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William Henry Black

William Henry Black FSA (7 May 1808 – 12 April 1872) was a Victorian antiquarian and Seventh-Day Baptist leader. During his lifetime, he was well known in London antiquarian and literary circles for his talent for paleography and archiving. He was the member of many historical societies, and the founder of three more. He published numerous articles and books, during his lifetime, with more published posthumously.

William Henry Black
William Henry Black, unknown date.[1]
Born7 May 1808
Died12 April 1872
Mill Yard, Whitehall, London
Occupation(s)Antiquarian, paleographer, preacher
Signature

Black was lesser known, but equally regarded, for his prominence in London Seventh-Day Baptist circles, leading a small congregation in London, which never held more than twenty people. This circle was the subject of a newspaper article in 1869, where the reporter wrote of the contrast between the dilapidated building the services were held in, and their leader, Black, who appeared as "a profound scholar and most courteous gentleman".

Early life and education Edit

William Henry Black was born on 7 May 1808, in Walworth, Surrey, to Mary and John Black of Kitmore. His mother's family, the Langleys, were the wealthy proprietors of estates in Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire, and strongly influenced Black's religious and historical interests, as well as his future religious opinion. He was educated at a private school, and acted as the tutor of several families in Tulse Hill when he was seventeen.[2][3]

Antiquarian career Edit

The earliest record of Black's antiquarian interests exist in his catalogues of various libraries. He catalogued the Arundel Manuscripts, at the College of Arms in 1829 (before they were purchased by the British Library) and, as the Leathersellers' Company requested in 1831, Abraham Colfe's grammar school library. From 1831 to 1833, Black worked in Oxford, compiling a catalogue of Elias Ashmole's manuscripts, published in 1845, to much esteem.[2][3] Early on in his career, he was also a contributor to the works of other antiquarians, including Sir Richard Hoare, 2nd Baronet's The History of Modern Wiltshire (11 vols; 1822–44) and Samuel Bentley's Excerpta Historica (1831). Upon the 1834 Burning of Parliament, Black boasted that he had been the earliest researcher to rush into the parliament buildings in hope of saving their valuable records. Thanks to the many literary contacts he had made while a reader at the British Museum, Black obtained a position at the Record Commission, a 19th-century royal commission into the state of the nation's archives.[3]

This position at the commission proved valuable to Black, as his antiquarian interests were occupied with the training of junior transcribers, and revision of Thomas Rymer's Foedera, a set of volumes detailing "all the leagues, treaties, alliances, capitulations, and confederacies, which have at any time been made between the Crown of England and any other kingdoms, princes and states".[3][4] He also produced an original work in this time, Docquets of Letters Patent Passed Under Charles I, 1642-6, which was printed in 1837, but only published posthumously.[3][5]

In 1840, again thanks to his literary connections, and his reputation as a paleographer, Black acquired the position of assistant keeper at the Public Record Office, which had been established only two years earlier. His duties, here, included cataloguing the Pell Office records and preparing reports on the records of HM Treasury.[6][3] This career lasted until 1853, as his vehement Sabbatarianism annoyed his employers, who required him to work on Saturdays, though his duties at the Treasury continued until 1854.[3]

Black was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1858, and was appointed into the Society's council three times, in 1863, 1864, and 1867.[7] He was one of the earliest members of the British Archaeological Association (est. 1843) the Camden Society, and several English local history societies, specifically: the Surrey, London and Middlesex, and Wiltshire Archaeological societies. He was also the founder of three antiquarian societies, all concerning Biblical archaeology: the Chronological Institute of London (est. 1850),[8] the Palestine Archaeological Association, and the Anglo-Biblical Institute.[2][3] By 1870, each of these had been voluntarily subsumed into the newly founded Society of Biblical Archaeology (which was, itself, later absorbed into the Royal Asiatic Society).[9] According to Bernard Nurse of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Black was "highly regarded by his contemporaries", and John Ashton, writing for the Dictionary of National Biography, has called him "a conscientious and painstaking antiquary".[2][3] In his obituary, he was flatteringly described as being "richly stored with archaic learning and palaeographical knowledge, which he was always alike ready to impart to the youthful student and to give to the world at large."[6]

Black was a prolific historical researcher. He issued several pamphlets on Biblical history, and the majority of issues of the Journal of the British Archaeological Association, from 1846 to 1872, contained articles by him. As a fellow of the society, several of his communications were published in the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London, between 1861 and 1871. His first communication to the Society concerned the will of Hans Holbein the Younger, and caused a significant stir, with his obituary in the Proceedings claiming it caused "a complete revolution in the history of Holbein's works".[6] Black also edited three volumes of early modern English poetry, for publication by the Percy Society. Near the end of his life, Black prepared an edition of the Antonine Itinerary for the Rolls Series, which Ashton recorded "still await[ed] editing and publication" in 1886, and never ended up being published.[2][3]

Seventh-Day Baptism Edit

 
The Baptist Church of Mill Yard, Whitechapel, c. 1883

In 1840, Black became the afternoon preacher of a small Seventh-Day Baptist community in Mill Yard, on Leman Street, Whitechapel, following from J. B. Shepston.[10] During this time there were only five members: himself, and the Slaters: Harriet (his third wife), Ann, Charlotte and Sophia.[1] Here, he occupied the minister's house of 15 Mill Yard.[7] While he served here, the congregation never grew over twenty people.[1] At this congregation, Black was constantly involved in litigation relating to his religious matters.[3] A member of the Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral charged Black with crypto-Judaism, due to his emphasis in the Old Testament in his sermons, a charge which Black vigorously rebuked.[11] In 1851, he was charged with libeling a fellow Baptist minister, and was forced to pay heavy damages.[3] Black continued as the minister of this congregation until his death, in 1872.[12] He was followed by his son-in-law, William Mead Jones.[1] In 1885, this congregation moved from Mill Yard, as their premises were sold on to the LTS Railway Company.[13]

In 1869, Black's congregation was the subject of a newspaper article by C. M. Davies, where he found the building in disrepair, with a languishing fourteen-person congregation, in an "unlikely-looking, unsavoury place".[12][1] Despite this, Davies records his meeting with Black as a pleasant surprise:

A venerable scholar-like old man, arrayed in clerical black, and with a long white beard, received me most courteously, [...] I expected to find some illiterate minister, with a hobby ridden to death, when lo ! I found myself in the presence of a profound scholar and most courteous gentleman, who informed me that he thought in Latin, said his prayers in Hebrew, and read his New Testament lessons from the original Greek. [...] Shall I add another "idea" also? — that it would be no harm if some of our Sunday preachers would take a quiet run out on Saturday to Goodman's Fields, and carry away an original notion or two from [...] the Seventh-day Baptist minister, William Henry Black, FSA.[11]

Personal life and death Edit

William Henry Black was married three times. Black first married, at age twenty-two, to Elizabeth White. They had three daughters. In 1841, Black was remarried to Mary Anne (d. 1843), daughter of doctor Benjamin Noakes. Again, in 1844, Black was remarried to Harriot (d. 1861), daughter of William Slater, minister of Mill Yard. Theodora, Black's daughter, married William Mead Jones, who became his successor as pastor.[3]

While at his job in the Public Record Office, Black suffered a marked decline in health, and believed his vision was damaged after a sewage-related incident in the Treasury Chambers. Davies recorded that Black was a keen poet, "one of the irritabile genus vatum [irritable race of poets (Horace)]", having rebuked claims of crypto-Judaism using the medium.[11] Black died in Mill Yard, on 12 April 1872, leaving behind less than £1500 in his will.[3]

Bibliography Edit

  • Catalogue of the Arundel Manuscripts in the Library of the College of Arms (Not published; 1829)
  • Bibliothecæ Colfanæ catalogus. Catalogue of the library in the Free grammar-school at Lewisham, founded by Rev. Abraham Colfe (London: Worshipful Company of Leathersellers; 1831)
  • Docquets of Letters Patent and other Instruments Passed under the Great Seal of King Charles I at Oxford in the years 1642-6 (Printed but never published; 1836)
  • Treatise on Arabic Numerals (Manuscript; 1839)
  • "A Paraphrase on the Seven Penitential Psalms in English Verse" in Percy Society Early English Poetry and Ballads of the Middle Ages, 7 (London: Percy Society; 1842)
  • A Descriptive, Analytical and Critical Catalogue of the Manuscripts Bequeathed unto the University of Oxford by Elias Ashmole (Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1845)
  • The Life and martyrdom of Thomas Beket, archbishop of Canterbury: from the series of lives and legends now proved to have been composed by Robert of Gloucester (London: Percy Society; 1845)
  • The enterlude of John Bon & Mast Person : a dialogue on the festival of Corpus Christi and on transubstantiation in verse (London: Percy Society; 1852)
  • On the Records of Chester Castle (Chester: The Courant Office; 1854)
  • "The Calendar of Palestine, Reconciled with the Law of Moses, against the Theory of Michealis" (London: Chronological Institute; 1861-2)
  • Discovery of the Will of Hans Holbein (London: J.B. Nichols & Sons; 1863)
  • Letters to Eminent Antiquaries on the Primitive Site and Plan of Roman (London: Private Distribution; 1863)'
  • History and Antiquities of the Worshipful Company of Leathersellers (London; 1871)

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Dissenters and Nonconformists (1): Introduction & Baptists". St George-in-the-East Church. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e Ashton, John (1886). "Black, William Henry" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 5. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Nurse, Bernard (2009). "Black, William Henry". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2500. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ "Browse collection: Rymer's Foedera". British History Online. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  5. ^ Cockburn, J. S. (7 September 1972). A History of English Assizes, 1558–1714. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 262. ISBN 9780521084499.
  6. ^ a b c "Wednesday, April 23rd 1873. [Containing an obituary of Black]". Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London. 6: 1–10. 1876. doi:10.1017/S0950797300001384.
  7. ^ a b Micklewright, F. H. A. (2 November 1946). "Some further notes on Mill Yard meeting-house". Notes and Queries. 191 (9): 185–189. doi:10.1093/nq/191.9.185.
  8. ^ London, Chronological Institute of (1852). Transactions of the Chronological Institute of London, Part 1. London. p. Title page.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Davies, Graham (23 July 2012). "The Beginnings of 'Biblical Archeology'". In Provan, Iain; Boda, Mark (eds.). Let Us Go Up to Zion: Essays in Honour of H. G. M. Williamson. pp. 4–5 (fn. 5). ISBN 9789004215986.
  10. ^ Micklewright, F. H. A. (19 October 1946). "Some further notes on Mill Yard meeting-house". Notes and Queries. 191 (8): 161–163. doi:10.1093/nq/191.8.161.
  11. ^ a b c Davies, C. M. (1874). "Saturday with the Seventh-Day Baptists". Unorthodox London; or, Phases of religious life in the Metropolis. London: Tinsley Brothers. pp. 227-237.
  12. ^ a b Micklewright, F. H. A. (7 September 1946). "A congregation of Sabbatarian and Unitarian Baptists". Notes and Queries. 191 (5): 95–99. doi:10.1093/nq/191.5.95.
  13. ^ Micklewright, F. H. A. (5 October 1946). "Some further notes on Mill Yard meeting house". Notes and Queries. 191 (7): 137–140. doi:10.1093/nq/191.7.137.

External links Edit

  • Photograph of William Henry Black at The National Archives (Available on paid request)
  • "Black, William Henry (1808-1872), antiquary" at The National Archives: Record Creators

william, henry, black, 1808, april, 1872, victorian, antiquarian, seventh, baptist, leader, during, lifetime, well, known, london, antiquarian, literary, circles, talent, paleography, archiving, member, many, historical, societies, founder, three, more, publis. William Henry Black FSA 7 May 1808 12 April 1872 was a Victorian antiquarian and Seventh Day Baptist leader During his lifetime he was well known in London antiquarian and literary circles for his talent for paleography and archiving He was the member of many historical societies and the founder of three more He published numerous articles and books during his lifetime with more published posthumously William Henry BlackWilliam Henry Black unknown date 1 Born7 May 1808Walworth SurreyDied12 April 1872Mill Yard Whitehall LondonOccupation s Antiquarian paleographer preacherSignatureBlack was lesser known but equally regarded for his prominence in London Seventh Day Baptist circles leading a small congregation in London which never held more than twenty people This circle was the subject of a newspaper article in 1869 where the reporter wrote of the contrast between the dilapidated building the services were held in and their leader Black who appeared as a profound scholar and most courteous gentleman Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Antiquarian career 3 Seventh Day Baptism 4 Personal life and death 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education EditWilliam Henry Black was born on 7 May 1808 in Walworth Surrey to Mary and John Black of Kitmore His mother s family the Langleys were the wealthy proprietors of estates in Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire and strongly influenced Black s religious and historical interests as well as his future religious opinion He was educated at a private school and acted as the tutor of several families in Tulse Hill when he was seventeen 2 3 Antiquarian career EditThe earliest record of Black s antiquarian interests exist in his catalogues of various libraries He catalogued the Arundel Manuscripts at the College of Arms in 1829 before they were purchased by the British Library and as the Leathersellers Company requested in 1831 Abraham Colfe s grammar school library From 1831 to 1833 Black worked in Oxford compiling a catalogue of Elias Ashmole s manuscripts published in 1845 to much esteem 2 3 Early on in his career he was also a contributor to the works of other antiquarians including Sir Richard Hoare 2nd Baronet s The History of Modern Wiltshire 11 vols 1822 44 and Samuel Bentley s Excerpta Historica 1831 Upon the 1834 Burning of Parliament Black boasted that he had been the earliest researcher to rush into the parliament buildings in hope of saving their valuable records Thanks to the many literary contacts he had made while a reader at the British Museum Black obtained a position at the Record Commission a 19th century royal commission into the state of the nation s archives 3 This position at the commission proved valuable to Black as his antiquarian interests were occupied with the training of junior transcribers and revision of Thomas Rymer s Foedera a set of volumes detailing all the leagues treaties alliances capitulations and confederacies which have at any time been made between the Crown of England and any other kingdoms princes and states 3 4 He also produced an original work in this time Docquets of Letters Patent Passed Under Charles I 1642 6 which was printed in 1837 but only published posthumously 3 5 In 1840 again thanks to his literary connections and his reputation as a paleographer Black acquired the position of assistant keeper at the Public Record Office which had been established only two years earlier His duties here included cataloguing the Pell Office records and preparing reports on the records of HM Treasury 6 3 This career lasted until 1853 as his vehement Sabbatarianism annoyed his employers who required him to work on Saturdays though his duties at the Treasury continued until 1854 3 Black was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1858 and was appointed into the Society s council three times in 1863 1864 and 1867 7 He was one of the earliest members of the British Archaeological Association est 1843 the Camden Society and several English local history societies specifically the Surrey London and Middlesex and Wiltshire Archaeological societies He was also the founder of three antiquarian societies all concerning Biblical archaeology the Chronological Institute of London est 1850 8 the Palestine Archaeological Association and the Anglo Biblical Institute 2 3 By 1870 each of these had been voluntarily subsumed into the newly founded Society of Biblical Archaeology which was itself later absorbed into the Royal Asiatic Society 9 According to Bernard Nurse of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Black was highly regarded by his contemporaries and John Ashton writing for the Dictionary of National Biography has called him a conscientious and painstaking antiquary 2 3 In his obituary he was flatteringly described as being richly stored with archaic learning and palaeographical knowledge which he was always alike ready to impart to the youthful student and to give to the world at large 6 Black was a prolific historical researcher He issued several pamphlets on Biblical history and the majority of issues of the Journal of the British Archaeological Association from 1846 to 1872 contained articles by him As a fellow of the society several of his communications were published in the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London between 1861 and 1871 His first communication to the Society concerned the will of Hans Holbein the Younger and caused a significant stir with his obituary in the Proceedings claiming it caused a complete revolution in the history of Holbein s works 6 Black also edited three volumes of early modern English poetry for publication by the Percy Society Near the end of his life Black prepared an edition of the Antonine Itinerary for the Rolls Series which Ashton recorded still await ed editing and publication in 1886 and never ended up being published 2 3 Seventh Day Baptism Edit The Baptist Church of Mill Yard Whitechapel c 1883In 1840 Black became the afternoon preacher of a small Seventh Day Baptist community in Mill Yard on Leman Street Whitechapel following from J B Shepston 10 During this time there were only five members himself and the Slaters Harriet his third wife Ann Charlotte and Sophia 1 Here he occupied the minister s house of 15 Mill Yard 7 While he served here the congregation never grew over twenty people 1 At this congregation Black was constantly involved in litigation relating to his religious matters 3 A member of the Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral charged Black with crypto Judaism due to his emphasis in the Old Testament in his sermons a charge which Black vigorously rebuked 11 In 1851 he was charged with libeling a fellow Baptist minister and was forced to pay heavy damages 3 Black continued as the minister of this congregation until his death in 1872 12 He was followed by his son in law William Mead Jones 1 In 1885 this congregation moved from Mill Yard as their premises were sold on to the LTS Railway Company 13 In 1869 Black s congregation was the subject of a newspaper article by C M Davies where he found the building in disrepair with a languishing fourteen person congregation in an unlikely looking unsavoury place 12 1 Despite this Davies records his meeting with Black as a pleasant surprise A venerable scholar like old man arrayed in clerical black and with a long white beard received me most courteously I expected to find some illiterate minister with a hobby ridden to death when lo I found myself in the presence of a profound scholar and most courteous gentleman who informed me that he thought in Latin said his prayers in Hebrew and read his New Testament lessons from the original Greek Shall I add another idea also that it would be no harm if some of our Sunday preachers would take a quiet run out on Saturday to Goodman s Fields and carry away an original notion or two from the Seventh day Baptist minister William Henry Black FSA 11 Personal life and death EditWilliam Henry Black was married three times Black first married at age twenty two to Elizabeth White They had three daughters In 1841 Black was remarried to Mary Anne d 1843 daughter of doctor Benjamin Noakes Again in 1844 Black was remarried to Harriot d 1861 daughter of William Slater minister of Mill Yard Theodora Black s daughter married William Mead Jones who became his successor as pastor 3 While at his job in the Public Record Office Black suffered a marked decline in health and believed his vision was damaged after a sewage related incident in the Treasury Chambers Davies recorded that Black was a keen poet one of the irritabile genus vatum irritable race of poets Horace having rebuked claims of crypto Judaism using the medium 11 Black died in Mill Yard on 12 April 1872 leaving behind less than 1500 in his will 3 Bibliography EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2019 Catalogue of the Arundel Manuscripts in the Library of the College of Arms Not published 1829 Bibliothecae Colfanae catalogus Catalogue of the library in the Free grammar school at Lewisham founded by Rev Abraham Colfe London Worshipful Company of Leathersellers 1831 Docquets of Letters Patent and other Instruments Passed under the Great Seal of King Charles I at Oxford in the years 1642 6 Printed but never published 1836 Treatise on Arabic Numerals Manuscript 1839 A Paraphrase on the Seven Penitential Psalms in English Verse in Percy Society Early English Poetry and Ballads of the Middle Ages 7 London Percy Society 1842 A Descriptive Analytical and Critical Catalogue of the Manuscripts Bequeathed unto the University of Oxford by Elias Ashmole Oxford Oxford University Press 1845 The Life and martyrdom of Thomas Beket archbishop of Canterbury from the series of lives and legends now proved to have been composed by Robert of Gloucester London Percy Society 1845 The enterlude of John Bon amp Mast Person a dialogue on the festival of Corpus Christi and on transubstantiation in verse London Percy Society 1852 On the Records of Chester Castle Chester The Courant Office 1854 The Calendar of Palestine Reconciled with the Law of Moses against the Theory of Michealis London Chronological Institute 1861 2 Discovery of the Will of Hans Holbein London J B Nichols amp Sons 1863 Letters to Eminent Antiquaries on the Primitive Site and Plan of Roman London Private Distribution 1863 History and Antiquities of the Worshipful Company of Leathersellers London 1871 References Edit a b c d e Dissenters and Nonconformists 1 Introduction amp Baptists St George in the East Church Retrieved 14 September 2019 a b c d e Ashton John 1886 Black William Henry In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 5 London Smith Elder amp Co a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Nurse Bernard 2009 Black William Henry Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 2500 Subscription or UK public library membership required Browse collection Rymer s Foedera British History Online Retrieved 14 September 2019 Cockburn J S 7 September 1972 A History of English Assizes 1558 1714 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 262 ISBN 9780521084499 a b c Wednesday April 23rd 1873 Containing an obituary of Black Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London 6 1 10 1876 doi 10 1017 S0950797300001384 a b Micklewright F H A 2 November 1946 Some further notes on Mill Yard meeting house Notes and Queries 191 9 185 189 doi 10 1093 nq 191 9 185 London Chronological Institute of 1852 Transactions of the Chronological Institute of London Part 1 London p Title page a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Davies Graham 23 July 2012 The Beginnings of Biblical Archeology In Provan Iain Boda Mark eds Let Us Go Up to Zion Essays in Honour of H G M Williamson pp 4 5 fn 5 ISBN 9789004215986 Micklewright F H A 19 October 1946 Some further notes on Mill Yard meeting house Notes and Queries 191 8 161 163 doi 10 1093 nq 191 8 161 a b c Davies C M 1874 Saturday with the Seventh Day Baptists Unorthodox London or Phases of religious life in the Metropolis London Tinsley Brothers pp 227 237 a b Micklewright F H A 7 September 1946 A congregation of Sabbatarian and Unitarian Baptists Notes and Queries 191 5 95 99 doi 10 1093 nq 191 5 95 Micklewright F H A 5 October 1946 Some further notes on Mill Yard meeting house Notes and Queries 191 7 137 140 doi 10 1093 nq 191 7 137 External links EditPhotograph of William Henry Black at The National Archives Available on paid request Black William Henry 1808 1872 antiquary at The National Archives Record Creators Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Henry Black amp oldid 1064586887, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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