George Thomas Nicholson
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Samuel Nicholson (1738–1827) was a London wholesale haberdasher, known as a Unitarian and associate of radicals. He is remembered for his social connections with William Wordsworth in the early 1790s.


Earlier life

Nicholson was born on 4 September 1738, the son of George Nicholson, and grandson of the nonconformist minister George Nicholson (1636–1690) of Kirkoswald, Cumberland. He was in business in London as a wholesale haberdasher, in
Cateaton Street Gresham Street in the City of London is named after the English merchant and financier Thomas Gresham. It runs from the junction of Lothbury and Moorgate at its eastern end, to St. Martin's Le Grand in the west. Gresham Street was created ...
. His warehouse was adjacent to his home. In the 1780s, Nicholson was a member of the Society for Constitutional Information.


Relationship with Wordsworth

Wordsworth met Nicholson through a family connection, Elizabeth Threlkeld, who had been Dorothy Wordsworth's foster mother (1778–1787) in Halifax, Yorkshire. Elizabeth married William Rawson in 1791; they were both Unitarians. They moved to London from Halifax, knew Nicholson, and introduced William to him. The period when Wordsworth dined regularly with Nicholson has tentatively been placed in spring of 1793. They went together to hear
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preach. Nicholas Roe has suggested that Wordsworth's further engagement with radical English reformers may trace back to his connection with Nicholson. It has been inferred, by Roe, that Nicholson probably introduced Wordsworth to
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the publisher. Keay places Wordsworth's own radical beliefs in the context of a period 1793–5 and contact with the views and milieu of the Society of Constitutional Information, to which Johnson also belonged: the Norman Yoke, and the Tory Bolingbroke's arguments on capital and corruption. Nicholson, in any case, is credited with Wordsworth's introduction into the London group of radical dissenters, including
William Godwin William Godwin (3 March 1756 – 7 April 1836) was an English journalist, political philosopher and novelist. He is considered one of the first exponents of utilitarianism and the first modern proponent of anarchism. Godwin is most famous for ...
. They played a significant part in his thinking, until the middle of 1795. "Mr Nicholson" was referenced in the notes to '' The Excursion''.


Later life

Nicholson was a founding partner of the Glasgow Bank in 1809. He acted as trustee of Dr Williams's Library from 1815 to 1827. He died on 26 October 1827, at Ham Common. In the last year of his life he had donated to the orphan school on City Road.


Family

Nicholson married Mary Haydon. Their eldest daughter Caroline married in 1804 Thomas Hockin Kingdon, Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. Harriet, the fourth daughter, married John Vowler of Parnacott in 1817. The only son of the marriage was George Thomas Nicholson. He studied at Manchester Academy from 1803 to 1805. In 1806 he matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1809. That year he entered the Inner Temple. He became a barrister, and was President of the National Life Assurance Society; it was founded in 1829, was a mutual insurance company from 1847, and merged with the Mutual Life Assurance Society in 1896 to form The National Mutual Life Assurance Society. Later in life Nicholson was owner of Waverley Abbey, which he bought from John Poulett Thomson. It had been damaged by fire in 1833, and he rebuilt it. He was High Sheriff of Surrey in 1833, and was elected a Fellow of the
Geological Society The Geological Society of London, known commonly as the Geological Society, is a learned society based in the United Kingdom. It is the oldest national geological society in the world and the largest in Europe with more than 12,000 Fellows. Fe ...
in 1835. Nicholson married Anne Elizabeth Smith, daughter of William Smith. Of their children, Marianne, the elder daughter, married
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in 1851. Laura Maria, the younger daughter, married in 1848 John Bonham Carter. The sons were: *Samuel Nicholson, the eldest. *William Smith Nicholson, second son, an army officer, married in 1849 Charlotte Elizabeth Miller, daughter of
Sir Thomas Miller, 6th Baronet Sir Thomas Combe Miller, 6th Baronet (1781 – 29 June 1864), was an English clergyman and landowner. He was educated at St John's College, Cambridge. Life The second but eldest surviving son of Sir Thomas Miller, 5th Baronet, Miller became a Ch ...
. *George Henry Nicholson,
called to the bar The call to the bar is a legal term of art in most common law jurisdictions where persons must be qualified to be allowed to argue in court on behalf of another party and are then said to have been "called to the bar" or to have received "call to ...
in 1844. *
Lothian Nicholson Lieutenant-General Sir Lothian Nicholson (19 January 1827 – 27 June 1893) was Governor of Gibraltar. History He was the son of George Thomas Nicholson and his wife Anne Elizabeth Smith, daughter of William Smith. Educated at Mr Malleson' ...
.


Notes

{{DEFAULTSORT:Nicholson, Samuel 1738 births 1827 deaths English businesspeople