William Tulloch Jeans (1848–1907) was a British parliamentary journalist and author.
Jeans was parliamentary correspondent for The Globe, and was widely known for and consulted on his knowledge of parliamentary principle. [1]
In their 1887 review of the first volume of The Lives of Electricians, The Spectator commented that, "Jeans has treated a subject always interesting in a pleasing and graceful way". [2]
His wife came from Stockport. They lived in Brighton, then Tulse Hill and Clapham Park in London. [1]
He was the father of Sir James Jeans OM FRS (1877–1946), physicist, astronomer and mathematician. [1]
William Tulloch Jeans (1848–1907) was a British parliamentary journalist and author.
Jeans was parliamentary correspondent for The Globe, and was widely known for and consulted on his knowledge of parliamentary principle. [1]
In their 1887 review of the first volume of The Lives of Electricians, The Spectator commented that, "Jeans has treated a subject always interesting in a pleasing and graceful way". [2]
His wife came from Stockport. They lived in Brighton, then Tulse Hill and Clapham Park in London. [1]
He was the father of Sir James Jeans OM FRS (1877–1946), physicist, astronomer and mathematician. [1]