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Thomas Barker

 
Art Encyclopedia: Thomas Barker

(b Pontypool, May 1769; d Bath, 11 Dec 1847). Painter and lithographer. He received his early training through the patronage of the Bath auctioneer Charles Spackman, whom he depicted in a joint portrait Thomas Barker and his Preceptor, Charles Spackman (1789; Bath, Victoria A.G.). Under Spackman's direction, Barker assiduously copied paintings by the Old Masters, gaining a proficient, if somewhat eclectic technique. The influence of Thomas Gainsborough in particular is evident in such early works as Woodman in a Storm (1789; London, Tate). He studied in Italy from 1790 to 1793, but there is little sign of any artistic development in paintings executed after his return to Bath. His most innovative works are Impressions of Rustic Figures after Nature (1813), the first one-man collection of lithographs printed in England, and the Massacre of the Inhabitants of Scio by the Turks (1825), a fresco painted on the walls of the picture gallery in his home, Doric House, Sion Hill, Bath (in situ). As an expert on fresco technique, Barker advised on the redecoration of the Houses of Parliament in 1841. In later years his popularity declined, and he died in poverty.

Part of the Barker family

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Thomas Barker (1722 – 29 December 1809) was a Rutland squire who kept a detailed weather record at Lyndon Hall from 1736 to 1798.

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Life and work

Thomas Barker was born at Lyndon Hall, Lyndon, Rutland, England in 1722. He came from a distinguished local family, which had lived in Lyndon from the time of Henry VIII. He married Anne White, who was the sister of Gilbert White, the famous naturalist. The couple had five children, a son and four daughters.

Barker's meteorological records have proved a valuable resource for those researching the 18th century British climate, because of its early date for instrumental observations, its length and the meticulousness with which it was compiled. He recorded barometric pressure, temperature, clouds, wind and rainfall. (In the early years his thermometer was indoors, in an unheated room, as was common at the time.) Barker's temperature data was amongst that used by Gordon Manley in compiling his Central England Temperature series.[1][2]

Barker recorded during September 1749 what was clearly, from his careful description, a tornado:

A remarkable Meteor was seen in Rutland, which I suspect to have been of the same kind as Spouts at Sea...
It was a calm, warm and cloudy Day, with some Gleams and Showers; the Barometer low and falling, and the Wind South, and small. The Spout came between 5 and 6 in the evening; at 8 came a Thunder-Shower, and Storms of Wind, which did some Mischief in some places; and then it cleared up with a brisk N.W. Wind.
The earliest Account I have was from Seaton. A great Smoke rose over or near Gretton, in Northamptonshire, with the Likeness of Fire, either one single Flash, as the Miller said, or several bright Arrows darting to the Ground, and repeated for some Time, as others say. Yet some who saw it, did not think there was really any Fire in it, but that the bright Breaks in a black Cloud looked like it. However, the Whirling, Breaks, Roar, and Smoke frightened both Man and Beast. Coming down the Hill, it took up Water from the River Welland, and passing over Seaton Field, carried away several Shocks of Stubble; and crossing Glaiston, and Morcot Lordships, at Pilton Town's End tore off two Branches ... I saw it pass from Pilton over Lyndon Lordship, like a black smoky Cloud, with bright Breaks; an odd whirling Motion, and a roaring Noise, like a distant Wind, or a great Flock of Sheep galloping along on hard Ground ... As it went by a Quarter of a Mile East from me, I saw some Straws fall from it, and a Part, like an inverted Cone of Rain, reached down to the Ground. Some who were milking, said it came all round them like a thick Mist, whirling and parting, and, when that was past, a strong Wind for a very little while, though it was calm both before and after. It then passed off between Edithweston and Hambleton, but how much further I do not know.

Barker published a number of papers in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. As well as being a meteorologist, he was also an astronomer, publishing An Account of the Discoveries concerning Comets, with the Way to find their Orbits, and some Improvements in constructing and calculating their Places in 1757. He was the first modern astronomer to note the discrepancy between some ancient accounts of Sirius being a red star and its current blue-white colour.[3] His journals include observations on the local flora and fauna in addition to the weather. He also wrote a number of theological books.

Thomas Barker died on 29 December 1809 and was buried in Lyndon churchyard on 3 January 1810.

References

  1. ^ Manley, G. (1953). "The mean temperature of central England, 1698-1952". Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 79 (340): 242 – 261. http://www.rmets.org/pdf/qj53manley.pdf. 
  2. ^ Manley, G. (1974). "Central England temperatures: monthly means 1659 to 1973". Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 100 (425): 389 – 405. http://www.rmets.org/pdf/qj53manley.pdf. 
  3. ^ Holberg, J. B. (2007). Sirius: Brightest Diamond in the Night Sky. Chichester, UK: Praxis Publishing. pp. 157 – 158. ISBN 0-387-48941-X. 

Further reading

  • Manley, G. (1952). "Thomas Barker's Meteorological Journals, 1748-1763 and 1777-1789". Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 78 (336): 255 – 259. 
  • Mayhew, Charles. Lyndon, Rutland - A Guide. Rutland Local History & Record Society. 

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