Francis Place
1 portrait
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- Extended Catalogue Entry
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Francis Place
by Samuel Drummond
oil on canvas, exhibited 1833
36 in. x 28 1/8 in. (914 mm x 714 mm)
Given by the sitter's great-grandson, Sir Henry Miers, 1922
Primary Collection
NPG 1959
On display in Room 12 on Floor 3 at the National Portrait Gallery
Artistback to top
- Samuel Drummond (1765-1844), Portrait and history painter. Artist or producer associated with 62 portraits, Sitter in 1 portrait.
This portraitback to top
The tailor Francis Place was one of the most influential popular radicals of the day. Not only a key campaigner for political reform, he also wanted to free people from the tyranny of idleness, drunkeness and superstition. Place argued that self-improvement could be encouraged by rational recreations such as visiting museums, enrolling in friendly societies, joining reading circles and radical corresponding societies and attending public lectures. His shop on London's Charing Cross Road was a gathering place for reformers and was piled high with pamphlets and books. By the early 1800s, Place was an unofficial spokesman for English workers and a bridge between them and middle-class radicals such as Jeremy Bentham and Sir Francis Burdett.
Linked publicationsback to top
- Smartify image discovery app
- Saywell, David; Simon, Jacob, Complete Illustrated Catalogue, 2004, p. 497
- Walker, Richard, Regency Portraits, 1985, p. 397
Events of 1833back to top
Current affairs
Shaftesbury's Factory Act is passed regulating women's hours and providing for the education of children working in the textile industry.Bank Act is passed, making Bank of England notes Britain's legal tender.
Art and science
Charles Lamb publishes Last Essays of Elia after the enormous success of his earlier Essays. A comic allegorization of his humdrum clerical job they become one of the period's literary sensations.Charles Dickens begins his series Sketches by Boz in the Monthly Magazine.
International
Abolition of slavery in the British Empire; 780,000 slaves are freed, £20 million is allocated as compensation for slave owners and a six year apprenticeship system for freed slaves is established.Comments back to top
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