Sir Thomas Hanmer, 4th Baronet

"Thomas Hanmer" redirects here. For other uses, see Thomas Hanmer (disambiguation).
Sir Thomas Hanmer.

Sir Thomas Hanmer, 4th Baronet (24 September 1677 – 7 May 1746) was Speaker of the House of Commons from 1714 to 1715, discharging the duties of the office with conspicuous impartiality. He is, however, perhaps best remembered as being one of the early editors of the works of William Shakespeare.

Life

Hanmer was born at Bettisfield in North Wales

He was the son of William Hanmer (b. c1648 in Angers, France, d. c1678?,[n 1] the son by his second marriage of Sir Thomas Hanmer, 2nd Baronet), and of Peregrine, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Henry North, 1st Baronet, of Mildenhall, Sussex.[1][2]

He was born between 10 and 11 p.m. in the house of his grandfather Sir Thomas Hanmer, 2nd Baronet, at Bettisfield Park,[3][4] near Wrexham, Clwyd, Wales (formerly Flintshire).[5][6] His father William seems to have died early, and Thomas was educated in Bury St Edmunds,[n 2] at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford, matriculating on 17 October 1693, age 17. His tutor was Robert Freind, D.D., who was later under-master at Westminster in 1699, and headmaster 1711-1733.[7] Hanmer gained his LL.D., however, Com. Reg.[n 3] from Cambridge University in 1705.[8]

He succeeded as 4th Baronet in 1701 when his uncle, the 3rd Baronet Sir John Hanmer, died in a duel[9] leaving no issue.[10]

He was a high church Tory M.P. for Thetford, 1701-2 and 1705-8; for Flintshire, 1702-5; and for Suffolk, 1708-27.[11][n 4] He was unanimously elected Speaker of the House of Commons in February 1714, during the last Tory government for over 100 years; the Tory party was split between those (like Hamner) who wished to maintain the Protestant succession in Britain, and those with jacobite tendencies who supported James Stuart, the 'Old Pretender' of the Jacobite succession. After the death of Queen Anne in August 1714, George I brought in a government composed entirely of Whigs. The House of Commons was dissolved in January 1715, and Hanmer was not put forward for re-election: in his stead Spencer Compton (later 1st Earl of Wilmington and Prime Minister) was elected Speaker on 17 March 1715,[12][9] although Hannmer continued to serve as an MP until 1727.[13] The Tory party was proscribed from government office until 1760 and the accession of George III.[14]

He was one of the founding governors of the Foundling Hospital, a charity set up for London's abandoned children in 1739, which also became a centre for the arts.[15][16]

Literary activities

Hanmer's Shakespeare was published at Oxford in 1743-44, with nearly forty illustrations by Francis Hayman and Hubert Gravelot.[17] The Cambridge History of English and American Literature states that "The print and binding were magnificent, and caused its value to rise to nine guineas, when Warburton’s edition was going for eighteen shillings."[18]

Hanmer's editing, however, was based on his own selection of emendations from the Shakespeare editions of Alexander Pope and Lewis Theobald, along with his own conjectures, without indicating for the reader what was in his source texts and what was editorially corrected.[19] Therefore, Hanmer's edition is not highly regarded today, with the editors of The Oxford Shakespeare assessing it in William Shakespeare: A Textual Companion as "one of the worst in the eighteenth century."[20]

Also, Hamner became the target of ridicule by Pope, who in his Dunciad lampoons him under the name Montalto (Book IV, 105ff.) and refers to him in a note (IV 113) as "An eminent person, who was about to publish a very pompous Edition of a great Author, at his own expense" (emphasis original).[21]

However, there are some emendations of value that were made by Hanmer which have been accepted into later editions of Shakespeare.[18]

He died in 1746 and was buried at Hanmer.[11] He had married in 1697 Isabella FitzRoy, Duchess of Grafton, the widow of Henry Fitzroy, 1st Duke of Grafton.[22] There was no heir and so the baronetcy became extinct.

See also

References

Notes
  1. Venn & Venn 1922, p. 299 state that William was aged 15 when he entered Pembroke College, Oxford on 17 July 1663, so he was probably born c.1648. Bunbury 1838, p. 4 says that William predeceased his father Thomas, the 2nd Baronet (1612–1678). William thus may have been under 30 when he died. Thomas was born in 1677.
  2. His grandmother Susan, wife of Sir Thomas Hanmer, 2nd Baronet, was the daughter of William Hervey, MP for Bury St Edmunds.
  3. Comitia Regia: a 'commencement' (or comitia maxima) held at Cambridge University on the occasion of a royal visit, characterised, especially in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, by the conferring of 'mandate degrees' (degrees conferred in response to instructions issued by the crown or, on the occasion of royal visits, by the chancellor) on a huge number of persons at a moment’s notice. In the 19th century the expression ‘Commencement’ was applied to a congregation on the penultimate Tuesday in June, when prize exercises were recited (see prolusiones) and all M.A.s and Doctors in all faculties were created. Source: 'Glossary of Cambridge terminology'. Janus.lib.ac.uk. Accessed 22 December 2015.
  4. After his mother Peregrine died, he inherited her Mildenhall estate.
Citations
  1. Burke, John Bernard. A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies
  2. Hayton, D. W. (2003). Hanmer, Thomas II (1677-1746), of Pall Mall, Westminster; Bettisfield Park, Flints.; and Mildenhall, Suff. The History of Parliament. Accessed 22 December 2015. Contains a lengthy and detailed political biography of Sir Thomas.
  3. Bettisfield Hall, (also known as Bettisfield Park), Bettisfield, Wales. Parks and Gardens UK. Accessed on 21 December 2015.
  4. See entry "Hanmer" under Lewis, Samuel (1849). A Topographical Dictionary of Wales: 'Halghston - Hawarden'. (London, 1849), pp. 396-411. British History Online. Accessed 17 December 2015.
  5. Hanmer, John Lord (1877). A Memorial of the Parish and Family of Hanmer in Flintshire, out of the thirteenth into the nineteenth century. London: privately printed at the Chiswick Press, pp. 63, 107, 149ff.
  6. Bunbury, Henry Edward (1838). The correspondence of Sir Thomas Hanmer ... with a memoir of his life, to which are added, other relicks of a gentleman's family. London: Edward Moxon. [Bunbury was Hanmer's brother-in-law]
  7. Bunbury 1838, p. 5.
  8. Venn, John; Venn, J. A. (1922). Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, Volume 1, part 2: Dabbs-Juxton. Cambridge University Press., p. 299
  9. 1 2 Dodd, Arthur Herbert. Hanmer family. Dictionary of Welsh Biography, online edition. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  10. George E. Cokayne Complete Baronetage, Vol. 1 (1900)
  11. 1 2 Venn & Venn 1922, p. 299.
  12. Bunbury 1838, p. 61-2.
  13. Sedgwick, Romney R. (ed.) Hanmer, Sir Thomas, 4th Bt. (1677-1746). The History of Parliament. Accessed 22 December 2015.
  14. Eveline Cruickshanks, Political Untouchables; The Tories and the '45 (Duckworth, 1979), p. 6.
  15. Copy of the Royal Charter Establishing an Hospital for the Maintenance and Education of Exposed and Deserted Young Children. London: Printed for J. Osborn, at the Golden-Ball in Paternoster Row. 1739.
  16. R.H. Nichols and F A. Wray, The History of the Foundling Hospital London: Oxford University Press, 1935, p. 347.
  17. Information from Washington University in St. Louis University Libraries Website article on special collections containing Shakespearean illustrations, accessed November 9, 2006.
  18. 1 2 A.W. Ward, et al., The Cambridge history of English and American literature: An encyclopedia in eighteen volumes. "XI. The Text of Shakespeare. § 13. Hanmer’s edition." New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons; Cambridge, England: University Press, 1907–21. Accessed at bartleby.com on November 9, 2006.
  19. Thomas Hubeart, "Shaking Up Shakespeare," Wayback Machine, accessed 21 December 2015. (Archived from the original, accessed on November 9, 2006 - dead link)
  20. Stanley Wells & Gary Taylor, et al., William Shakespeare: A Textual Companion (NY: Norton, 1997 [reprint of Oxford University Press ed., 1987]), p. 54. ISBN 0-393-31667-X.
  21. Quoted from John Butt, ed., The Poems of Alexander Pope. New Haven: Yale UP, 1963, p. 772. ISBN 0-300-00030-8.
  22. "SELECTED BRIEF BIOGRAPHIES" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-01-27.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
William Bromley
Speaker of the House of Commons
17141715
Succeeded by
Spencer Compton
Baronetage of England
Preceded by
John Hanmer
Baronet
(of Hanmer)
17011746
Succeeded by
Extinct

This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wood, James, ed. (1907). "article name needed". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne. 

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