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Thomas Southwood Smith

4 of 7 portraits by John Carr (or James Charles) Armytage

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Thomas Southwood Smith

by John Carr (or James Charles) Armytage, published by Smith, Elder & Co, after Margaret Gillies
stipple engraving, published 1844
8 1/4 in. x 5 in. (210 mm x 127 mm) plate size; 8 7/8 in. x 5 3/4 in. (225 mm x 146 mm) paper size
Given by Henry Witte Martin, 1861
Reference Collection
NPG D8396

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Current affairs

Britain experiences a railway boom. Peel's government passes a series of Acts creating provision of cheap, regular rail services. George Hudson, the first great railway entrepreneur, who controlled over 1,000 miles of railway track and whose enterprises made York a major commercial and transport hub, becomes known as 'the Railway King'.

Art and science

Disraeli's Coningsby is published. The first of his 1840s 'Young England' trilogy, it was the cultural manifesto of Disraeli's vision for a new Conservativism.
David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson set up their innovative and pioneering photography studio in Edinburgh, capturing portraits of both Scottish society figures and workers, as well as urban and rural landscape scenes.

International

Tensions continue to mount in Eastern Europe over Russian imperialist ambitions, as Tsar Nicholas I describes the Ottoman Empire as 'the Sick Man of Europe'.
With the overthrow of the Haitians, the Spanish-speaking portion of the island of Hispaniola gains independence, as the Dominican Republic.

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