Fanny Wyndham (née Frances Wilton)

1 portrait by Jérémie Graf

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Fanny Wyndham (née Frances Wilton)

by (Isaac) Weld Taylor, printed by Jérémie Graf, published by John Mitchell, published by Rittner & Goupil, after Alfred Edward Chalon
hand-coloured lithograph, published 20 February 1838
16 1/2 in. x 11 1/4 in. (419 mm x 286 mm) paper size; 15 1/4 in. x 11 1/4 in. (387 mm x 286 mm) image size
Purchased with help from the Friends of the National Libraries and the Pilgrim Trust, 1966
Reference Collection
NPG D36211

Sitterback to top

Artistsback to top

  • Alfred Edward Chalon (1780-1860), Portrait and subject painter. Artist or producer associated with 180 portraits, Sitter associated with 1 portrait.
  • Jérémie Graf (active 1837-1842), Lithographic printer. Artist or producer associated with 113 portraits.
  • John Mitchell (active 1832-died 1889), Publisher. Artist or producer associated with 206 portraits.
  • Rittner & Goupil (active 1836-1839), Publishers. Artist or producer associated with 15 portraits.
  • (Isaac) Weld Taylor (1812-1891), Lithographer. Artist or producer associated with 17 portraits.

Related worksback to top

  • NPG D36212: Fanny Wyndham (née Frances Wilton) (from same stone)
  • NPG D36213: Fanny Wyndham (née Frances Wilton) (from same stone)
  • NPG D36214: Fanny Wyndham (née Frances Wilton) (from same stone)

Placesback to top

Subject/Themeback to top

Events of 1838back to top

Current affairs

The Anti-Corn Law league is established in Manchester, led by Richard Cobden and John Bright, aiming to create a fully free-trade economy.
The People's Charter is published, demanding many constitutional amendments that would become central to future democratic reform, including universal male suffrage and secret ballots. Despite having one million signatures (and 5 million by 1848), the petition was rejected.
Slavery is completely abolished.

Art and science

Turner's The Fighting Temeraire is exhibited at the Royal Academy. The Temeraire, which had broken the line at the Battle of Trafalgar, was a reflection on the rapid changes of the industrial age. This was demonstrated this year when Isambard Brunel's Great Western crosses the Atlantic, in just fifteen days - a ship under sail could take a month.
The London-Birmingham railway is also completed, the line engineered by Robert Stephenson.

International

The first stage in the formation of independent Boer republics in South Africa, as the Republic of Natal is formed in South Africa, following the Boers defeat of the Matabele of Mzilikasi. This comes two years after the Dutch-speaking inhabitants of the British-ruled colony of South Africa set out on the Great Trek, in search of their own independent state.
The Central American Federation, an experimental republic formed of several Latin states splits.

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