Clement-Jones family - Person Sheet
Clement-Jones family - Person Sheet
NameRichard REYNOLDS , 13970
Birth1735
Death1816
FatherRichard REYNOLDS , 14006 (1709-1769)
MotherJane DONNE , 14044 (-1785)
Spouses
1Hannah DARBY, 14007
Birth1735
Death1762
FatherAbraham DARBY , 14008
MotherMargaret SMITH , 14041
Marriage1757
ChildrenHannah Mary , 13968 (1761-1839)
 William , 14042 (1758-1803)
Marriage1763
ChildrenJoseph , 14013 (1768-)
 Michael , 14047 (1766-1770)
 Richard , 14048 (1765-)
Notes for Richard REYNOLDS
He was educated at Thomas Bennett's school in Pickwick, Corsham, Wiltshire. He worked as an Apprentice to William Fry, grocer in 1749 in Castle Street, Bristol. He worked as a Head of the Coalbrookdale Iron Co. Ironmaster. REYNOLDS, RICHARD (1735-1816), Quaker-philanthropist, only son of Richard Reynolds (d. 1769), an iron merchant of Bristol, by his wife, Jane Dunn or Doane, was born at Bristol on 1 (or 12) Nov. 1735. He was great-grandson of Michael Reynolds of Farringdon, Berkshire, one of the earliest converts to Quakerism, an account of whose 'Sufferings' is published in 'The Antient Testimony of the Primitive Christians,' 4to, 1860. After being educated by Thomas Bennett at Pickwick, Wiltshire, Reynolds was apprenticed to William Fry, a grocer in Bristol, in 1749. On the expiration of his apprenticeship in 1756, he became a partner in the large iron- works at Ketley in Coalbrookdale, Shropshire, of Abraham Darby [q. v.], whose daughter Mary (Hannah)he married at Shrewsbury on 20 May 1757. She died suddenly on 24 May 1762, leaving two children. Subsequently, upon the death of his father-in-law, and during the minority of his brothers-in-law, Reynolds assumed the charge of the extensive works at Coalbrookdale, then the most important of the kind in England. Reynolds's energy and business capacity did much to develop and extend them. Under his direction the cylinders of most of the early steam-engines were cast there, and the first rotative engine made by Boulton & Watt was ordered by Reynolds for a corn-mill at Ketley. He is said to have been the first to use cast iron instead of wood for the rails or tram-plates of colliery rail- ways. In 1766 a patent for refining iron was taken out under his auspices by Thomas and Robert Cranage, the latter of whom was a workman at Coalbrookdale. The process has been regarded by some as being in part an anticipation of Cort's discovery of making wrought iron by puddling. Reynolds saw its importance, and it seems to have been practically carried out at Coalbrookdale (notes kindly supplied by Mr. R. B. Prosser ; PEECY, Iron and Steel, p. 636 ; SMILES, Industrial Biography, 1863, p. 87). In 1768 he resigned the post of active manager, but remained associated with the concern, and greatly improved the works in the interests of his workpeople.

In 1785 he joined in forming the United Chamber of Manufacturers of Great Britain, and himself represented the iron trade. In 1788 he obtained an act for the construction of a canal from the works to the river Severn. About 1789 he retired from business, having amassed a large fortune. A description of his home at Coalbrookdale in 1790 is given in Mrs. Schimmelpenninck's 'Autobio- graphy ' (edit. 1858, pp. 193-5). He had already purchased the neighbouring manor of Madeley, but in April 1804 he settled in Bristol . Determining to ' be his own executor,' he devoted himself thenceforth to dispensing charity unostentatiously and through private almoners, but on a very large scale. It is computed that he usually gave away at least 10,000/. a year, besides giving 10,500 J. to trustees to invest in lands in Monmouthshire for the benefit of seven Bristol charities. In 1795, a year of much distress, he distributed 18,000/. in London.

Among his personal friends were James Watt, Jonas Hanway, Dr. John Fothergill, John Howard, Mrs. Sarah Trimmer, Josiah Wedgwood, the Fletchers of Madeley, James Montgomery, and William Roscoe, M.P. He died while on a visit to Cheltenham for his health on 10 Sept. 1816, and was buried at the Friars, Bristol, on the 17th. Verses to his memory, * The Death of the Righteous, the Memory of the Just, and a Good Man's Monument,' were published by James Montgomery (3rd ed. London, 1817, 8vo), and by William Roscoe ( Works, London, 1857, p. 93). Montgomery's lines were inscribed to the Reynolds Commemoration Society, formed 2 Oct. 1816 to commemorate and develop the benefits that Reynolds had conferred upon Bristol and its vicinity.

By his first wife Reynolds had a daughter, Hannah Mary, who married, in 1786, William Rathbone of Liverpool ; and a son William (see below).

By his second wife, Rebecca Gulson of Coventry, who pre-deceased him, he had three sons, Michael, Richard, and Joseph, who succeeded him in the ironworks. A fine portrait of Reynolds is in the possession of Mr. W. G. Norris of Coalbrookdale (reproduced in ' Hardware Trade Journal,' 30 Sept. 1895, p. 100).

Another portrait, drawn by William Hobday, is in the possession of J. B. Braithwaite, esq., of London. It was engraved by Sharp, and dedicated to the prince regent. A third portrait, by S. Bellin, was engraved for the memoir by Reynolds's granddaughter, Hannah Mary Rathbone [q.v.] A bust, by S. Percy, was also engraved by Meyer (European Mag. February 1817).
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