Donisthorpe was born in Leeds, on 24 March 1847.[3][4] His father was George E. Donisthorpe, also an inventor;[5] his brother, Horace Donisthorpe, was a myrmecologist. He studied at Leeds Grammar School and Trinity College, Cambridge.[4] Donisthorpe married Ann Maria Anderson on 17 December 1873; whom he had four children. He and his wife later separated and he had a daughter with Edith Georgina Fleming (whom he described as his second wife) in 1911.[4]
He was an avid explorer and traveled throughout Northern Africa with Newnes, the publisher. He wrote a book, 'Down the Streams of Civilization,' and many papers.
Donisthorpe filed for a patent in 1876, for a film camera, which he named a "kinesigraph."[5] The object of the invention was to:
facilitate the taking of a succession of photographic pictures at equal intervals of time, in order to record the changes taking place in or the movement of the object being photographed, and also by means of a succession of pictures so taken of any moving object to give to the eye a presentation of the object in continuous movement as it appeared when being photographed.[5][8]
According to Donisthorpe, he produced a model of this camera around the late 1870s.[9] In 1890 he also produced, together with his cousin W. C. Crofts, a moving picture of London's Trafalgar Square.[10] The camera that produced this moving picture was patented in 1889 along with the projector necessary to show the motion frames.[11]
In his last book Uropa (1913), he proposed a philosophical language derived from Latin roots.
An example is the phrase Karla avyrie ma glacyrusam, "Charles has given me a refrigerator".[13]
On 30 January 1914, Donisthorpe died of heart failure at Shottermill, Surrey.[3][4]
^ abMingardi, Alberto (2011). Herbert Spencer. Continuum. p. 123. ISBN9780826424860.
^Bristow, Edward (1970). The defence of liberty and property in Britain, 1880-1914 (Thesis). Yale University. Quotes Donisthorpe in the Westminster Gazette: "The Late Lord Bramwell, Tolstoi, Herbert Spencer, Benjamin Tucker, Vaillart, Auberon Herbert, J.H Levy, Kropotkin, the late Charles Bradlaugh, Yves Guyot, Caserio, and thousands of smaller fry, including myself, are anarchists".
Bristow, Edward (1975). "The Liberty and Property Defence League and Individualism". Historical Journal. 18 (4): 761–789. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00008888.