Edward Fordham Flower
Edward Fordham Flower (1805–1883) was an English brewer and author who campaigned for a Shakespeare memorial theatre and against cruelty to animals.[1]
Origins
Born at Marden Hill in Hertfordshire on 31 January 1805, he was the younger surviving son of Richard Flower and nephew of both Benjamin Flower[1] and John Clayton. His mother was Elizabeth, daughter of Edward Fordham and sister of Edward King Fordham.
Life
When Edward was aged 12, his father Richard Flower took his family to live in the newly created community of Albion in Illinois.[2] The settlement included free Negroes, who were abducted by a gang of kidnappers to sell into slavery. Edward led a party that captured the gang at rifle point, freed their captives and saw the leaders tried and punished. Threatened with death by their supporters, Edward was sitting at home when a bullet shattered the mirror above his head.[3]
His father sent him back to England and in 1824 he settled at Stratford-upon-Avon, where he joined a business.[1] In 1827 he married Celina Greaves (1804–84); they had four sons: Richard Fordham (who died as a young child), then Charles Edward Flower, who became a partner in his father's brewery, followed by William Henry Flower, a much-decorated military surgeon, Conservator of the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, and Hunterian Professor of Comparative Anatomy, in succession to Huxley, and Director of the Natural History Museum in Kensington, and fourthly Edgar Flower who also became a partner in the brewery. In 1831 Edward built his own brewery in Stratford with a canal frontage for delivery and distribution. The enterprise flourished, becoming Flower and Sons Ltd; when larger premises using latest technology were opened in 1870, the original brewery was used for offices with reduced production. The first tied public house had been linked to the firm in 1836 and their inn holdings increased gradually. Export trade, particularly India pale ale, was always a large sector of the business.[4]
As a major employer in the area, he was influential in local affairs, serving four times as mayor of Stratford and sitting as a justice of the peace for Warwickshire. He attempted to enter national politics, standing as Liberal candidate for Coventry in 1865 and for North Warwickshire in 1868, but was not successful.[1]
Perhaps his greatest legacy is his involvement in the celebrations, to which he was a major financial contributor, marking the tercentenary of Shakespeare's birth in 1864,[1][5] and the impetus they gave to create a permanent memorial in the town. Fund raising began to erect a theatre, which opened in 1879 as the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre.
In 1873 he retired and moved to London where, being a great lover of horses, he spent the rest of his life campaigning to reduce the suffering caused by inappropriate harness, in particular tight bearing reins (also criticised in the 1877 novel Black Beauty[6][7]) and gag bits.[1][8]
He died in London on 26 March 1883, followed by his widow on 2 March 1884.[1]
Writings
Works he authored were:
- A Few Words about Bearing Reins, 1875.[1]
- Bits and Bearing Reins, 1875, illustrated by John Paget.[1]
- Horses and Harness, 1876.[1]
- The Stones of London, or Macadam v. Vestries, 1880.[1]
Family
In 1827 he married Celina, eldest daughter of John Greaves (1774-1849), later a banker living at Radford Semele,[1] and his wife Mary Whitehead (1779-1864). She was the sister of the slate entrepreneur John Whitehead Greaves. They were survived by three sons:
References
- Boase, George Clement (1885–1900), "Flower, Edward Fordham", Dictionary of National Biography, 19, London: Smith, Elder & Co
- Boase, George Clement, "Flower, Edward Fordham (1805–83)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- Chicago Tribune, 9 April 1883, p. 4, retrieved 4 November 2017
Further reading
Jonathan Reinaez, A Social History of a Midland Brewery: Flower and Sons Brewery, 1870-1914 (Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Warwick, 1998)