T. D. Kendrick

"Thomas Kendrick" redirects here. For the Medal of Honor recipient, see Thomas Kendrick (Medal of Honor).

Sir Thomas Downing "T. D." Kendrick, KCB (1 April 1895 – 2 November 1979) was a British archaeologist and art historian.[1]

Kendrick was born in Handsworth, a suburb of Birmingham, England,[2] and educated at Charterhouse School and Oriel College, Oxford, for a year before World War I, during which he was wounded and rose to the rank of captain.

Initially specializing in prehistoric art, Kendrick turned in the 1930s to Viking and Anglo-Saxon art, for which his two survey volumes were long standard references. Kendrick was Director of the British Museum from 1950 until he retired in 1959. He believed in cleaning museum objects, but this resulted in numerous bronze artifacts in his department being overcleaned.[2] He was a keen advocate of Victorian art, with assistance from the poet John Betjeman and the painter John Piper, amongst others. Kendrick's notes on Victorian stained glass were used by Nikolaus Pevsner for his Buildings of England series (Pevsner Architectural Guides).[3]

Kendrick died in Dorchester, Dorset.[2]

Books

References

  1. David M. Wilson, Kendrick, Sir Thomas Downing (1895–1979), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Online edn, May 2005, accessed 4 November 2006.
  2. 1 2 3 Kendrick, T[homas] [Downing], Dictionary of Art Historians
  3. Nikolaus Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Cornwall (1951), p. 9.
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