John Chambers (antiquary)
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John Chambers (1780–1839) was an English antiquarian and topographer.


Life

Born in London in March 1780, Chambers began a career in the office of an architect. Having come into a fortune by the death of his father, he gave up work. In 1806 he became a member of the Society of Arts, and from 1809 to 1811 acted as a chairman of the committee of polite arts. On 29 September 1814 he married Mary, the daughter of Peter Le Neve Foster of Wymondham in Norfolk. In 1815, the year after his marriage, Chambers left London for Worcester, where he remained for nearly eight years. He moved to his wife's home at Wymondham, and after about two years, settled at Norwich, so that his sons could attend the grammar school there. Chambers died in Dean's Square, Norwich, on 28 July 1839.


Works

Chambers was the author of the following works: * ''A General History of Malvern'', Worcester, 1817. Another edition, Worcester, 1820. * ''A General History of Worcester'', Worcester, 1819. * ''Biographical Illustrations of Worcestershire; including Lives of Persons, Natives or Residents, eminent either for Piety or Talent, to which is added a List of Living Authors of the County'', Worcester, 1820. * ''A General History of the County of Norfolk, intended to convey all the information of a Norfolk Tour, with the more extended details of antiquarian, statistical, pictorial, architectural, and miscellaneous information; including biographical notices, original and selected'', 2 vols. Norwich, 1829. This was published anonymously, Chambers having collaborated with Norfolk residents. Chambers wrote a ''Life'' of
Inigo Jones Inigo Jones (; 15 July 1573 – 21 June 1652) was the first significant architect in England and Wales in the early modern period, and the first to employ Vitruvian rules of proportion and symmetry in his buildings. As the most notable archit ...
for ''Arnold's Magazine of the Fine Arts'', and contributed to the '' Gentleman's Magazine'', and other periodicals.


Family

He left two sons and a daughter. The elder son was John Charles Chambers, vicar of St. Mary's and warden of the
House of Charity The House of St Barnabas, at 1 Greek Street, Soho, is a Grade I Listed Georgian building in London notable for its rococo plasterwork interiors and for other architectural features. Since 1862 the House has been run as a charity to help those w ...
, Soho, from 1856 until his death in 1874; the younger son, Oswald Lyttleton, became in 1863 vicar of Hook, Yorkshire, where he died in 1883.


Notes

;Attribution {{DEFAULTSORT:Chambers, John 1780 births 1839 deaths Antiquarians from London English biographers