Charles Frederick Partington was a British science lecturer and writer.
Life
Partington was associated with the London Institution. He lectured successfully also in the North of England, and adopted the style "Professor". While he at times claimed a closer relationship with the London Institution, professionally he was paid there only as an assistant librarian, by William Maltby. His presumption of a position at the Institute caused friction in the end, and he had to drop any such claim. Partington lectured also at the other institutes in London. He lectured to the short-lived London Chemical Society in 1824.
Works
Partington published the following:
An Historical and Descriptive Account of the Steam Engine, comprising a General View of the Various Modes of employing Elastic Vapour as a Prime Mover in Mechanics, 1822; 3rd. edit. 1826.
A Brief Account of the Royal Gardens, Vauxhall, 1822.
The Printers' Complete Guide, containing a Sketch of the History and Progress of Printing, 1825.
Introduction to the Science of Botany, illustrated by a series of highly finished delineations of the plants, coloured to represent Nature, 1835.
An Account of Steam Engines, 1835.
National History and Views of London and its Environs, from original drawings by eminent artists, 2 vols.; 2nd edit. 1835–7, 2 vols.. This work came out in eighteen parts. George Shepherd made 400 drawings for the illustrations, according to Lucy Peltz in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; Bernard Adams, however, attributes the majority to Thomas Hosmer Shepherd, his brother, working with H. West. The engraver was J. Shury.
The Builder's Complete Guide, 1852.
Introductory Account of Messrs. Muir and Company's Machinery for the Manufacture of Rifle Sights, 1857.
Edited works
Partington edited The British Cyclopædia of Arts and Sciences, Literature, History, Geography, Law and Politics, Natural History and Biography, from 1835; the tenth and last volume appeared in 1837. As a part publication, it appeared from May 1834 in monthly parts at a shilling. The divisions were:
The Mechanics' Gallery of Science and Art, 1825, vol. i.; no more printed.
Periodicals
Partington edited The Scientific Gazette, or Library of Mechanical Philosophy, Chemistry, and Discovery, which ran from July 1825 to 4 February 1826. With the civil engineerWilliam Newton, he edited and partly wrote the second series of The London Journal of Arts and Sciences, containing descriptions of every new patent; also original communications on science and philosophy; this periodical went to nine volumes, 1834–42.