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Legh Richmond

Legh Richmond (1772–1827) was a Church of England clergyman and writer. He is noted for tracts, narratives of conversion that innovated in the relation of stories of the poor and female subjects, and which were subsequently much imitated.[1] He was also known for an influential collection of letters to his children, powerfully stating an evangelical attitude to childhood of the period, and by misprision sometimes taken as models for parental conversation and family life, for example by novelists, against Richmond's practice.[2][3]

Legh Richmond

MA
Born(1772-01-29)29 January 1772
Died8 May 1827(1827-05-08) (aged 55)
NationalityEnglish
OccupationClergyman
Years active1797-1827
Known forReligious writing
Notable workThe Dairyman's Daughter
Plaque in Brading church commemorating Richmond and his work

Life edit

He was born on 29 January 1772, in Liverpool, the son of Henry Richmond, physician and academic, and his wife Catherine Atherton. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, was ordained deacon in June 1797 and took his MA in July of the same year. On 24 July 1797, two days after marrying Mary Chambers, he was appointed to the joint curacies of St. Mary's Church, Brading and St. John the Baptist Church, Yaverland on the Isle of Wight. He was ordained priest in February 1798.[4][5]

Richmond was powerfully influenced by William Wilberforce's Practical View of Christianity, and took a prominent interest in the British and Foreign Bible Society, the Church Missionary Society, the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews[6] and similar institutions.

In 1805 Richmond became assistant-chaplain to the Lock Hospital, London, for a short period. Later that year he was appointed rector of Turvey, Bedfordshire, as successor to Erasmus Middleton. The patron, Sarah Fuller, consulted Ambrose Serle; who recommended Richmond. He remained at Turvey for the rest of his life.[4][7][8] He began taking pupils at the rectory, two being Charles Longuet Higgins and Walter Augustus Shirley, while teaching his own sons, but was not effectual and passed tuition on to his curates.[9][10]

Richmond was instrumental in unmasking the imposter Ann Moore, the "fasting woman" of Tutbury, in 1813.[4] In 1814 he was appointed[11] chaplain to Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn (1767–1820), father of Queen Victoria.[12]

Richmond died on 8 May 1827.[4] His funeral sermon was preached by the Rev. Thomas Fry of Emberton, a close friend.[13]

Legacy edit

Richmond was one of the first clergymen to found a village Friendly Society. The Turvey Friendly Society was formed to give wages to the poor when they were sick and could not work.[14]

Works edit

It was in Turvey that Richmond began to write stories based on material he had collected while living in the Isle of Wight. These were simple tales about country folk. The Dairyman's Daughter was the first published, followed by The Young Cottager and The Negro Servant. All were originally published in the Christian Guardian between 1809 and 1814. The best known of his writings is The Dairyman's Daughter, of which as many as four millions in nineteen languages were circulated before 1849. A collected edition of his stories of village life was first published by the Religious Tract Society in 1814 under the title of Annals of the Poor. Sixteen years after Richmond's death, the engraver George Brannon[15] published a supplement to Annals of the Poor under the title The Landscape Beauties of the Isle of Wight (1843).[16]

Richmond also edited a series of Reformation theological works, with biographies, in eight volumes called Fathers of the English Church (1807–12).[17]

Tracts edit

  • The Dairyman's Daughter
  • The history of little Jane,[18] the young cottager
  • The Negro servant
  • A Visit to the Infirmary
  • The history of Mary Watson & Jenny Mortimer, two Sunday-School girls : founded on facts
  • The African widow; being the history of a poor black woman : showing how she grieved for the death of her child, and the consequences of her doing so.
  • Annals of the Poor, 1814
  • The Orphan (for a juvenile audience)

Other edit

  • Memoir of Miss Hannah Sinclair, (eldest daughter of the Right Hon. Sir John Sinclair, bart.) who died, May 22, 1818.
  • Walk circumspectly; or, Rules for Christian Conduct
  • Is the 'doctrinal, practical, experimental' system of the Rev. Legh Richmond, the 'true, Scriptural, Evangelical Religion,' as it professes to be, while all others are mere imitations and assumptions of that title?. (London, 1829)

Books edit

  • The Fathers of the English Church: or, A selection from the writings of the reformers and early protestant divines of the Church of England, series edited Richmond. This series appeared in eight volumes, from 1807 to 1812, was unsuccessful in financial terms, leaving Richmond with debts, which were met by supporters in 1814.[4] The work of republication was later taken up by the Parker Society.[19]

Sermons edit

  • A Sermon [on Luke xiii. 3][20] preached in the Parish Church of Brading ... on February 27, 1799, being the Day appointed for a General Fast.
  • A Sermon [on Gen. i. 26] on the sin of cruelty towards the brute creation; preached ... February 15, 1801.
  • A Sermon [on John xxi. 16] preached at the Parish Church of St. Andrew by the Wardrobe and St. Anne, Blackfriars, on Tuesday in Whitsun week, May 23, 1809, before the Society for Missions to Africa and the East, instituted by members of the Established Church, being their ninth anniversary.
  • Reflections, suggested by the close of the year : being a sermon preached at Brading in the Isle of Wight, on the last Sunday of the year.

Letters edit

The following items are also listed in WorldCat.

  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Samuel Hope (1815)
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Thomas Burgess (1816)
  • 2 letters from Legh Richmond to William Wilberforce (1803,1804)
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Samuel Whitbread (1814)
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Harris Cawes (1806)
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Lord Bolton (1803)
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Rev. S. Hillyard
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Rev. W. Renton (1825)
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Chauncy Hare Townshend
  • Letter from Legh Richmond to Joseph John Gurney (1826)
  • Autograph letter signed : Brading, Isle of Wight, to Hannah More, 1804 Jan. 17.
  • Autograph letter signed : to Mr. Relfe, 1826 Feb. 6.
  • Legh Richmond letters, 1807-1815 [21]

Biographers edit

Numerous lives of Richmond have been published. Domestic Portraiture (1833) by his close friend Thomas Fry related to the Richmond household, and in particular the two oldest sons.[4] The Rev. Legh Richmond's letters and counsels to his children (1848),[22] edited by his daughter Fanny Richmond, [citation needed], drew on Domestic Portraiture. A life by John Ayre was included in editions of Annals of the Poor.[23]

Family edit

Richmond in 1797 married Mary Chambers (died 1873), daughter of James William Chambers of Bath. They had 12 children, of whom eight survived their father. Two of the sons, Nugent and Wilberforce, died in 1825.[4]

  • Mary Catherine, eldest daughter.[28] She married in 1822 the Rev. James Marshall (1796–1855), and was mother of Sir James Marshall (1829–1889).[29]
  • Frances (Fanny), the second daughter, married George Farish, a barrister. She was widowed, and then married the Rev. James L. Harris.[30]
  • Henrietta Anne, the third daughter, married the Rev. John Ayre in 1825.[31][32]
  • Samuel Nugent Legh, eldest son.[4]
  • Thomas Henry Wilberforce, second son, died 16 January 1825.[33]
  • Henry Sylvester, died 1872, third son, became rector of Wyck Rissington.[34]
  • Legh Brooke[35]
  • Catherine, married T. D. Close.[35]
  • Legh Serle, married first Cecelia, daughter of Alexander Cheyne, and secondly Georgiana, daughter of Thomas Shuttleworth Grimshawe.[35]
  • Charlotte Elizabeth, married the Rev. Charles Bowen of Chester[35]
  • Theophilus Pelatt, M.D., died in Demerara in 1838 at age 23.[36]
  • Atherton.[35]

References edit

  1. ^ Juliette Atkinson (26 August 2010). Victorian Biography Reconsidered: A Study of Nineteenth-Century 'Hidden' Lives. Oxford University Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-19-957213-7.
  2. ^ Heather Glen (2002). Charlotte Brontë: The Imagination in History. Oxford University Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-19-818761-5.
  3. ^ Doreen M. Rosman (18 July 2012). Evangelicals and Culture. Casemate Publishers. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-227-68034-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Taylor, Clare L. "Richmond, Legh". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23595. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ "Richmond, Legh (RCMT789L)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  6. ^ The Jewish Expositor and Friend of Israel: Containing Monthly Communications Respecting the Jews and the Proceedings of the London Society, Volume 5
  7. ^ The Life of Rev. Legh Richmond, Author of the Dairyman's Daughter, Young Cottager, Etc: Compiled from Authentic Sources. G. Lane & P.P. Sandford. 1842. pp. 50–1.
  8. ^ "Presentation Deed: Turvey (Bedfordshire), Rectory, Lincs to the Past". Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  9. ^ Burgon, John William (1888). "Lives of Twelve Good Men". Internet Archive. London: Murray. pp. 360–1. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  10. ^ Gregory, Stephen. "Shirley, Walter Augustus". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25439. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  11. ^ "CCED: Person Display".
  12. ^ Grimshawe, Thomas Shuttleworth, A Memoir of the Rev. Legh Richmond, A.M., of Trinity College, Cambridge; Rector of Turvey, Bedfordshire; and chaplain to his Royal Highness the late Duke of Kent
  13. ^ Munby, G. F. W.; Thomas Wright of Olney (1893). "Turvey and the Mordaunts, with some account of Legh Richmond and his connection with Turvey". Internet Archive. London: F. Kirby. p. 44. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  14. ^ "Leigh Richmond - People - Digitised Resources - the Virtual Library".
  15. ^ Brannon, George, on Island Eye
  16. ^ Brannon, George. The Landscape Beauties of the Isle of Wight, as Described by L. Richmond (in His Celebrated "Annals of the Poor"). Illustrated with engravings of some of the principal objects, explanatory notes and such other additional information as are necessary to constitute a brief local guide. Wootton Common: George Brannon, 1843.
  17. ^ https://archive.org/stream/cyclopaediabibl01darlgoog#page/n483/mode/1up
  18. ^ Identified as Jane Squibb in some editions.
  19. ^ A General Index to the publications of the Parker Society. Cambridge University Press. 1855. p. iii.
  20. ^ Amplified title: The miseries of surrounding nations an awful warning to Britain
  21. ^ This collection consists of three letters. Two letters are from 1807 and are addressed to a Reverend Aspland in Cambridge, who appears to be a librarian. In the first letter, dated 20 July 1807, Richmond tells Aspland that a Dr. Jowet has advised him to borrow several books from the library. He refers to works by several men, calling them martyrs. The second letter from Richmond to Aspland is dated 21 October 1807 (from WorldCat record).
  22. ^ Selected from his memoir and "Domestic portraiture"; with an account of the closing scene of his life.
  23. ^ Jared Sparks; Edward Everett; James Russell Lowell; Henry Cabot Lodge (1861). The North American Review. University of Northern Iowa. p. 265.
  24. ^ David Newsome (1966). The Parting of Friends: The Wilberforces and Henry Manning. Gracewing Publishing. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-8028-3714-1.
  25. ^ The British Critic, and Quarterly Theological Review. F. and C. Rivington. 1830. p. 154.
  26. ^ "Life of Legh Richmond: Bedell, Gregor Townsend, 1793-1834". Retrieved 5 March 2017 – via Internet Archive.
  27. ^ "Catalog Record: The life of Rev. Legh Richmond, author of the... , Hathi Trust Digital Library". Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  28. ^ Legh Richmond; Fanny Richmond (18 August 2016). The Rev. Legh Richmond's Letters and Counsels to His Children. Curiosmith. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-941281-79-6.
  29. ^ Matthew, H. C. G. "Marshall, James". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18138. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  30. ^ The Gentleman's Magazine. A. Dodd and A. Smith. 1845. p. 523.
  31. ^ Thomas Shuttleworth Grimshawe (1844). A Memoir of the Rev. Legh Richmond ... M.W. Dodd. p. 297.
  32. ^ "Ayre, John (AR819J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  33. ^ Sylvanus Urban (1825). The Gentleman's Magazine. p. 189.
  34. ^ "Richmond, Henry Sylvester (RCMT827HS)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  35. ^ a b c d e Remains, Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine Counties of Lancaster and Chester. Chetham Society. 1879. p. 193.
  36. ^ Gentleman's Magazine, Or Monthly Intelligencer. Edward Cave. 1838. p. 454.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • The Negro Servant in "Annals of the Poor. Containing The Dairyman's Daughter, (with considerable additions) The Negro Servant, and the Young Cottager." New Haven: Whiting and Tiffany, Sign of Franklin's Head, Corner of College Green, 1815.
  • Works by Legh Richmond at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Legh Richmond at Internet Archive
  • Legh Richmond collection, 1807-1815 at Pitts Theology Library, Candler School of Theology
  • Rev. Legh Richmond, Information on Legh Richmond, The Turvey Website - a site dedicated the history and families of the Bedfordshire village of Turvey.

legh, richmond, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, as. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Legh Richmond 1772 1827 was a Church of England clergyman and writer He is noted for tracts narratives of conversion that innovated in the relation of stories of the poor and female subjects and which were subsequently much imitated 1 He was also known for an influential collection of letters to his children powerfully stating an evangelical attitude to childhood of the period and by misprision sometimes taken as models for parental conversation and family life for example by novelists against Richmond s practice 2 3 Legh RichmondMABorn 1772 01 29 29 January 1772LiverpoolDied8 May 1827 1827 05 08 aged 55 Turvey BedfordshireNationalityEnglishOccupationClergymanYears active1797 1827Known forReligious writingNotable workThe Dairyman s Daughter Plaque in Brading church commemorating Richmond and his workContents 1 Life 2 Legacy 3 Works 3 1 Tracts 3 2 Other 3 3 Books 3 4 Sermons 3 5 Letters 4 Biographers 5 Family 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksLife editHe was born on 29 January 1772 in Liverpool the son of Henry Richmond physician and academic and his wife Catherine Atherton He was educated at Trinity College Cambridge was ordained deacon in June 1797 and took his MA in July of the same year On 24 July 1797 two days after marrying Mary Chambers he was appointed to the joint curacies of St Mary s Church Brading and St John the Baptist Church Yaverland on the Isle of Wight He was ordained priest in February 1798 4 5 Richmond was powerfully influenced by William Wilberforce s Practical View of Christianity and took a prominent interest in the British and Foreign Bible Society the Church Missionary Society the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews 6 and similar institutions In 1805 Richmond became assistant chaplain to the Lock Hospital London for a short period Later that year he was appointed rector of Turvey Bedfordshire as successor to Erasmus Middleton The patron Sarah Fuller consulted Ambrose Serle who recommended Richmond He remained at Turvey for the rest of his life 4 7 8 He began taking pupils at the rectory two being Charles Longuet Higgins and Walter Augustus Shirley while teaching his own sons but was not effectual and passed tuition on to his curates 9 10 Richmond was instrumental in unmasking the imposter Ann Moore the fasting woman of Tutbury in 1813 4 In 1814 he was appointed 11 chaplain to Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn 1767 1820 father of Queen Victoria 12 Richmond died on 8 May 1827 4 His funeral sermon was preached by the Rev Thomas Fry of Emberton a close friend 13 Legacy editRichmond was one of the first clergymen to found a village Friendly Society The Turvey Friendly Society was formed to give wages to the poor when they were sick and could not work 14 Works editIt was in Turvey that Richmond began to write stories based on material he had collected while living in the Isle of Wight These were simple tales about country folk The Dairyman s Daughter was the first published followed by The Young Cottager and The Negro Servant All were originally published in the Christian Guardian between 1809 and 1814 The best known of his writings is The Dairyman s Daughter of which as many as four millions in nineteen languages were circulated before 1849 A collected edition of his stories of village life was first published by the Religious Tract Society in 1814 under the title of Annals of the Poor Sixteen years after Richmond s death the engraver George Brannon 15 published a supplement to Annals of the Poor under the title The Landscape Beauties of the Isle of Wight 1843 16 Richmond also edited a series of Reformation theological works with biographies in eight volumes called Fathers of the English Church 1807 12 17 Tracts edit The Dairyman s Daughter The history of little Jane 18 the young cottager The Negro servant A Visit to the Infirmary The history of Mary Watson amp Jenny Mortimer two Sunday School girls founded on facts The African widow being the history of a poor black woman showing how she grieved for the death of her child and the consequences of her doing so Annals of the Poor 1814 The Orphan for a juvenile audience Other edit Memoir of Miss Hannah Sinclair eldest daughter of the Right Hon Sir John Sinclair bart who died May 22 1818 Walk circumspectly or Rules for Christian Conduct Is the doctrinal practical experimental system of the Rev Legh Richmond the true Scriptural Evangelical Religion as it professes to be while all others are mere imitations and assumptions of that title London 1829 Books edit The Fathers of the English Church or A selection from the writings of the reformers and early protestant divines of the Church of England series edited Richmond This series appeared in eight volumes from 1807 to 1812 was unsuccessful in financial terms leaving Richmond with debts which were met by supporters in 1814 4 The work of republication was later taken up by the Parker Society 19 Sermons edit A Sermon on Luke xiii 3 20 preached in the Parish Church of Brading on February 27 1799 being the Day appointed for a General Fast A Sermon on Gen i 26 on the sin of cruelty towards the brute creation preached February 15 1801 A Sermon on John xxi 16 preached at the Parish Church of St Andrew by the Wardrobe and St Anne Blackfriars on Tuesday in Whitsun week May 23 1809 before the Society for Missions to Africa and the East instituted by members of the Established Church being their ninth anniversary Reflections suggested by the close of the year being a sermon preached at Brading in the Isle of Wight on the last Sunday of the year Letters edit The following items are also listed in WorldCat Letter from Legh Richmond to Samuel Hope 1815 Letter from Legh Richmond to Thomas Burgess 1816 2 letters from Legh Richmond to William Wilberforce 1803 1804 Letter from Legh Richmond to Samuel Whitbread 1814 Letter from Legh Richmond to Harris Cawes 1806 Letter from Legh Richmond to Lord Bolton 1803 Letter from Legh Richmond to Rev S Hillyard Letter from Legh Richmond to Rev W Renton 1825 Letter from Legh Richmond to Chauncy Hare Townshend Letter from Legh Richmond to Joseph John Gurney 1826 Autograph letter signed Brading Isle of Wight to Hannah More 1804 Jan 17 Autograph letter signed to Mr Relfe 1826 Feb 6 Legh Richmond letters 1807 1815 21 Biographers editNumerous lives of Richmond have been published Domestic Portraiture 1833 by his close friend Thomas Fry related to the Richmond household and in particular the two oldest sons 4 The Rev Legh Richmond s letters and counsels to his children 1848 22 edited by his daughter Fanny Richmond citation needed drew on Domestic Portraiture A life by John Ayre was included in editions of Annals of the Poor 23 Memoirs of the Rev Legh Richmond A M first edition 1828 by Thomas Shuttleworth Grimshawe 4 It was disliked by Samuel Wilberforce on theological grounds for its handling of baptismal regeneration 24 As part of the wider debate on evangelicalism the British Critic in 1830 reviewed positively an anonymous hostile pamphlet on Richmond s doctrine provoked by Grimshawe s biography and addressed to William Wilberforce 25 By Gregory T Bedell 1829 26 Life compiled from authentic sources 1842 published for the Methodist Episcopal Church is attributed to Stephen B Wickens 27 Family editRichmond in 1797 married Mary Chambers died 1873 daughter of James William Chambers of Bath They had 12 children of whom eight survived their father Two of the sons Nugent and Wilberforce died in 1825 4 Mary Catherine eldest daughter 28 She married in 1822 the Rev James Marshall 1796 1855 and was mother of Sir James Marshall 1829 1889 29 Frances Fanny the second daughter married George Farish a barrister She was widowed and then married the Rev James L Harris 30 Henrietta Anne the third daughter married the Rev John Ayre in 1825 31 32 Samuel Nugent Legh eldest son 4 Thomas Henry Wilberforce second son died 16 January 1825 33 Henry Sylvester died 1872 third son became rector of Wyck Rissington 34 Legh Brooke 35 Catherine married T D Close 35 Legh Serle married first Cecelia daughter of Alexander Cheyne and secondly Georgiana daughter of Thomas Shuttleworth Grimshawe 35 Charlotte Elizabeth married the Rev Charles Bowen of Chester 35 Theophilus Pelatt M D died in Demerara in 1838 at age 23 36 Atherton 35 References edit Juliette Atkinson 26 August 2010 Victorian Biography Reconsidered A Study of Nineteenth Century Hidden Lives Oxford University Press p 77 ISBN 978 0 19 957213 7 Heather Glen 2002 Charlotte Bronte The Imagination in History Oxford University Press p 69 ISBN 978 0 19 818761 5 Doreen M Rosman 18 July 2012 Evangelicals and Culture Casemate Publishers p 80 ISBN 978 0 227 68034 6 a b c d e f g h i Taylor Clare L Richmond Legh Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23595 Subscription or UK public library membership required Richmond Legh RCMT789L A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge The Jewish Expositor and Friend of Israel Containing Monthly Communications Respecting the Jews and the Proceedings of the London Society Volume 5 The Life of Rev Legh Richmond Author of the Dairyman s Daughter Young Cottager Etc Compiled from Authentic Sources G Lane amp P P Sandford 1842 pp 50 1 Presentation Deed Turvey Bedfordshire Rectory Lincs to the Past Retrieved 5 March 2017 Burgon John William 1888 Lives of Twelve Good Men Internet Archive London Murray pp 360 1 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Gregory Stephen Shirley Walter Augustus Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25439 Subscription or UK public library membership required CCED Person Display Grimshawe Thomas Shuttleworth A Memoir of the Rev Legh Richmond A M of Trinity College Cambridge Rector of Turvey Bedfordshire and chaplain to his Royal Highness the late Duke of Kent Munby G F W Thomas Wright of Olney 1893 Turvey and the Mordaunts with some account of Legh Richmond and his connection with Turvey Internet Archive London F Kirby p 44 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Leigh Richmond People Digitised Resources the Virtual Library Brannon George on Island Eye Brannon George The Landscape Beauties of the Isle of Wight as Described by L Richmond in His Celebrated Annals of the Poor Illustrated with engravings of some of the principal objects explanatory notes and such other additional information as are necessary to constitute a brief local guide Wootton Common George Brannon 1843 https archive org stream cyclopaediabibl01darlgoog page n483 mode 1up Identified as Jane Squibb in some editions A General Index to the publications of the Parker Society Cambridge University Press 1855 p iii Amplified title The miseries of surrounding nations an awful warning to Britain This collection consists of three letters Two letters are from 1807 and are addressed to a Reverend Aspland in Cambridge who appears to be a librarian In the first letter dated 20 July 1807 Richmond tells Aspland that a Dr Jowet has advised him to borrow several books from the library He refers to works by several men calling them martyrs The second letter from Richmond to Aspland is dated 21 October 1807 from WorldCat record Selected from his memoir and Domestic portraiture with an account of the closing scene of his life Jared Sparks Edward Everett James Russell Lowell Henry Cabot Lodge 1861 The North American Review University of Northern Iowa p 265 David Newsome 1966 The Parting of Friends The Wilberforces and Henry Manning Gracewing Publishing p 128 ISBN 978 0 8028 3714 1 The British Critic and Quarterly Theological Review F and C Rivington 1830 p 154 Life of Legh Richmond Bedell Gregor Townsend 1793 1834 Retrieved 5 March 2017 via Internet Archive Catalog Record The life of Rev Legh Richmond author of the Hathi Trust Digital Library Retrieved 5 March 2017 Legh Richmond Fanny Richmond 18 August 2016 The Rev Legh Richmond s Letters and Counsels to His Children Curiosmith p 13 ISBN 978 1 941281 79 6 Matthew H C G Marshall James Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18138 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Gentleman s Magazine A Dodd and A Smith 1845 p 523 Thomas Shuttleworth Grimshawe 1844 A Memoir of the Rev Legh Richmond M W Dodd p 297 Ayre John AR819J A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Sylvanus Urban 1825 The Gentleman s Magazine p 189 Richmond Henry Sylvester RCMT827HS A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c d e Remains Historical and Literary Connected with the Palatine Counties of Lancaster and Chester Chetham Society 1879 p 193 Gentleman s Magazine Or Monthly Intelligencer Edward Cave 1838 p 454 Sources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Richmond Legh Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Lee Sidney ed 1896 Richmond Legh Dictionary of National Biography Vol 48 London Smith Elder amp Co External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1905 New International Encyclopedia article about Legh Richmond The Negro Servant in Annals of the Poor Containing The Dairyman s Daughter with considerable additions The Negro Servant and the Young Cottager New Haven Whiting and Tiffany Sign of Franklin s Head Corner of College Green 1815 Works by Legh Richmond at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Legh Richmond at Internet Archive Legh Richmond collection 1807 1815 at Pitts Theology Library Candler School of Theology Rev Legh Richmond Information on Legh Richmond The Turvey Website a site dedicated the history and families of the Bedfordshire village of Turvey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Legh Richmond amp oldid 1215130429, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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