The phrase "hard progeny of the North" is a misquotation from the autobiography (1792) of Gilbert Wakefield. He wrote that
"It is observed at Cambridge, and is generally true, that the hardy progeny of the North, from Cumberland, Westmoreland, and the remoter parts of Yorkshire, are usually the profoundest proficients in Mathematics and Philosophy."[1]
The "hard progeny" were educated in the region's grammar schools which were small and typically situated in rural market towns. In an era prior to the dominance of the great public schools, grammar schools were the most important source of entrants to Oxford and Cambridge universities, at least of entrants with serious academic aspirations, especially in north-west England.[3]
These men of science, as well as many others, have been called "the hard progeny of the North," and it seems that the inhospitable climate and the rough terrain must have been one factor in promoting a certain toughness of mind that is so necessary in the pursuit of science.
— Michael Faraday: Physics and Faith
The principal individuals
Richard Watson (1737-1816), mathematician; Cambridge professor of chemistry, then theology; Bishop of Llandaff.
Thomas Garnett (1766-1802), physician; professor of natural philosophy at Glasgow, then at the Royal Institution.
^Robert Fox and Lois Gray, The Hard Progeny of the North. The life and work of eight north country scientists. Lancaster, 1976. Library Shelf-mark AK44L
^Slinn, Sara (2017). The Education of the Anglican Clergy, 1780–1839. Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer. pp. 129–169. ISBN978-1-78327-175-7.