Selwyn was the eldest surviving son of
William Selwyn (1775–1855) and his wife Laetitia, daughter of Thomas Kynaston of
Witham, Essex. He was one of four brothers, the most famous being
George Augustus Selwyn (1809–1878), the first Anglican bishop of New Zealand, and after whom
Selwyn College, Cambridge, was named. Selwyn was educated at
Eton College and
St John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1828,
MA in 1831, BD in 1850 and DD in 1864. He was a
Fellow of St John's from 1829 to 1832. Selwyn was ordained as a deacon of the Church of England in 1829 and as a priest in 1831. He was appointed Rector of
Branston, Leicestershire in 1831, Vicar of
Melbourn, Cambridgeshire, in 1846 and Canon Residentiary of Ely in 1833, serving in that capacity until 1875. He was also
Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity at Cambridge from 1855 until his death in 1875. He became Honorary Joint Curator of the Library of
Lambeth Palace in 1872. Whilst at Ely he established an observatory in the college, an area of the cathedral precincts containing the houses of senior cathedral clergy. In collaboration with John Persehouse Titterton, a local photographer, he prepared a series of photographs of the solar disc over an entire sunspot cycle from 1863 to 1874 using a six-inch achromatic lens. Selwyn was seriously ill from 1866 onwards and this, together with his ecclesiastical commitments, prevented the work from being published. Instead, the prints were donated to the
Royal Greenwich Observatory and Selwyn was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1866 as someone "''Distinguished as a promoter of the Science of Astronomy and Especially as having applied photography in making numerous records of the state of the Sun's disk. Eminent as a Scholar and a theologian''." He died in 1875 aged 69 in consequence of a fall from his horse and has a monument in Ely cathedral. He had married Juliana Elizabeth, daughter of George Cooke of Carr House, Doncaster. ==References==