Difference between revisions of "Joseph Gulston 1744/5-1786"

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[[file:P1160579(1).JPG|thumb|An example of Gulston's crest tool on a spine label, from a copy of W. Wotton, ''The history of Rome'', 1701, private collection]]
 
[[file:P1160579(1).JPG|thumb|An example of Gulston's crest tool on a spine label, from a copy of W. Wotton, ''The history of Rome'', 1701, private collection]]
 
====Biographical Note====
 
====Biographical Note====
Son of [[family::Joseph Gulston]], businessman, but brought separately up by his mother [[family::Mericas Sylva]] because their marriage was kept secret. Matriculated at [[education::Christ Church,Oxford]] 1763 but did not graduate; he spent time in [[location::Hamburg]] being trained in business. [[occupation::MP]] for [[location::Poole]] 1765-68. On inheriting his father's considerable fortune in 1766 he married [[family::Elizabeth Stepney]] and moved to Ealing Grove where their extravagant lifestyle forced them to sell and downsize in 1775, moving several times. Elizabeth died in 1780, the year in which he was re-elected MP, but after losing his seat in 1784 he moved in with his mother in London where he died soon afterwards in distressed circumstances. He left an unfinished biographical dictionary of foreign visitors to Britain, intended to be an adjunct to James Granger's ''Biographical history''; this is now in the British Library, Add MSS 24353-6, 34280-5.
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Son of [[family::Joseph Gulston]], businessman, but brought up separately by his mother [[family::Mericas Sylva]] because their marriage was kept secret. Matriculated at [[education::Christ Church,Oxford]] 1763 but did not graduate; he spent time in [[location::Hamburg]] being trained in business. [[occupation::MP]] for [[location::Poole]] 1765-68. On inheriting his father's considerable fortune in 1766 he married [[family::Elizabeth Stepney]] and moved to Ealing Grove where their extravagant lifestyle forced them to sell and downsize in 1775, moving several times. Elizabeth died in 1780, the year in which he was re-elected MP, but after losing his seat in 1784 he moved in with his mother in London where he died soon afterwards in distressed circumstances. He left an unfinished biographical dictionary of foreign visitors to Britain, intended to be an adjunct to James Granger's ''Biographical history''; this is now in the British Library, Add MSS 24353-6, 34280-5.
  
 
====Books====
 
====Books====

Latest revision as of 12:34, 30 October 2024

Joseph GULSTON 1744/5-1786

An example of Gulston's crest tool on a spine label, from a copy of W. Wotton, The history of Rome, 1701, private collection

Biographical Note

Son of Joseph Gulston, businessman, but brought up separately by his mother Mericas Sylva because their marriage was kept secret. Matriculated at Christ Church,Oxford 1763 but did not graduate; he spent time in Hamburg being trained in business. MP for Poole 1765-68. On inheriting his father's considerable fortune in 1766 he married Elizabeth Stepney and moved to Ealing Grove where their extravagant lifestyle forced them to sell and downsize in 1775, moving several times. Elizabeth died in 1780, the year in which he was re-elected MP, but after losing his seat in 1784 he moved in with his mother in London where he died soon afterwards in distressed circumstances. He left an unfinished biographical dictionary of foreign visitors to Britain, intended to be an adjunct to James Granger's Biographical history; this is now in the British Library, Add MSS 24353-6, 34280-5.

Books

Much of Gulston's spending went on books and prints, the collecting of which became his main passion in life. He assembled a large library along with around 70,000 prints, and was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. His financial problems led him to have to sell these collections in a series of sales (the books on 8 May 1783 and 27 May 1784; the prints over 38 days in January-March 1786).

Characteristic Markings

The first of Gulston's book sales promoted their "beauty, scarcity and preservation" and he liked his books to be in fine condition. He used several armorial binding stamps based on his crest (on an ostrich wing a bend sable charged with three roundels), applied on the covers or as a spine decoration. He sometimes had goatskin spine labels made stamped with one of these tools and the imprint date of the book.

Sources