son,
Noel Trevenen (born in 1889) committed suicide in 1914. Their daughter,
Margaret Arnold Huxley, was born in 1899. She studied at
Somerville College, Oxford and died on 11 October 1981. After the death of his first wife, Leonard married Rosalind Bruce (1890–1994), and had two further sons. The elder of these was
David Bruce Huxley (1915–1992), whose daughter
Angela Huxley married
George Pember Darwin, son of the physicist Sir
Charles Galton Darwin (and thus a great-grandson of
Charles Darwin married a great-granddaughter of
Thomas Huxley). The younger son (1917–2012) was the
Nobel Prize winner, physiologist
Andrew Fielding Huxley. A Plaque was erected in 1995 at the house in Bracknell Gardens, Hampstead to commemorate Leonard, Julian and Aldous 'Men of Science and Letters, lived here.' Leonard and his two wives and sons (Aldous and Julian) have their ashes buried in
Watts Cemetery in Compton near the site of their Priorsfield home.
Sir Julian Huxley when Fellow of
New College, Oxford 1922.
Julian Huxley (1887–1975) was the first Director-General of
UNESCO. He was Secretary of
Zoological Society, co-founder of the
World Wildlife Fund, and president of the
British Eugenics Society. He won the
Darwin Medal of the
Royal Society, the
Darwin–Wallace Medal of the
Linnaean Society, the
Kalinga Prize and the
Lasker Award. He presided over the founding conference for the
International Humanist and Ethical Union. He wrote fifty books, including "
The Science of Life", co-authored with
H. G. Wells and Wells's son, G. P. Wells. Julian was important as a proponent of
natural selection at a time when
Darwin's idea was denigrated by many. His master-work
Evolution: The Modern Synthesis gave the name to a mid-century movement which united biological theory and overcame problems caused by over-specialisation. Julian married Juliette Baillot in 1919. They had two children, and both became scientists:
Anthony Julian Huxley, a botanist and horticulturalist, and
Francis Huxley, an anthropologist. A
Wetherspoon Public house in
Selsdon was named after him.
Francis Huxley Francis Huxley (1923 – 2016) was the son of Julian and Juliette Huxley. He was a British zoologist, anthropologist and author and is best known for his anthropological expeditions to The Gambia, the Amazon, and Haiti, among other places, about which he wrote several notable books.
Aldous Huxley Aldous Huxley (1894–1963) was a novelist and philosopher. His styles were
iconoclasm; disenchanted social commentary and a dystopic view of the future were repeated themes. He was regarded in California, where he spent the latter part of his life, as a considerable intellectual guru. His main works include
Crome Yellow (1921),
Antic Hay (1923),
Brave New World (1932) (which began as a parody of
Men Like Gods by
H. G. Wells),
Eyeless in Gaza (1936) and
Island (1960).
Island, his last novel, is set in a utopia, in profound contrast to the dystopian
Brave New World. The central theme is the development of a society which unites the best of western and eastern culture. It contains, amongst more serious ideas, the humorous notion of parrots who utter uplifting slogans. Huxley also wrote many essays, including
The Doors of Perception which he wrote while experimenting with
mescaline. Its title was taken from a poem by
William Blake, and in turn inspired the name of the band
The Doors. Aldous married twice, to Maria Nys (1919), and after her death, to
Laura Archera (1956). Laura felt inspired to illuminate the story of their provocative marriage through Mary Ann Braubach's 2010 documentary, "Huxley on Huxley". His only child,
Matthew Huxley (1920 – 10 February 2005, age 84) was also an author, as well as an educator, anthropologist and prominent epidemiologist. His work ranged from promoting universal health care to establishing standards of care for nursing home patients and the mentally ill to investigating the question of what is a socially sanctionable drug. Matthew's first marriage, to documentary filmmaker
Ellen Hovde, ended in divorce. His second wife died in 1983. He was survived by his third wife,
Franziska Reed Huxley; and two children from his first marriage,
Trevenen Huxley and
Tessa Huxley.
David Bruce Huxley Financier and lawyer (1915–1992). He served in
World War II in Africa and
Iraq reaching the rank of
brigade major in the
British Army. He became the youngest
Queen's Counsel (QC) in the
British Empire. In
Bermuda in the 1940s and 1950s he was Solicitor General,
Attorney General, and acting Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court. He compiled and revised many of the laws of Bermuda. He married twice and had five children by his first wife, Anne Remsen Schenck. His daughter Angela Mary Bruce Huxley (born 1939) married George Pember Darwin in 1964, and his son Michael Remsen Huxley (1940–2021) became curator of science at the
Smithsonian Institution. In retirement, David and his second wife, Ouida (who was raised by her aunt Ouida Rathbone, married to the actor
Basil Rathbone) lived in Wansford-in-England,
Cambridgeshire, where he served as
churchwarden.
Andrew Huxley Andrew Huxley (1917–2012), the last child of Leonard Huxley, was awarded the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for studies of the
central nervous system, especially the activity of
nerve fibres. He was knighted in 1974 and appointed to the
Order of Merit in 1983. He was the second Huxley to be
President of the Royal Society, the first being his grandfather, T. H. H. In 1947 he married Jocelyn Richenda Gammell Pease (1925–2003), the daughter of the geneticist
Michael Pease and his wife Helen Bowen Wedgwood, the daughter of
Josiah Wedgwood IV. They had one son and five daughters. == Jessie Oriana Huxley (1858–1927) and issue ==