All Topics  
Richard Sharp (politician)

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Richard Sharp (politician)



 
 
Richard Sharp, FRS
Royal Society

The Royal Society of London for the Improvement of Natural Knowledge, known simply as the Royal Society, or even the Royal, is a learned society for science that was founded in 1660 and is considered by most to be the oldest such society still in existence....
, FSA
Society of Antiquaries of London

The Society of Antiquaries of London is the world?s premier Learned Society for heritage. It is based at Burlington House, Piccadilly, London in the United Kingdom, along with the Royal Academy and four other leading Learned Societies; the Linnean Society, the Royal Society of Chemistry, the Geological Society of London and the Royal Astrono...
 (born Newfoundland
Newfoundland and Labrador

Newfoundland and Labrador is a Provinces and territories of Canada of Canada, on the country's Atlantic Ocean coast in northeastern North America....
 1759; died Dorchester, 30 March 1835), also known as "Conversation" Sharp, was a hat-maker, banker, merchant, poet, critic, British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 politician
Politician

A politician is an individual who is involved in influencing public decision making through the influence of politics or a person who influences the way a society is governed....
, but above all - doyen of the conversationalists.

Family Background
Sharp’s father, also Richard Sharp, came from a well-known family of merchants in Romsey
Romsey

Romsey is a small market town in the county of Hampshire, England.It is 8 miles northwest of Southampton and 11 miles south-west of Winchester....
 England, and in 1756 he joined the British army as a nineteen year old Ensign in His Majesty’s 40th Regiment of Foot – a regiment which would later became known as the “illustrious 40th” after distinguishing itself during the Seven Year's War against the French
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 in North America (1756-1763).






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Richard Sharp (politician)'
Start a new discussion about 'Richard Sharp (politician)'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Richard Sharp, FRS
Royal Society

The Royal Society of London for the Improvement of Natural Knowledge, known simply as the Royal Society, or even the Royal, is a learned society for science that was founded in 1660 and is considered by most to be the oldest such society still in existence....
, FSA
Society of Antiquaries of London

The Society of Antiquaries of London is the world?s premier Learned Society for heritage. It is based at Burlington House, Piccadilly, London in the United Kingdom, along with the Royal Academy and four other leading Learned Societies; the Linnean Society, the Royal Society of Chemistry, the Geological Society of London and the Royal Astrono...
 (born Newfoundland
Newfoundland and Labrador

Newfoundland and Labrador is a Provinces and territories of Canada of Canada, on the country's Atlantic Ocean coast in northeastern North America....
 1759; died Dorchester, 30 March 1835), also known as "Conversation" Sharp, was a hat-maker, banker, merchant, poet, critic, British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 politician
Politician

A politician is an individual who is involved in influencing public decision making through the influence of politics or a person who influences the way a society is governed....
, but above all - doyen of the conversationalists.

Family Background


Sharp’s father, also Richard Sharp, came from a well-known family of merchants in Romsey
Romsey

Romsey is a small market town in the county of Hampshire, England.It is 8 miles northwest of Southampton and 11 miles south-west of Winchester....
 England, and in 1756 he joined the British army as a nineteen year old Ensign in His Majesty’s 40th Regiment of Foot – a regiment which would later became known as the “illustrious 40th” after distinguishing itself during the Seven Year's War against the French
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 in North America (1756-1763). While garrisoned at St. John's
St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador

St. John's is the Provinces of Canada capital of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada and located on the eastern tip of the Avalon Peninsula on the Newfoundland ....
 in Newfoundland
Newfoundland and Labrador

Newfoundland and Labrador is a Provinces and territories of Canada of Canada, on the country's Atlantic Ocean coast in northeastern North America....
, Ensign Richard Sharp met and fell in love with Elizabeth Adams, a citizen of St John’s, and they were married in 1759. Richard and Elizabeth’s first son was soon born and, though naming him ‘Richard’, they can have had little idea that when he grew up he would become variously known throughout London society as ‘Hatter Sharp’, ‘Furrier Sharp’, ‘Copenhagen Sharp’ (after a famous speech that he gave as an MP castigating the British bombardment of Copenhagen) or, most famously of all, as ‘Conversation Sharp’ Long before this time, and while the Left-tenant was still in North America fighting the war, his grandfather was establishing a highly successful firm of hat-makers on Fish Street Hill in the very heart of London. Thither, in about 1763, the wounded soldier and his family returned from Newfoundland and there he died a few years later at the age of twenty eight. His grandfather had been a close friend of Isaac Watts
Isaac Watts

Isaac Watts is recognised as the "Father of English Hymnody", as he was the first prolific and popular English hymnwriter, credited with some 750 hymns....
, all the family being staunch Dissenters, so Richard was buried in the family vault within the Dissenters’ graveyard at Bunhill Fields
Bunhill Fields

Bunhill Fields is a cemetery located in the United Kingdom, in the London Borough of Islington, north of the City of London, and managed by the City of London Corporation....
 (where his tomb-stone is still visible).

In 1769, the widow Elizabeth Sharp married Thomas Cable Davis, a partner in the hatter’s business, and they had further children, while it was not long before Richard Sharp, still in his teens, began to assume a major responsibility for the family business as evidence of his exceptional abilities.

Biography

Until the age of 13/14, Richard Sharp was educated at Thaxted, Essex, by the Rev. John Fell, a dissenting minister, and a friendship sprang up between the two which lasted until Fell's death. At the age of 24, Sharp wrote the Preface to Fell's influential book, An Essay towards an English Grammar (1784), a work which is still acknowledged and quoted to this day. Graduating from Fell's care, Sharp returned to the family home/business at 6 Fish Street Hill to begin a 7-year apprenticeship to become a master hatter. In this role he excelled, not only rescuing the business from imminent commercial failure but gradually developing his exceptional erudition and powers of conversation in such a way as to enable him to rise from the humble ranks of hatter to reach celebrity status in several different spheres of life. Amazingly, one respected commentator described Sharp at about the age of thirty as,

Sharp thought seriously about joining the legal profession and he was admitted to the Inner Temple
Inner Temple

The Honourable Society of the Inner Temple is one of the four Inns of Court around the Royal Courts of Justice in London which may call members to the Bar association and so entitle them to practise as barristers....
 on the 24th January 1786. It seems however that his strict moral conscience could not be reconciled with the prospect of having to defend a guilty man, and in the end he was not called to the Bar. In 1798 he finally retired from the hatter's business and joined a firm of West India merchants run by his friend Samuel Boddington
Samuel Boddington

Samuel Boddington , was an Ireland politician. He was Member of Parliament for Tralee from January to May 1807.The Boddington family held large estates in the West Indies and Samuel had been left a fortune by his father who had been a director of the South Sea Company as well as a West India merchant with offices at Mark Lane....
 in Mark Lane, a third partner later becoming Sir George Philips
George Philips

George Philips , later Sir George Philips MP, came from a well known cotton manufacturing family in Manchester and he was brought up in the dissenting tradition....
. Sharp made so much money as a merchant, and through his investments and banking connections, that he eventually left an incredible £250,000 in his Will. He was once described as being ‘one of the most considerable merchants in London’ and his acquired knowledge of the shipping business enabled him to give crucial support and advice to Samuel Coleridge in 1804 when the poet was about to leave England for health reasons. Indeed, as a respected London critic, Sharp gave important assistance and encouragement to both Coleridge and Wordsworth, among many others, and although much of their correspondence with Sharp has been sold overseas, some may still be seen within the poets' collected works.

Despite his modest roots, Richard Sharp’s exceptional cleverness and powers of conversation gained him acceptance in the highest social circles and led to him acquiring his lasting sobriquet. Although he achieved distinction in many areas, he nevertheless seems to have made most impact upon people simply because of his basic human kindness and wisdom, as a few quotes from some of those who knew him well will illustrate:


John William Ward, later Earl of Dudley
Earl of Dudley

Earl of Dudley, of Dudley Castle in the County of Stafford, is a title that has been created twice in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, both times for members of the Ward family....
, was not only a man of immense personal wealth but similarly renowned for being an extremely talented, quick-witted and humorous man with a tenacious memory. He described Richard Sharp as,



Francis Horner
Francis Horner

Francis Horner was a Scotland British Whig Party MP for St Ives in 1806, Wendover in 1807, and St Mawes in 1812 .He was born in Edinburgh and studied at University of Edinburgh until being called to the bar in Scotland in 1800 and for England in 1807....
, an original contributor to the Edinburgh Review and a barrister before he turned to politics, met Sharp when he came to London and was inspired by him to keep a journal in which he wrote,

Horner later wrote to Lady Mackintosh in 1805 in the same admiring tones, complaining that he simply could not get enough of Sharp’s company and telling her ‘….Sharp I respect and love more and more every day; he has every day new talents and new virtues to show’. Her husband, Sir James Mackintosh, was one of the few people that Sharp felt able to discuss metaphysics with and he expressed the opinion that Richard Sharp had made a greater influence on his thinking than almost any other person. In Byron’s opinion Sharp was one of those who had ‘lived much with the best - Fox
Charles James Fox

Charles James Fox was a prominent Kingdom of Great Britain British Whig Party statesman whose parliamentary career spanned thirty-eight years of the late eighteenth century and early nineteenth century and who was particularly noted for being the arch-rival of William Pitt the Younger....
, Horne Tooke, Windham
William Wyndham

William Wyndham may refer to:*Sir William Wyndham, 1st Baronet , of Orchard Wyndham, English politician, Member of Parliament for Somerset, 1656?1658 and for Taunton 1660?1679...
, Fitzpatrick and all the agitators of other times and tongues..’ while Macaulay
Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay

Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay, Privy Council of the United Kingdom was a nineteenth-century British poet, historian and British Whig Party politician and one of the two Member of Parliament for Edinburgh ....
 was similarly impressed by Sharp when he commented in a letter to his sister before leaving for India,

As a young man Sharp met Samuel Johnson
Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson was an English author. Beginning as a Grub Street journalist, he made lasting contributions to English literature as a poet, essayist, moralist, novelist, literary critic, biographer, editor and lexicographer....
 and Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke was an Irish statesman, author, orator, political theorist, and philosophy who, after relocating to Great Britain, served for many years in the British House of Commons as a member of the British Whig Party party....
 and dined regularly with Boswell
James Boswell

James Boswell, 9th Laird of Auchinleck was a lawyer, diarist, and author born in Edinburgh, Scotland; he is best known for his biography of Samuel Johnson....
. He was also a close friend of Mrs Siddons, and of John Henderson
John Henderson

John Henderson may refer to:*John Henderson , Australian-American blind activist*John Henderson , British film and television director*John Henderson , U.S....
 the actor - who once asked him to report on the acting ability of an up-and-coming rival, John Kemble
John Kemble

John Kemble may refer to:*John Kemble , Roman Catholic martyr*John Philip Kemble, English actor and manager...
, which Sharp did and his accurate account of Kemble may still be read.

By the late 1780’s Sharp was at the hub of the Dissenter movement in London at a crucial period in history when Revolution was in the air and when young intellectual Whigs such as he fell under natural suspicion. He belonged to the Society for Constitutional Information
Society for Constitutional Information

Founded in 1780 by Major John Cartwright to promote parliamentary reform, the Society for Constitutional Information flourished until 1783, but thereafter made little headway....
 and helped, with other leading Whigs, to establish the Friends of the People society. At about the same time he became one of the Dissenters' ‘Deputies’ – it being the custom for each dissenting congregation within ten miles of London to be represented by two such deputies and their common aim being to overturn the notorious Test Act
Test Act

The Test Acts were a series of England penal laws that served as a religious test for public office and imposed various civil disabilities on Roman Catholics and Nonconformists....
s which so discriminated against them. In this latter connection Sharp issued a famous ‘Letter’ in support of repeal which may still be viewed within the British Library records.

Sharp’s reputation as a critic increased when his close friend, Samuel Rogers
Samuel Rogers

Samuel Rogers was an England poet.Rogers was born at Newington Green, London.His father, Thomas Rogers, a banker, was the son of a Stourbridge glass manufacturer, who was also a merchant in Cheapside....
, began to emerge as the most eminent and popular poet of that period (his poem ‘To a Friend being dedicated to Sharp) and both visited Wordsworth in the Lakes and gave him important 'city' support before this new, naturalistic style of poetry became truly fashionable. The Rogers family in Stoke Newington
Stoke Newington

Stoke Newington is a district in the London Borough of Hackney. It is north-east of Charing Cross....
 was a well known one in dissenting circles and the names of Joseph Priestley
Joseph Priestley

Joseph Priestley was an 18th-century British theologian, English Dissenters clergyman, Natural philosophy, educator, and Political philosophy who published over 150 works....
, Samuel Parr
Samuel Parr

Samuel Parr , England schoolmaster, was born at Harrow on the Hill to Samuel Parr, a surgeon, and his wife Ann. ...
, Richard Price
Richard Price

Richard Price , was a Wales moral and political philosopher....
, Dr John Fell, Kippis and Towers were eminently familiar to both men. Apart from a common interest in Unitarianism both Sharp and Rogers became well known for their good taste at a time when ‘taste’ was one of the most vital commodities that an aspiring young man could acquire. Rogers’ home in St James’s Place was visited by almost every famous person in London and he was a guest of royalty. Both men were habitues at the fashionable Whig salon, Holland House
Holland House

Holland House, built in 1605 for Sir Walter Cope and originally known as Cope Castle, was one of the first great houses built in Kensington, England....
, and considerable correspondence between Sharp and Lord and Lady Holland has survived to this day. When Sharp moved to his house in Park Lane he acquired portraits painted by Reynolds of Johnson, Burke and of Reynolds himself as symbols of those things that he most cherished – language, oratory and art. At his cottage retreat, in Mickleham
Mickleham

Mickleham may refer to:* Mickleham, Victoria, Australia* Mickleham, Surrey, England...
, Surrey, he received politicians, artists, scientists and some of the cleverest minds of the day including people from abroad such as the intriguing but formidable Mme de Staël.

Sharp was a founder member of the intellectual 'King of Clubs’
King of Clubs (Whig club)

The King of Clubs club - a famous Whig conversation club, founded in 1798The King of Clubs club was perhaps the most distinguished conversation club ever to have existed and, in contrast to its mainly Tory forerunner it was a predominantly Whig fraternity of some of the most brilliant minds of the day....
 conversation club as well as a leading figure in founding the London Institution
London Institution

The London Institution was an educational institution founded in London in 1806. It preceded the University of London in making scientific education widely available in the capital to people such as the Dissenters who adhered to non-orthodox religious beliefs and were consequently barred from attending Oxford or Cambridge....
 in 1806, a venue for popular education and a forerunner of London University
University College London

University College London is a university institution and constituent college of the University of London based primarily in London, England, United Kingdom....
 . He belonged to a great many London Clubs and Societies, such as Brooks's
Brooks's

Brooks's is a London gentlemen's club, founded in 1764 by 27 men including four dukes. At an early date it was the meeting place for British Whig Party of the highest social order; it remains one of the most exclusive London Clubs....
, the Athenaeum
Athenaeum

Athenaeum, also Athen?um or Atheneum, is used in the names of institutions or periodicals for literary, scientific, or artistic study....
, the 'Unincreasable', the 'Eumelean' and White's
White's

White's is a London gentlemen's club, established at 4 Chesterfield Street in 1693 by Italian immigrant Francesco Bianco . Originally it was established to sell hot chocolate, a rare and expensive commodity at the time ....
. An early member of the Literary Society
Literary society

A literary society is a group of people interested in literature. In the modern sense, this refers to a society that wants to promote one genre of literature or a specific writer....
, in 1787 he became a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries
Society of Antiquaries of London

The Society of Antiquaries of London is the world?s premier Learned Society for heritage. It is based at Burlington House, Piccadilly, London in the United Kingdom, along with the Royal Academy and four other leading Learned Societies; the Linnean Society, the Royal Society of Chemistry, the Geological Society of London and the Royal Astrono...
 and in 1806 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society
Royal Society

The Royal Society of London for the Improvement of Natural Knowledge, known simply as the Royal Society, or even the Royal, is a learned society for science that was founded in 1660 and is considered by most to be the oldest such society still in existence....
, his application for the latter being supported by such names as Charles Burney
Charles Burney

Charles Burney was an England music history and father of author Frances Burney....
 Jnr, James Watt
James Watt

James Watt was a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer whose improvements to the steam engine were fundamental to the changes brought by the Industrial Revolution in both the Kingdom of Great Britain and the world....
 and Humphry Davy
Humphry Davy

Sir Humphry Davy, 1st Baronet Fellow of the Royal Society Royal Irish Academy was a Cornish chemist and inventor. He is probably best remembered today for his discoveries of several alkali metal and alkaline earth metals, as well as contributions to the discoveries of the elemental nature of chlorine and iodine....
. During the period 1810-1812 Sharp was appointed Prime Warden of the Fishmongers' Company in London and at different times represented the Whig party as a dissenting Member of Parliament for Castle Rising
Castle Rising (UK Parliament constituency)

Castle Rising was a parliamentary borough in Norfolk, which elected two Member of Parliament to the British House of Commons from 1558 until 1832, when it was abolished by the Great Reform Act....
 from 1806 to 1812, Portarlington
Portarlington (UK Parliament constituency)

Portarlington was a rotten borough and is a former United Kingdom Parliament constituency, in Ireland, returning one MP. It was an original constituency represented in Parliament when the Union of Great Britain and Ireland took effect on 1 January, 1801....
 from 1816 to 1819 and Ilchester
Ilchester (UK Parliament constituency)

Ilchester was a United Kingdom constituencies of the British House of Commons of the Parliament of England then of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1707 to 1800 and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1832....
 from 1826 to 1827. In the House of Commons he often sat next to his friend, Samuel Whitbread
Samuel Whitbread

Samuel Whitbread was an England politician.Born in Cardington, Bedfordshire, Whitbread was the son of the brewer Samuel Whitbread . He was educated at Eton College, Christ Church, Oxford and St John's College, Cambridge, after which he embarked on a European 'Grand Tour', visiting Denmark, Sweden, Russia, Poland, Prussia, France and Italy....
, and supported his move for popular education.

Sharp once considered writing a history of American Independence and wrote to his friends, John Adams
John Adams

John Adams was an Politics of the United States and the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States , after being the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States for two terms....
 and John Quincey Adams about this and other matters. He also considered writing a tourist’s guide to Europe after becoming so familiar with continental travel that he was once called 'the Thomas Cook
Thomas Cook

Thomas Cook of Melbourne, Derbyshire, founded the travel agency that is now Thomas Cook Group. He was brought up as a strict Baptist and joined his local Temperance movement....
 of his day’ . In the event his only publication was a slim volume of 'Letters and Essays in Prose and Verse' published shortly before his death.

Towards the end of his life Sharp liked to spend the winter months at his house in Torquay (Higher Terrace) where he was able to look out to sea and no doubt think fondly of his birthplace in Newfoundland. He had suffered all his life with a cough and a bad chest and Torquay was noted for both its health-giving air and Italianate landscape, but in 1834 the winter was particularly severe and as Sharp succumbed he resolved that he would die in his beloved London. He set off for the city with his family and servants but only got as far as Dorchester before expiring at the coaching inn there. Fearful that a nephew might obtain and subvert his Will, we are told that 70-year old George Philips
George Philips

George Philips , later Sir George Philips MP, came from a well known cotton manufacturing family in Manchester and he was brought up in the dissenting tradition....
, in a final act of kindness, set off on his horse
Canon and rode through the night as fast as he could to ensure that this did not occur!

Richard 'Conversation' Sharp never married but in about 1812 he adopted an infant, Maria Kinnaird
Maria Kinnaird

Maria Kinnaird was born on Saint Vincent , but was orphaned by a volcanic eruption and she was adopted by the politician, Richard Sharp . She was the heiress of her adopted father and she has been described as a accomplished, attractive, and intelligent woman....
 , who had been orphaned by a catastrophic volcano eruption in the West Indies. Maria, as a teenager, knew Wordsworth
William Wordsworth

William Wordsworth was a major England Romantic poetry poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romanticism in English literature with the 1798 joint publication Lyrical Ballads....
's daughter, Dora
Dora Wordsworth

Dora Wordsworth was the only surviving daughter of William Wordsworth , major Romantic poet and British Poet Laureate. Her babyhood inspired Wordsworth to write the beautiful "Address To My Infant Daughter" in her honour....
, very well and in later life she led an interesting and colourful life in London Society . Macaulay and Romilly (son of Samuel Romilly
Samuel Romilly

Sir Samuel Romilly , was an England legal reformer.Samuel Romilly was born in Frith Street, Soho, London, the second son of Peter Romilly, a watchmaker and jeweller....
, were among many eligible young men who were said to be enamoured of Maria but in 1835 she married Thomas Drummond
Thomas Drummond

Captain Thomas Drummond was a Scotland civil engineer, born in Edinburgh. Drummond used the Drummond light which was employed in the trigonometrical survey of Great Britain and Ordnance Survey Ireland....
 who later became Undersecretary for Ireland.

London Institution

Richard Sharp’s exceptional shrewdness and eloquence were frequently aimed at bringing about some tangible outcome or change, and nowhere was this more the case than with regard to the formation of the London Institution
London Institution

The London Institution was an educational institution founded in London in 1806. It preceded the University of London in making scientific education widely available in the capital to people such as the Dissenters who adhered to non-orthodox religious beliefs and were consequently barred from attending Oxford or Cambridge....
. One commentator is in no doubt that this man's particular role was pivotal in the establishment of this important Institution when he wrote that it was…

As a pioneer and champion of adult education, Sharp’s initiative predates that of his better known contemporary, George Birkbeck
George Birkbeck

George Birkbeck was a British physician, academic, philanthropist, an early pioneer in adult education and founder of Birkbeck, University of London....
, whose Mechanics Institutes only developed in Glasgow, London and elsewhere from the 1820s onwards. Like Sharp, Birkbeck was from a dissenter background and both were committed to making education more democratically available. Indeed, history would show that many of the founders of the London Institution would be those who joined with Thomas Campbell to found a new University for London incorporating Birkbeck’s Mechanics’ Institute as Birkbeck College.

At the very beginning of its life, Richard Sharp was a member of the Institution’s Temporary Management Committee and he remained a Manager for most of his life. In 1810 he served as their Chairman, resigning from this position on September 10th, 1812, and for the years 1827 and 1831 he was Vice-President. Throughout his long period of office he was brought into contact with many leading artists, thinkers and men of science, and as his interest in education grew he supported Whitbread
Samuel Whitbread

Samuel Whitbread was an England politician.Born in Cardington, Bedfordshire, Whitbread was the son of the brewer Samuel Whitbread . He was educated at Eton College, Christ Church, Oxford and St John's College, Cambridge, after which he embarked on a European 'Grand Tour', visiting Denmark, Sweden, Russia, Poland, Prussia, France and Italy....
’s move for a proper system of state education as well as Henry Brougham’s drive for a fully-fledged city University.

Published works

In 1828 Sharp's only book
Letters & Essays in Prose and Verse was published (Murray) which the Quarterly Review declared to be remarkable for "wisdom, wit, knowledge of the world and sound criticism." Several editions, including an American copy, were published and it is now available on-line via GoogleBooks

Richard Sharp is a sadly forgotten personality of his age and his biography has surely been a glaring omission from any history of the period. This has recently been corrected by a scholarly volume, privately published as
Conversation Sharp - The Biography of a London Gentleman, Richard Sharp (1759-1835), in Letters, Prose and Verse (2004), of which a copy is in many leading British Libraries. A single, contemporary image of Sharp is known to exist, an excellent master drawing which is held in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.