Jump to content

Thomas Blore

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 12:50, 24 May 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Thomas Blore (1754-1818) was an English topographer.

Life

Blore was born at Ashbourne, Derbyshire, on 1 December 1764. He received his education at the grammar school there, and afterwards became a solicitor at Derby. He then moved to Hopton to take over the management of the affirs of Philip Gell.

On Gell's death in 1795 he went to London and entered the Middle Temple, though he was never called to the bar. Subsequently, during a residence at Benwick Hall, near Hertford, he made extensive collections relating to the topography and antiquities of Hertfordshire. These filled three folio volumes of closely written manuscript, which formed the nucleus of Robert Clutterbuck's history of the county. Afterwards Blore lived successively at Mansfield Woodhouse, at Burr House, near Bakewell, at Manton, in Rutland, and at Stamford. The latter borough he unsuccessfully contested in the whig interest, and he also edited for a brief period Drakard‘s Stamford News. He died in London 10 November 1818, and was buried in Paddington Church, where a stone bearing the following inscription was erected:

Sacred to the memory of Thomas Blore, Gentleman, of the honourable society of the Middle Temple and member of the Antiquarian Society, whose days were embittered and whose life was shortened by intense application. He died 10 November 1818, aged 63 years.

He was father of the architect Edward Blore.

Works

He was an able and diligent topographer, but his labours brought few works to a successful termination. His publications are:

  1. A History of the .Manor and Manor-house of South Wingfield in Derbyshire, printed in Nichols's Miscellaneous Antiquities (in continuation of the Bibliotheca Topographica Britannica), vol. i. No. 3, 1791;reprinted separately, London, 1793
  2. "Proposals for publishing a History of Derbyshire".
  3. "A History of Alderwasley", in four pages, folio, as a specimen of his History of Derbyshire.
  4. "A History of Breadsall Priory, in the county of Derby", printed in the Topographical Miscellany, 1791.
  5. "A Statement of a Correspondence with Richard Phillips, Esq., respecting the “Antiquary’s Magazine", Stamford, 1807
  6. The History and Antiquities of the County of Rutland, vol. i. pt. 2, Stamford, 1811. With many plates and genealogical tables. This was the only part published. It includes the East Hundred and the Hundred of Casterton Parva.
  7. An Account of the Public Schools, Hospitals, and other Charitable Foundations in the borough of Stamford, in the counties of Lincoln and Rutland, Stamford, 1813
  8. A Guide to Burghley House, Northamptonshire, the seat of the Marquis of Exeter; containing an Account of all the paintings, antiquities, &c., with biographical notices of the Artists, Stamford, 1815 (anonymous).

References

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Blore, Thomas". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.