Robert Fellowes (philanthropist)

at St Mary Hall, where he graduated BA on 30 June 1796, and an MA on 28 January 1801.

He was a close friend of Samuel Parr, who introduced him to the embattled Queen Caroline of Brunswick, whose cause he supported.

[1] On the other hand, the positions as the Queen's chaplain and private secretary may have been taken by John Page Wood at some point in 1819.

Fellowes erected to the memory of Maseres a monument in Reigate churchyard, with a eulogistic inscription in Latin.

Out of gratitude for the professional services of Dr John Elliotson, who held a chair of medicine at University College London he provided there two annual gold medals, the Fellowes Medals, for proficiency in clinical medicine.

[1] Fellowes interested himself in the opening of Regent's Park to the public, and in the emancipation of the Jews.

Major writings were:[1] Fellowes translated from the Latin John Milton's Familiar Epistles and Second Defence of the People of England for an 1806 edition.

Queen Caroline, wife of King George IV, is greeted by people from Marylebone , caricature by Theodore Edward Hook , in which the Rev. Robert Fellowes stands to the right of the Queen, with a scroll "Socinian Creed" – the figure on the right edge of the drawing is Matthew Wood