|
Sambrooke Freeman FRSA (aka Sambrook Freeman, c.1721–1782) was a member of the prominent Freeman family of Fawley Court near Henley-on-Thames, England.〔Sambrooke Freeman of Fawley Court. In Roger Kendal, Jane Bowen, and Laura Wortley, ''Genius & Gentility: Henley in the Age of Enlightenment'', River & Rowing Museum, 2002, page 14. ISBN 0-9535571-2-X.〕 He was a Member of Parliament, for Pontefract in Yorkshire from 1754–61 and Bridport in Dorset from 1768–74. Sambrooke Freeman was the son of John (Cooke) Freeman, a successful businessman. His first name derived from the Sambrooke family. Due to the Freeman family's rising fortune, Sambrooke Freeman was educated at University College, Oxford, graduating in 1739, followed by an expensive Grand Tour of Italy on two trips over nearly four years from 1744. Freeman lived at Fawley Court, a large house close to the River Thames north of Henley-on-Thames and just in Buckinghamshire. He inherited the house on the death of his father in 1752. Capability Brown was commissioned to work on the grounds of the estate surrounding the house between 1764 and 1766.〔Peter Willis, Capability Brown's Account with Drummonds Bank, 1753–1783, ''Architectural History'', volume 27.〕 Freeman also had the house remodelled by the architect James Wyatt during the early 1770s is a Neoclassical style.〔(Fawley Court ), Oxfordshire. TourUK.〕 Wyatt also designed the "temple" (a fishing lodge) on Temple Island on the river close to Fawley Court in 1771 for Freeman, with Etruscan-style murals inside.〔(Walk 1: Henley (round walk) — Temple Island, Hambleden & the Great Wood ), ''Time Out Country Walks near London'', Volume 1.〕〔(Henley-on-Thames ), ''Floating Down the River'', The Harts.〕 Edward Cooper sold Phyllis Court to Sambrooke Freeman in 1768.〔Emily J. Climenson (editor), ''(Passages from the Diaries of Mrs. Philip Lybbe Powys )'', Kessinger Publishing, 2008. ISBN 978-1-4365-6715-2.〕 He also bought the manors of Henley and Remenham in the same year.〔 Freeman worked on a pagoda fountain project for Prior Park south of the city of Bath that was never realized.〔John Harris, (A pagoda fountain for Prior Park: Sambrooke Freeman's unrealized project ), ''Apollo: The international magazine of arts'', no. 434, pages 9–10, 1998. .〕 Sambrooke Freeman was twice an MP, for Pontefract and Bridport. He joined the Society of Arts in 1756, two years after its formation, and encouraged the involvement of Humphrey Gainsborough the inventor and Thomas Powys.〔 Freeman tried to change the position (to the end of New Street, Henley) and style of the new stone Henley Bridge so it could form a pleasing view from his house, but was unsuccessful.〔(Henley Communications II: Roads and Bridges — Early Roads ), ''Victoria County History'', Oxfordshire. Online texts in progress, Henley. University of London, November 2006.〕 On his death in 1782, Fawley Court passed to his nephew, Strickland Freeman. After his death, his wife lived in Henley Park, a dower house in the deer park of the Fawley Court Estate. She died on 2 October 1806.〔 == References == 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sambrooke Freeman」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|