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HARRIS, RICHARD DEODATUS POULETT (1817-1899), educationist,
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was descended from Sir Amias Poulett, ambassador to France in the reign of
Queen Elizabeth, and afterwards keeper of Mary Queen of Scots. Harris was born
on 26 October 1817 at Cape Breton Island, where his father, Captain Charles
Poulett-Harris of the 60th Rifles, was stationed. Educated at the Manchester
Free Grammar School and Trinity College, Cambridge, he graduated B.A. with
honours in 1843, and M.A. in 1852. He was ordained deacon in 1847 and priest in
1849 in the Church of England. He engaged in teaching and became a master at
Huddersfield College in 1844, and five years later was appointed classics master
at the Blackheath proprietary school. He went to Tasmania about the end of 1856
to became headmaster of the Hobart high school, and filled the position with
much ability, inspiring both respect and affection from his pupils. It was at
his suggestion that an act was passed in 1858 founding a system of school
examinations based on the Oxford and Cambridge local examinations, and also
founding the Tasmanian scholarships of £200 a year tenable at English
universities. He was one of the original members of the council of education
founded in 1859, and long advocated the establishment of the university of
Tasmania. He resigned from his headmastership in 1885 and lived in retirement
near Hobart. When the university was founded in 1890 Harris was elected the
first warden of the senate. He died at Woodbridge, Tasmania, on 23 December
1899, and was survived by his wife, several daughters and a son.
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