Sir Samuel Shepherd

1 portrait by Sir Thomas Lawrence

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Sir Samuel Shepherd

by John Richardson Jackson, after Sir Thomas Lawrence
mezzotint, published 1846
Given by Suckling & Co, 1959
Reference Collection
NPG D5962

Sitterback to top

  • Sir Samuel Shepherd (1760-1840), Chief Baron of the Exchequer in Scotland. Sitter in 2 portraits.

Artistsback to top

  • John Richardson Jackson (1819-1877), Engraver. Artist or producer associated with 63 portraits.
  • Sir Thomas Lawrence (1769-1830), Portrait painter, collector and President of the Royal Academy. Artist or producer associated with 698 portraits, Sitter in 25 portraits.

Related worksback to top

  • NPG D5963: Sir Samuel Shepherd (from same plate)

Subject/Themeback to top

Events of 1846back to top

Current affairs

The Conservative Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel divides his own party by repealing the unpopular Corn Laws, which prohibited the import of cheap grain from overseas, viewed by many as causing the famines in Ireland (which peaked in this year), as well as domestic hardships following a bad harvest. Peel, defeated on a separate issue, resigns. The Whig Earl Russell becomes Prime Minister.

Art and science

Ether is used for the first time as anaesthetic in an operation by the dentist William Morton, while surgeon John Collins Warren removes a tumor on a patient's neck.
Edward Lear, the popular humourist and artist, and author of illustrated nonsense verse (including 'The Owl and the Pussycat'), publishes his Book of Nonsense.

International

The first Anglo-Sikh war ends with the Treaty of Lahore, by which Jammu and Kashmir are ceded to the British. The war had been fought between the Sikh kingdom of the Punjab and the British East India Company, with conflict escalating after internal disorder in the Punjab led the East India Company to increase their military presence on the border.

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