Bell, John, 1783-1864

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Bell, John, 1783-1864

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Bell, John, 1783-1864

Bell, John Junior (folk music)

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Bell, John Junior (folk music)

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1783

1783

Birth

1864-10-31

1864-10-31

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Biographical History

John Bell was born in Newcastle on 7 October 1783, first son of John Bell (1755-1816), a land surveyor and bookseller, and Margaret, the daughter of John Gray of Combfield House, co. Durham. He married Barbara, the daughter of Thomas Pringle of Newcastle, on 22 November 1806; they had nine children. His brother was Thomas Bell (1785-1860), land surveyor and book collector. Thomas Bell had fourteen children with his wife Hannah, among them John Gray Bell, bookseller.

On leaving school John and Thomas worked with their father in his business in Union Street, Newcastle. John left to establish his own business on the Quayside in 1803. He began collecting coins, antiquities and ephemera on a range of subjects, including the book trade, and started a numismatic society in Newcastle which ran for only a short time. He published two undated charts of British silver coinage.

Following the failure of the numismatic society Bell issued "Proposals, for publishing, by subscription, reprints of a rare and curious collection of old English tracts", but nothing came of this. In 1812 he published Rhymes of Northern Bards, a collection of songs and poems from Newcastle, Northumberland, and Durham. Over the next five years Bell published eleven pamphlets of local interest.

In 1817 John Bell's business failed, and he was declared bankrupt. His assignees, who included his brother Thomas, ordered all his possessions to be sold, and his collection of ephemera was widely dispersed. Following his bankruptcy Bell moved to Gateshead to practice as a land surveyor; he occasionally also sold books and continued to collect ephemera.

In 1812 John Bell sent a circular to the leading gentry of Northumberland and Durham, proposing the formation of a society for the study and preservation of antiquities in these two counties. The project received the support of Hugh, second duke of Northumberland, and the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne was formally established on 6 February 1813. Bell was elected treasurer, an office he held until his bankruptcy. He remained the society's librarian until 1849, and published seven papers in its transactions, now Archaeologica Aeliana, three of them jointly.

John Bell died on 31 October 1864, aged eighty-one, and was buried in St. John's cemetery, Elswick.

(Taken from Peter Isaac's article on Thomas Bell in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004-5)).

From the guide to the The Correspondence of John Bell, Antiquary and Land Surveyor, Gateshead, Newcastle, 1819-1848, (Chetham's Library)

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External Related CPF

https://viaf.org/viaf/22999862

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q6221436

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n85368952

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n85368952

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Antiquarian booksellers

Antiquities

Booksellers

Coin collections

Coin dealers

Coin design

Coin design

Coin hoards

Numismatic studies

Railroad

Surveyors

Tokens

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Collector

Surveyors

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Places

England--Tyne and Wear

as recorded (not vetted)

AssociatedPlace

Gateshead (England)

as recorded (not vetted)

AssociatedPlace

Tyne and Wear (England)

as recorded (not vetted)

AssociatedPlace

England

as recorded (not vetted)

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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>

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Identity Constellation Identifier(s)

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76024222