Sir John Ross

1 portrait by Jérémie Graf

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Sir John Ross

by Richard James Lane, printed by Jérémie Graf, published by Joseph Dickinson, after Benjamin Rawlinson Faulkner
lithograph, published January 1834
8 1/8 in. x 6 3/4 in. (207 mm x 170 mm) paper size
Given by Austin Lane Poole, 1956
Reference Collection
NPG D21781

Sitterback to top

  • Sir John Ross (1777-1856), Rear-Admiral and Arctic explorer. Sitter in 7 portraits.

Artistsback to top

  • Joseph Dickinson (1780-1849), Stationer and lithographic publisher. Artist or producer associated with 83 portraits.
  • Benjamin Rawlinson Faulkner (1787-1849), Portrait painter. Artist or producer associated with 17 portraits.
  • Jérémie Graf (active 1837-1842), Lithographic printer. Artist or producer associated with 113 portraits.
  • Richard James Lane (1800-1872), Sculptor and lithographer. Artist or producer associated with 1226 portraits, Sitter in 6 portraits.

Subject/Themeback to top

Events of 1834back to top

Current affairs

Sir Robert Peel, Tory, replaces Whig Lord Melbourne as Prime Minister, promising measured reform in a shift from reactionary 'Tory' to more measured 'Conservative' politics (he had voted for the 1832 Reform Act).
Trial of Tolpuddle Martyrs, six labourers transported to Australia after trying to raise funds for workers in need by forming a Friendly Society.

Art and science

Charles Babbage's invents the Analytic Machine. Considered to be the forerunner to the modern computer, the machine was able to make automatic mathematical calculations.
Edward Bulwer-Lytton publishes his hugely popular, but now largely neglected, novel Last Days of Pompeii, set in the Italian city at the time of Mount Vesuvius' eruption in 79AD.

International

Dom Miguel I, King of Portugal, is defeated by his brother Pedro IV, in the Portuguese civil war.
Slavery is abolished in the British dominions, although slaves still working are indentured to their former owners in an 'apprenticeship' system; the philanthropist Joseph Sturge was a prominent critic of the policy, which was abolished in 1838. Whilst slave owners received compensation, slaves received nothing.

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