Thomas Beckwith

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Thomas Beckwith FSA (10 February 1731 – 17 February 1786) was an English painter, genealogist and antiquary.

Life and work[edit]

Beckwith was born at Rothwell, West Yorkshire, the son of a West Riding solicitor, and brother of Josiah Beckwith (b. 1734), attorney and antiquary. He was apprenticed as a house-painter to George Fleming of Wakefield, who tutored him in drawing and limning; subsequently Beckwith set himself up in business as a painter in York. He painted portraits and also made many drawings of antiques, local churches, ruins etc., some of which were finished in watercolour.[1]

Beckwith acquired a great knowledge of heraldry and local family pedigrees which he amassed in 30–40 volumes of notes,[2] seeming "to have spent much of his time in forming antiquarian and genealogical collections, of which he left a great mass behind him... they were so numerous that they have found their way into almost every collection of manuscripts which has been formed during the last half century."[3] He was elected Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, and also wrote a book on local history, "A Walk in and about the city of York", though it was not published.[1]

In 1781 he took out a patent for "crayons for drawing and other purposes of various colours, superior to any hereforeto made."[4] The new type of crayon, which could be sharpened like a pencil, was licensed to be manufactured and sold by the London artists' supplier George Riley.[5]

Beckwith's wife, Frances, died on 29 August 1773, aged 36. Beckwith himself died in York on 17 February 1786. His son, Ray Beckwith (d. 19 Dec 1799), was a medical doctor who practised in York.[2]

Thomas Beckwith's portrait was etched by William Doughty.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b The Gentleman's magazine, March 1786 p265.
  2. ^ a b The Gentleman's magazine, May 1800 p485.
  3. ^ Rose, H. J., A new general biographical dictionary, 12 vols, 1853.
  4. ^ Patents for inventions. Abridgments of specifications. London: Patent Office. 1869. pp. 7.
  5. ^ British artists' suppliers, 1650-1950 - R (Ra-Rob) (National Portrait Gallery, London).
  6. ^ Joseph Strutt. A biographical dictionary: containing an historical account of all the engravers(1785) p 261.

Attribution:

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBryan, Michael (1886). "Beckwith, Thomas". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.

External links[edit]