- Thomas Crofts
The Reverend and Learned Thomas Crofts FRS FSA (
1722 -8 November 1781 ) was a Britishbibliophile , Anglican priest, Fellow of the Royal Society and European traveller.Early life
Thomas was born in
Monmouth, Wales and was the son of John Crofts. At the age of 17 he matriculated atWadham College Oxford, obtaining his BA in February 1743 and his MA in 1746.The Grand Tour
In the following 20 years Thomas alternated between the closeted life of a Fellow of an
Oxford College and at least three extended tours ofEurope [ G Macdonald 'Catalogue of Greek Coins in the Hunterian Collection' 1899 Preface ] . On one such visit (1758-1759) he accompanied a young Oxford Graduate, Thomas Knight, a cousin and future benefactor of the family ofJane Austen thenovelist , on TheGrand Tour. [ Obituary of Knight in The Gentlemans Magazine 1794 p1058 ] On such visits Thomas brought back many rarebooks andcoins .In 1763 Thomas was installed as
Rector of Donyat,Somerset . He then travelled toAleppo ,Syria where he was chaplain to the English Factory in the late 1760s and there continued researching and collecting antiquities. [ R Chandler'Travels in Asia Minor' 1775 p143 ]Literati
In 1770 Thomas returned to England as Chaplain to the 4th
Duke of Leeds and lived in Bury Street in the fashionable district of St. James. He became a member of the literati frequenting the so-called 'Literary Coffee House' at the shop of the bookseller and publisherThomas Payne . His friends and colleagues includedThomas Tyrwhitt ,George Steevens ,John Hoole and the anatomist and numismatistWilliam Hunter . His library was now very extensive and books borrowed from it helped Tyrwhitt with 'The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer' (1775) and also Hoole with his translation of 'Orlando Furioso'(1783). Thomas also came to the attention of the Dilettante Society as Lord Seaforth, the Marquis of Carmarthen( Francis Osborne son of the Duke of Leeds) and the naturalistJoseph Banks nominated him for membership inThe Royal Society in March 1776. It was also in 1776 that Thomas was involved with the publication of the spoof poems ofThomas Rowley , amedieval monk, which had in fact been written byThomas Chatterton ( 1752-1770) [ LF Powell'Thomas Chatterton and the Rowley Poems'. Review of English Studies Vol 7 July 1931 ] . Contemporary correspondence shows that Thomas recommended Tyrwhitt as an expert to George Catcott, who possessed the 'manuscripts', and he also suggested Payne as a publisher. These poems were subsequently edited by Tyrrwhitt and published as genuine in 1777 only for Tyrwhitt to recant and expose them as forgeries.Health Problems & Death
During the late 1770s Thomas' health began to deteriorate. He sold his large collection of coins to Hunter in January 1781 and died at the home of the 4th
Earl Fitzwilliam at Milton Park,Northamptonshire on 8th Nov that year.A tribute in the 'Biographical Memoirs of William Bowyer' [ J Nichols ' Literary anecdotes of the eighteenth century comprising biographical memoirs of William Bowyer' 1812 p 481 ] described him as 'distinguished for his general attainments as well as antient erudition . . gleaned . . not of reading only but of intelligent travels'. His extensive library was sold in over 8000 lots over 43 days in 1783. Copies of the Catalogue of the Sale 'Bibliotheca Croftsiana . . ' are still in existence and his books now reside in some of the important collections of the world.
References
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