Nicholas Hughes

Birthday January 17, 1962

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace North Tawton, Devon, England, United Kingdom

DEATH DATE 2009, Fairbanks, Alaska, U.S. (47 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#19118 Most Popular

1592

Through his father's mother, Hughes was related to Nicholas Ferrar (1592–1637).

After her son was born, Plath wrote most of the poems that would comprise her most famous collection of poems (the posthumously published Ariel), and published her semi-autobiographical novel about mental illness, The Bell Jar.

1962

Nicholas Farrar Hughes (January 17, 1962 – March 16, 2009) was a British and American fisheries biologist known as an expert in stream salmonid ecology.

Hughes was the son of the American poet Sylvia Plath and English poet Ted Hughes, and the younger brother of artist and poet Frieda Hughes.

He and his sister were public figures as small children due to the circumstances of their mother's widely publicized suicide.

Nicholas was born in North Tawton, Devon, England in 1962.

In the summer of 1962, Ted Hughes began an affair with Assia Wevill; Hughes and Plath separated in the autumn of 1962.

1963

On February 11, 1963, while Nicholas, age one, and his sister Frieda, two and a half, slept upstairs, Plath taped shut the doorframe of the room in which the children slept, then placed towels around the kitchen door to make sure fumes could not escape to harm the children, and died by suicide using the toxic gas from the kitchen oven.

Plath addressed one of her last poems, "Nick and the Candlestick", to her son:

O love, how did you get here?

O embryo

Remembering, even in sleep

Your crossed position.

The blood blooms clean

In you, ruby.

The pain

You wake to is not yours.

After their mother Sylvia Plath's 1963 suicide, their father Ted Hughes installed his current lover Assia Wevill in the family home to take care of his & Plath's two children, Frieda & Nicholas.

1969

In 1969, Assia Wevill also committed suicide after killing her 4-year-old child by Hughes.

1970

In 1970 Ted Hughes married his long-time lover Carol Orchard, and the children continued their life on the family farm in Devon.

Despite the posthumous fame of Sylvia Plath, and the growing literary and biographical writings about her death, Nicholas was not told about the circumstances of his mother's suicide until the 1970s.

1984

He attended Oxford University, receiving a BA degree in zoology in 1984.

From 1984 to 1991, he worked in Fairbanks, Alaska as a research assistant at the Alaska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, part of the Biological Resources Division of the United States Geological Survey, and from 1990 to 1991, he was a student intern with the Sportfish Division of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

1991

In 1991, he earned a Ph.D. in biology from University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF).

After receiving his doctorate, Hughes held positions of increasing responsibility, instructing at UAF's School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences in 1991–1992 and working as a research associate with UAF's Institute of Arctic Biology from 1992 to 1998.

1993

He held a post-doctoral fellowship from 1993 to 1995 with the Behavioral Ecology Research Group at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia and was a research associate there from 1995 to 1998.

1998

In 1998, Ted Hughes published Birthday Letters, over 30 years of poems about Plath, which he dedicated to his two children.

In the poem "Life After Death", Hughes recounts how:

Your son's eyes....

would become

So perfectly your eyes,

Became wet jewels

The hardest substance of the purest pain

As I fed him in his high white chair.

Hughes was passionate about wildlife, especially fish.

In September 1998, he became an assistant professor in the School of Fisheries and Ocean Science at UAF.

Hughes studied stream salmonid ecology and conducted research both in the Alaska Interior and in New Zealand.

He was a member of the American Fisheries Society.

During his scientific career, Hughes advanced the field of stream ecology as a prominent Alaskan biologist.

According to Fairbanks reporter Dermot Cole: