Joseph Wright FBA (31 October 1855 – 27 February 1930)[1] was an English Germanic philologist who rose from humble origins to become Professor of Comparative Philology at the University of Oxford.[1] He started work as a "donkey-boy" in a quarry around 1862, at the age of six, leading a donkey-drawn cart full of tools to the smithy to be sharpened."[4] By now a wool-sorter earning a pound a week, after 1870 Wright became increasingly fascinated with languages, and began attending night school to study French, German and Latin, as well as maths and shorthand.A former pupil of Wright's recalled: "With a piece of chalk [he would] draw illustrative diagrams at the same time with each hand, and talk while he was doing it.[5] Wright later returned to Heidelberg, and in 1885 he completed his PhD dissertation, Qualitative and Quantitative Changes of the Indo-Germanic Vowel System in Greek under Hermann Osthoff."[8][9] Wright's greatest achievement is considered to be the editing of the six-volume English Dialect Dictionary, which he published between 1898 and 1905, partly at his own expense.[10] The Dictionary remains a definitive work, a snapshot of the dialects of spoken English in England at the end of the 19th century.She also wrote a book, Rustic Speech and Folklore (Oxford University Press 1913), in which she refers to their walking and cycling journeys in the Yorkshire Dales, as well as various articles and essays.[5] Although his energies were for the most part directed into his work, Wright also enjoyed gardening, and followed Yorkshire cricket and football teams.[4] At the age of seventy-four Wright succumbed to pneumonia and died at his home, "Thackley", 119 Banbury Road, Oxford, on 27 February 1930.[29] Wright was greatly admired by Virginia Woolf, who wrote of him in her diary: The triumph of learning is that it leaves something done solidly for ever.
Joseph and Elizabeth Wright with their children, c. 1907.