- John Thornton (philanthropist)
John Thornton (1720 – 1790) was a
merchant andChristian philanthropist .Thornton was the son of Robert Thornton of
Clapham ,Surrey , a merchant who became a director of theBank of England .He invested heavily in the Russian and Baltic trade and acquired wealth that he donated to Christian ministry causes. A devout
Anglican , he espoused evangelical causes, regardless of denomination, and his extensive giving included evangelical ministries in various parts of the world. He is best known as having partly sponsoredJohn Newton , the ex-slave ship trader who became anAnglican priest atOlney, Milton Keynes ,Buckinghamshire from 1764 to 1780, giving him £200 a year. In 1780, he offered Newton the living ofSt Mary Woolnoth , Lombard Street – the fashionableLondon church where Newton became established as a notedpreacher for over twenty years, and where he ended his days. He also aided Lady Huntingdon in setting up her training college with an interest-free loan.Thornton was the treasurer of a fund raised in England from 1766 to 1768 by American colonial preachers
Samson Occom andNathaniel Whitaker forMoor's School , an Indian charity school founded byEleazar Wheelock in Lebanon Crank,Connecticut . Wheelock applied the fund to establishDartmouth College inHanover, N.H. , and in 1829 the school named one of its main buildings Thornton Hall. Thornton donated his own money so that Wheelock could build amansion for the college president in 1771. It still stands at 4 West Wheelock Street.Thornton travelled extensively and contributed to churches in different parts of the country, including Holy Trinity,
Clapham , which was to become the centre for the so-calledClapham Sect of Christian social reformers.On 28 November 1753 Thornton married Lucy Watson (1722–1785), daughter of Samuel Watson of Hull. They had four children, including
Samuel Thornton (1754–1838) aMember of Parliament ), and Henry Thornton (1760–1815),banker andeconomist .John Thornton sustained a fatal injury as a result of an accident at Bath and died on
7 November 1790 .References
* Hochschild, Adam. "Bury the Chains, The British Struggle to Abolish Slavery" (Pan Macmillan, 2005)
* Stephen, Leslie. "Henry Thornton" in Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 1898)
* Welch, Edwin. "John Thornton" in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
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