Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T17:10:16.706Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘OUT OF HIS ELEMENT’: MR JOHNSON, SIR JOSEPH BANKS AND TATTERSHALL CASTLE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 August 2014

Julian Munby*
Affiliation:
26 Oakthorpe Road, Oxford OX2 7BE, UK. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

During research for the Tattershall Castle Conservation Plan for the National Trust, a set of framed drawings of the castle was found in the storeroom of the great tower. Examination of the Curzon correspondence deposited by the National Trust in the Lincolnshire Record Office revealed that these had been commissioned in 1783 by no less a person than Sir Joseph Banks (of nearby Revesby Abbey), President of the Royal Society and Council member of the Society of Antiquaries. With the help of the Sir Joseph Banks Archive Project, and piecing together materials in Aberystwyth, Cambridge, Lincoln, London and New Haven, Connecticut, a story has emerged of antiquarian endeavour in the 1780s when, amidst a frenzy of scientific activity, rampant balloon mania and the care of an ailing turtle, Sir Joseph commissioned the most detailed survey yet undertaken of a medieval monument in the British Isles, entrusting the task to the hitherto unremarked J L Johnson, surveyor and draughtsman, a figure who deserves belated recognition and a place in the history of medieval archaeology for his pioneering efforts.

Résumé

Lors des recherches réalisées pour retrouver le plan de conservation du château de Tattershall pour le National Trust, une série de dessins du château encadrés ont été trouvés dans le débarras de la grande tour. Un examen de la correspondance de Curzon déposée par le National Trust au Lincolnshire Record Office a révélé que ces dessins avaient été commandés en 1783 par Sir Joseph Banks lui-même (de l’abbaye de Revesby voisine), président de la Royal Society et membre du conseil de la Society of Antiquaries. Avec l’aide du Sir Joseph Banks Archive Project, et en rassemblant des documents provenant d’Aberystwyth, Cambridge, Lincoln, Londres et New Haven (dans le Connecticut), les historiens sont parvenus à reconstituer une entreprise archéologique des années 1780. À cette époque d’activité scientifique frénétique, de déploiement exubérant de montgolfières et de soins apportés à une tortue souffrante, Sir Joseph avait commandé l’étude la plus détaillée jamais effectuée d’un monument médiéval dans les îles Britanniques, confiant la tâche à J L Johnson, géomètre et dessinateur jusqu’à présent peu connu, personnage qui mérite une reconnaissance tardive et une place dans l’histoire de l’archéologie médiévale pour son travail de pionnier.

Zusammenfassung

Im Zuge der Nachforschungen zum Konservierungsplan für Tattershall Castle für den National Trust wurde ein Satz gerahmter Zeichnungen des Schlosses im Abstellraum des großen Turms gefunden. Eine Prüfung der Curzon-Korrespondenz, die vom National Trust im Archiv von Lincolnshire deponiert worden war, zeigte, dass die Zeichnungen 1783 von niemand Geringerem als Sir Joseph Banks (von der nahegelegenen Revesby Abbey), dem Präsidenten der Royal Society und einem Ratsmitglied der Society of Antiquaries in Auftrag gegeben wurden. Mit Hilfe des Sir Joseph Banks Archive Project und dem Zusammenfügen von Material in Aberystwyth, Cambridge, Lincoln, London und New Haven, Connecticut, hat sich eine Geschichte über seine antiquarischen Unterfangen nach 1780 ergeben, als Sir Joseph inmitten einer frenetischen wissenschaftlichen Tätigkeit, zügellosem Ballonfieber und mit einer kränkelnden Schildkröte in seiner Obhut die ausführlichste Studie in Auftrag gab, die je zu einem mittelalterlichen Baudenkmal auf den britischen Inseln durchgeführt worden ist. Der Auftrag ging an den bis dahin unbeachteten J L Johnson, einen Landvermesser und Bauzeichner, einen Mann, der für seine bahnbrechenden Bemühungen eine verspätete Anerkennung und einen Platz in der Geschichte der mittelalterlichen Archäologie verdient.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© The Society of Antiquaries of London 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, R G W (ed) 2003. Enlightening the British: knowledge, discovery and the museum in the eighteenth century, British Museum Press, LondonGoogle Scholar
Andrews, M 1989. The Search for the Picturesque: landscape, aesthetics and tourism in Britain 1760–1800, Scholar Press, AldershotGoogle Scholar
Beaglehole, J C 1962. The Endeavour Journal of Joseph Banks 1768–1771, 2 vols, Trustees of the Public Library of New South Wales, SydneyGoogle Scholar
Bertucci, P 2004– . ‘Cavallo, Tiberius (1749–1809)’, in H C G Matthews and B Harrison (eds), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: online edition, <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/4918> (4 July 2014)Google Scholar
Browne, E O 1913. Registers of Worcester Cathedral 1693–1811, Worcestershire Parish Register Society, WorcesterGoogle Scholar
Buchanan-Dunlop, W R 1943. ‘Thomas White of Worcester, sculptor and architect’, Trans Worcs Archaeol Soc, 20, 1525Google Scholar
Carter, H B 1987. Sir Joseph Banks: a guide to biographical and bibliographical sources, St Paul’s Bibliographies in association with British Museum (Natural History), WinchesterGoogle Scholar
Carter, H B 1988. Sir Joseph Banks 1743–1820, British Museum (Natural History), LondonGoogle Scholar
Chambers, N 2000. The Letters of Sir Joseph Banks: a selection, 1768–1820, Imperial College Press, River Edge, NJCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chambers, N 2003. ‘Joseph Banks, the British Museum and collections in the age of Empire’, in Anderson 2003, 99–113Google Scholar
Chambers, N 2007. The Scientific Correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks, 1765–1820, 6 vols, Pickering & Chatto, LondonGoogle Scholar
Colvin, H M 1968. ‘John Aubrey’s Chronologia Architectonica’, in J Summerson (ed), Concerning Architecture: essays on architectural writers and writing presented to Nikolaus Pevsner, 112, Allen Lane, LondonGoogle Scholar
Colvin, H M 2008. A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600–1840, 4th edn, Yale University Press, New Haven and LondonGoogle Scholar
Cooper, M P 2004– . ‘Greville, Charles Francis (1749–1809)’, in H C G Matthews and B Harrison (eds), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: online edition, <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/40496> (4 July 2014)Google Scholar
Curzon, G N and Tipping, J A 1929. Tattershall Castle, Lincolnshire: a historical and descriptive survey, Jonathan Cape, LondonGoogle Scholar
Dawson, W 1958. The Banks Letters: a calendar of the manuscript correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks preserved in the British Museum, the British Museum (Natural History) and other collections in Great Britain, British Museum (Natural History), LondonGoogle Scholar
Dolman, B 2003. ‘“Everything curious”: Samuel Hieronymus Grimm and Sir Richard Kaye’, eBLJ, article 2, <http://www.bl.uk/eblj/2003articles/article2.html> (4 July 2014)+(4+July+2014)>Google Scholar
Evans, D M 2009. ‘“Banks is the villain!”? Sir Joseph Banks and the governance of the Society of Antiquaries’, Antiq J, 89, 337363CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, J 1956. A History of the Society of Antiquaries, Society of Antiquaries of London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Fane, W V R 1919. ‘Sketches of Lincolnshire churches and houses, 1790–1805’, Lincolnshire Notes Queries, 15, 160 (with church index in 15, 218–20, and 16, 18–21, 66–9)Google Scholar
Fox, C 2010. The Arts of Industry in the Age of Enlightenment, Yale University Press, New Haven and LondonGoogle Scholar
Gascoigne, J 1994. Joseph Banks and the English Enlightenment: useful knowledge and polite culture, Cambridge University Press, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gibbs, Vet al (eds) 1910–59. The Complete Peerage, 2nd edn, 13 vols, St Catherine Press, LondonGoogle Scholar
Gilmour, D 1994. Curzon, John Murray, LondonGoogle Scholar
Gomme, G L 1907. Index of Archaeological Papers 1665–1890, Archibald Constable & Co, LondonGoogle Scholar
Gough, R 1780. British Topography, T Payne & Son and J Nichols, LondonGoogle Scholar
Heringman, N 2013. Sciences of Antiquity: romantic antiquarianism, natural history, and knowledge work, Oxford University Press, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, F 1952. The Letters and Papers of the Banks Family of Revesby Abbey, 1704–1760, Lincoln Record Society Monograph 45, LincolnGoogle Scholar
Holmes, R 2008. The Age of Wonder: how the Romantic generation discovered the beauty and terror of science, HarperPress, LondonGoogle Scholar
Hutton, C, Shaw, G and Pearson, R 1781–1809. The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society from their Commencement in 1665 to 1800, Abridged, with Notes and Biographic Illustrations, 18 vols, Royal Society, LondonGoogle Scholar
Impey, E 2008. The White Tower, Yale University Press, New Haven and LondonGoogle Scholar
Jenkins, I 1996. ‘“Contemporary minds”: Sir William Hamilton’s affair with antiquity’, in I Jenkins and K Sloan (eds), Vases and Volcanoes: Sir William Hamilton and his collection, 4064, British Museum Press, LondonGoogle Scholar
Kelly, J M 2009. The Society of Dilettanti, Yale University Press, New Haven and LondonGoogle Scholar
King, E 1799–1805. Munimenta Antiqua; or Observations on Ancient Castles in Great Britain, G Nicol, LondonGoogle Scholar
Lysaght, A 1974. ‘Joseph Banks at Skara Brae and Stennis, Orkney, 1772’, Notes Records Royal Soc London, 28 (2), 221234Google Scholar
MacGregor, A G 2003. ‘The antiquary en plein air: eighteenth-century progress from topographical survey to the threshold of field archaeology’, in Anderson 2003, 164–175Google Scholar
MacGregor, A G 2012. Animal Encounters, Reaktion Books, LondonGoogle Scholar
Miller, D P 2004– . ‘Blagden, Sir Charles (bap 1748, d 1820)’, in H C G Matthews and B Harrison (eds), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: online edition, <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/2553> (4 July 2014)Google Scholar
Mooney, B 2011. Frank Baines: a life beyond the sea, Thorogood, LondonGoogle Scholar
Myrone, M 2007. ‘The Society of Antiquaries and the graphic arts: George Vertue and his legacy’, in S Pearce (ed), Visions of Antiquity: the Society of Antiquaries of London 1707–2007, 99121, Society of Antiquaries of London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Nurse, B and Crook, J M 2001. ‘John Carter, FSA (1748–1817): “The Ingenious, and Very Accurate Draughtsman”’, Antiq J, 91, 211252CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nurse, B, Gaimster, D and McCarthy, S 2007. Making History: antiquaries in Britain 1707–2007, Royal Academy of Arts, LondonGoogle Scholar
Pevsner, N 1972. Some Architectural Writers of the Nineteenth Century, Clarendon Press, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Preston, J 2011. ‘A polymath in Arcadia: Thomas Wright (1711–1786)’, Garden Hist, 38 (2), 159176Google Scholar
Rae, W F 2004– . ‘Hugessen, Edward Hugessen Knatchbull-, first Baron Brabourne of Brabourne (1829–93)’, in H C G Matthews and B Harrison (eds), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: online edition, <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15704> (4 July 2014)Google Scholar
Rauschenberg, R 1973. ‘The journals of Joseph Banks’s voyage up Great Britain’s west coast to Iceland and to the Orkney Isles, July to October 1772’, Proc American Phil Soc, 117 (3), 186226Google Scholar
Reed, F R 1872. Illustrations of Tattershall Castle, Lincolnshire, from Measured Drawings made by Fred H Reed to Whom was Awarded the Silver Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, self-published, LondonGoogle Scholar
[Rhodes, J and Munby, J 2006]. ‘Tattershall Castle, Lincolnshire, conservation plan’, unpublished report, Oxford Archaeology for the National TrustGoogle Scholar
Rice, T 2010. Voyages of Discovery: a visual celebration of ten of the greatest natural history expeditions, Natural History Museum, LondonGoogle Scholar
Richmond, I 1944. ‘Three fragments of Roman official statues, from York, Lincoln, and Silchester’, Antiq J, 24, 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, M 2002. Dugdale and Hollar: history illustrated, University of Delaware Press, London and Newark, DEGoogle Scholar
Smith, B 1988. European Vision and the South Pacific, 2nd edn, Yale University Press, New Haven and LondonGoogle Scholar
SPAB 1915. Annual Report, Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, LondonGoogle Scholar
Stephens, J R 2004– . ‘Topham, Edward (1751–1820)’, in H C G Matthews and B Harrison (eds), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: online edition, <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/27551> (4 July 2014)Google Scholar
Sweet, R 2004. Antiquaries: the discovery of the past in eighteenth-century Britain, Hambledon and London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Tait, A A 2008. The Adam Brothers in Rome: drawings from the Grand Tour, Sir John Soane’s Museum, LondonGoogle Scholar
Thompson, M W 1981. Ruins: their preservation and display, British Museum Press, LondonGoogle Scholar
Thompson, M W 2006. Ruins Reused: changing attitudes to ruins since the late eighteenth century, Heritage Marketing & Publications Limited, King’s LynnGoogle Scholar