The Oxford English Dictionary is one of the most ambitious intellectual projects in human history.
The project began in 1857. The goal was to compile a complete record of every word in the English language with historical examples showing when and how each word was used going back to its earliest known appearance. Volunteers from around the world were invited to read books and send in quotations on slips of paper illustrating specific words in use.
It took 70 years to complete the first edition. The final volume was published in 1928.
One of the most prolific contributors over a 20 year stretch submitted nearly ten thousand entries. His citations were meticulous, detailed, and extraordinarily useful to the editors. He worked from an enormous personal library that he had assembled over years of dedicated reading.
His name was Dr. William Chester Minor. He was an American Civil War surgeon. And he was writing his entries from a cell in Broadmoor, Britain's most secure institution for the criminally insane, where he had been confined since 1872 after shooting and killing a man in London.
What Happened to Minor
Minor served as a Union Army surgeon during the Civil War and was exposed to battlefield horrors that left him severely mentally disturbed. He developed paranoid delusions that persisted for the rest of his life. He believed he was being pursued by Irish conspirators who broke into his room at night and tortured him.
In 1872 he shot and killed a man named George Merritt in London, believing in his delusional state that Merritt was one of his pursuers. He was tried for murder, found not guilty by reason of insanity, and committed to Broadmoor.
From inside Broadmoor he found purpose in the dictionary project. He wrote to the editors, received books, and spent his days reading and sending in carefully researched quotations. His contributions were so valuable that when the editor James Murray finally visited to meet the contributor he assumed had to be a distinguished scholar or professor, he was shocked to find himself in an asylum.
The two men became friends. Murray advocated for better treatment for Minor and eventually for his release. Minor was eventually repatriated to the United States in 1910 where he died in 1920.
Why This Story Matters
The story of William Minor is remarkable on its own terms. But it also illustrates something important about how knowledge gets built.
The Oxford English Dictionary was not constructed by a small group of experts working in a university. It was built from contributions by thousands of volunteers across decades. Vicars in country parishes. Schoolteachers. Retired professionals. And one deeply troubled man in a locked room in an asylum who found in the act of careful reading and cataloguing a purpose that kept him connected to the world outside his cell.
The dictionary contains his words. His citations are there. His labor is woven into the fabric of one of the greatest reference works in the English language.
What people are capable of even in the most constrained circumstances is one of the recurring lessons of history. Minor's story is one of its most extraordinary examples.
Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.