Thomas Tyndall (bapt. 26 March 1723 – 17 April 1794) was an English merchant and banker from Bristol with extensive slave trade connections.
Tyndall was the son of Onesiphorus Tyndall and Elizabeth Cowles and baptised in the
Unitarian church. Tyndall's father had been a founding partner in the Old Bank in Bristol, and Tyndall inherited a considerable legacy on his father's death in 1757. Tyndall also succeeded his father as a partner in the bank. Tyndall's uncle William Tyndall was a slave factor in Jamaica, and owned a plantation with his business partner Richard Assheton.
Tyndall commissioned the
Royal Fort House in Tyndalls Park in Bristol, now part of the
University of Bristol
, mottoeng = earningpromotes one's innate power (from Horace, ''Ode 4.4'')
, established = 1595 – Merchant Venturers School1876 – University College, Bristol1909 – received royal charter
, type ...
. The house was built around 1767.
Tyndall's daughter Caroline married into another family heavily involved in the slave trade, the
Brights.
Bristol University holds a painting of Tyndall and his wife and children, painted by
Thomas Beach.
References
1723 births
1794 deaths
English slave traders
English bankers
British merchants
18th-century English businesspeople
Date of birth missing
Businesspeople from Bristol
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