Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 61.djvu/37

 New Testament in small octavo in 1547. Many editions of the prayer-book and of the Psalter in Sternhold and Hopkins's version came from his press during the next five years. He reprinted the Great Bible in small folio in 1549, and again in folio in 1553. He helped to project and he printed the translation of Erasmus's paraphrase of the New Testament, in which Nicholas Udall [q. v.], John Old, the Princess Mary, and others took part; the first volume appeared in 1548, the second in 1549. John Rogers was for some time Whitchurch's guest at his house in Fleet Street, and he published for him on 1 Aug. 1548 his book on ‘The Interim.’ In 1549 he issued a sermon by Bishop Hooper.

The accession of Queen Mary imperilled Whitchurch's position. He was excepted from pardon in the proclamation of 1554 directed against those who refused allegiance to the new ecclesiastical régime. He probably fled to Germany. His name was omitted from the list of stationers to whom Queen Mary granted the charter of incorporation constituting them the Stationers' Company in 1556, nor was he mentioned in the confirmation of that charter by Queen Elizabeth on 10 Nov. 1559. But after Elizabeth's accession Whitchurch resumed business in London, and in 1560 he published a new edition of Thomas Phaer's ‘Regiment of Life.’ This was his last undertaking. He is apparently the ‘Maister Wychurch’ who was buried at Camberwell on 1 Dec. 1561.

Whitchurch married, after 1556, the widow of Archbishop Cranmer; she was Margaret, niece of Osiander, pastor of Nuremberg. She survived Whitchurch, and married on 29 Nov. 1564 a third husband, Bartholomew Scott of Camberwell, justice of the peace for Surrey (Narratives of the Reformation, Camden Soc. p. 244). 

WHITE, ADAM (1817–1879), naturalist, was born at Edinburgh on 29 April 1817, and educated at the high school of that city. When quite a lad he went to London with an introduction to [q. v.], and became an official in the zoological department of the British Museum in December 1835. He held the post till 1863, when mental indisposition, consequent on the loss of his wife, necessitated his retirement on a pension.

He never permanently recovered, although, even when an inmate of one of the Scottish asylums, he edited and largely contributed to a journal the contents of which were supplied by the patients.

He was a member of the Entomological Society of London from 1839 to 1863, and a fellow of the Linnean Society of London from December 1846 to 1855. He died at Glasgow on 4 Jan. 1879. His work, except in a few instances in which he wrote to order, has proved, under the test of time, to be of exceptional value.

He was author of: Between 1850 and 1855 he contributed parts iv., viii., xiv., xv., and xvii. to the ‘List of British Animals in the British Museum.’ He contributed notes on natural history specimens to numerous narratives of exploring expeditions published between 1841 and 1852.
 * 1) ‘List of Crustacea in the … British Museum,’ London, 1847, 12mo.
 * 2) ‘Nomenclature of Coleopterous Insects in the … British Museum,’ pts. i–iv. vii. and viii., London, 1847–55, 12mo.
 * 3) ‘A Popular History of Mammalia,’ London, 1850, 8vo.
 * 4) ‘A Contribution towards an Argument for the Plenary Inspiration of Scripture. … By Arachnophilus,’ London, 1851, 8vo.
 * 5) ‘A Popular History of Birds,’ London, 1855, 8vo.
 * 6) ‘A Popular History of British Crustacea,’ London, 1857, 8vo.
 * 7) ‘Tabular View of the Orders and Leading Families of Insects’ (engraved by J. W. Lowry), London, 1857, and many subsequent issues undated.
 * 8) . ‘Tabular View of the Orders and Leading Families of Myriapoda, Arachnida, and Crustacea’ (engraved by J. W. Lowry), London, 1861, and many subsequent issues undated.
 * 9) ‘Heads and Tales; or Anecdotes … of Quadrupeds and other beasts,’ London and Edinburgh, 1869, 8vo; 2nd ed. 1870.

He edited:
 * 1) ‘A Collection of Documents on Spitzbergen and Greenland’ [Hakluyt Society's works, No. 18], 1855.
 * 2) ‘The Instructive Picture Book, or Progressive Lessons from the Natural History of Animals and Plants,’ edited by A. White and R. M. Stark, 1857; 10th ed. 1877.
 * 3) ‘Spring … by R. Mudie,’ fifth thousand [1860].

He also wrote upwards of sixty papers, mostly on insects and crustacea, for various scientific journals between 1839 and 1861, and contributed ‘Some of the Invertebrata’ to the ‘Museum of Natural History,’ by Sir J. Richardson and others, Glasgow (1859–1862), 8vo; another issue (1868).

[Entom. Monthly Mag. xv. 210; Proc. Linn. Soc. i. 310; Brit. Mus. Cat.; Nat. Hist. Mus. Cat.; Roy. Soc. Cat.] 

WHITE, ALICE MARY MEADOWS (1839–1884), composer, daughter of Richard Smith, lace merchant, was born in London