Bourchier Cleeve

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1715
Died1760-03-01
Foots Cray Place
SpouseMary Haydon
Parents
  • Alexander Cleeve (father)
  • Ann Bourchier (mother)
Bourchier Cleeve
Born1715
Died1760-03-01
Foots Cray Place
SpouseMary Haydon
Parents
  • Alexander Cleeve (father)
  • Ann Bourchier (mother)
FamilyBourchier

Bourchier Cleeve (1715–1760)[1] was an English pewterer and writer of pamphlets.

A prosperous pewterer in London, he was the son of Alexander Cleeve, a pewterer in Cornhill,[2] who died on 11 April 1738. He was given the freedom of the City of London in 1736,[3] at the age of 21. In 1755 Cleeve paid a fine to be excused from serving the office of sheriff of London.[1]

Foots Cray Place, 1760 engraving by William Woollett

Around that date Cleeve acquired an estate in Foots Cray, Kent, once the property of Sir Francis Walsingham. He pulled down the old house, and erected, at some distance north of it, a Palladian mansion of freestone. He enclosed a park round it, with plantations of trees, and an artificial canal. This house was known as Foots Cray Place.[1] It has been attributed to the architect Isaac Ware, on the basis of a 19th-century listing; Howard Colvin regards the attribution as "acceptable" on style ground, but there is no direct evidence. The house was damaged by fire in 1949, and demolished.[4]

Cleeve also acquired much other land in Kent before his death on 1 March 1760.[1]

Works

Cleeve wrote A Scheme for preventing a further Increase of the National Debt, and for reducing the same (1756), inscribed to the Earl of Chesterfield (1756). The scheme was to impose a high tax on houses, and to repeal an equivalent amount of taxes on "commodities". Part of this tract was taken up with estimates of the amount subtracted in taxes from incomes. Cleeve's estimates were exaggerated, as was shown by Joseph Massie's Letter to Bourchier Cleeve, Esq., concerning his Calculations of Taxes (1757).[1] He wrote another pamphlet, on the staffing of the navy.[5]

Family

Wealth

Notes

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI