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SOCIETY OF ARTS Set up as the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce in 1754, soon became known as the Society of Arts.
Still going strong, having become the Royal Society of Arts early in the twentieth century. Their website tells you a lot about their history, but not their link with Henry Cort. The link has two phases. First is in the 1780s, when he becomes a member. He is proposed for membership in October 1787 by Francis Stephens (probably related to Sir Philip Stephens, one of the longest-serving civil servants in naval administration). In January 1790 Francis will be appointed Commissioner of Victualling for the Royal Navy. If he is familiar with navy victualling before that, he will doubtless appreciate Cort's provision of hoops: doubtless the basis of his support for Cort's membership of the Society. Cort does not remain a member for long. His last entry in the Society's records is 9 March 1789. Since his business collapses a few months later, we can assume he has failed to pay his next subscription. I have not managed to check how many of signatories to the 1791 petition are Society members. But one signatory, Sir Watkin Lewes, is the Society's Vice President at the time. Moving on to 1855, we find his son Richard has several friends among Society members. We have noted in particular the parts played by Charles Sanderson, David Mushet and Thomas Webster.
Others members particularly sympathetic to Cort are Sir Richard Broun ("author of works on heraldry, agriculture, colonisation, sanitation etc" according to the ODNB) and inventor William Fairbairn.
Harry Scrivenor and J. Kenyon Blackwell are members well acquainted with the iron trade.
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The pages on this site are copied from the original site of Eric Alexander (henrycort.net) with his allowance. |