Charles Conway (Pontnewydd)

From Wikitia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Charles Conway (8 February 1820 – 11 June 1884) was a Welsh industrialist, botanist, artist and engraver.[1]

Background

Conway was born in Pontnewydd, Monmouthshire, the child of Benjamin Conway (1791-1863), owner of the Pontnewydd tinplate works and Ann (née Evans) his wife. His uncle Charles Conway (1797-1860) had been a botanist and lepidopterist [2][3] who also had a large collection of fossils and an a meteorological station at Pontnewydd (and Monmouth).[4]; his nephew, Charles Conway (fl.1870), was also an artist, engraver, and botanist. Items from the collections of the three Charles Conways initiated the botanical collection of the National Museum Cardiff.[5] The Conway family were prominent members of the Baptists in Monmouthshire, but there was a complaint from the denomination's Welsh-speakers that the presence of an English-speaking family led to too much English being used in the denomination's meetings and services.[6]

Career

Conway worked as one of the directors of the Benjamin Conway tinplate company, becoming managing director of the company on his father's death. He was a Justice of the Peace on the Monmouthshire bench [7] and chairman of the Llanfrechfa Local Board. He served on the board of guardians of the Pontypool Poor Union. He was one of the directors of Cwmbran and Pontnewydd Gas Company.[8]

Conway is mostly remembered for his recreational activities. He collected and studied plants, birds, and shells. He was a capable artist, a sculptor, and he decorated vessels, examples of which were exhibited at the Fine Art Exhibition of 1881. Above all he was a superb engraver. His engravings were used to illustrate scientific publications, such as Fossil Flora by John Lindley and Sir William Jackson Hooker, Botany by James Sowerby, and also in the publications mainly under Sowerby's direction relating to illustrations of greenhouse plants. He was also very interested in Welsh folklore and collected and published some examples. He won an eisteddfod award in Cardiff for a series of engravings depicting folklore.[9] Shortly before his death he was commissioned to write a series of fairy tales illustrated with engravings for Red Dragon magazine.[10] He began to engrave a series of Monmouthshire trees with the intention of publishing them under the title Silva Silurica but died before finishing the work.[9]

Death

He died unmarried at his home in Pontnewydd aged 64, and his remains were buried in the Baptist cemetery, Pontrhydyrun.[11]

References

  1. "CONWAY, CHARLES (1820 - 1884), painter and engraver | Dictionary of Welsh Biography". biography.wales. Retrieved 2022-11-21.
  2. G.A.N.Horton (1994). Monmouthshire Lepidoptera.
  3. C.Conway. "Sketches of the Natural History of My Neighbourhood No.1 Butterflies".
  4. Transactions of the Meteorological Society, Vol.1 (1839).
  5. "Vascular Plants". Amgueddfa Cymru National Museum Cardiff. Retrieved 2022-11-21.
  6. Y Traethodydd Cyf. CXLII (602-605), 1987 p.217 "Iaith y Nefoedd Anghydffurfiaeth ar Gymraeg yn Sir Fynwy yn y Bedwaredd Ganrif ar Bymtheg"
  7. Y Bedyddiwr [The Baptist Cyf. VII Rhif. 73 - Ionawr 1848 tud 36 "CHARLES CONWAY, YSW. PONT- NEWYDD"]
  8. "Weekly Mail: PONTYPOOL Death of Mr Charles Conway". 1884-06-14. Retrieved 2022-11-21.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Weekly Mail: THE LATE MR CHARLES CONWAY, J.P., OF PONTNEWYDD". Henry Mackenzie Thomas. 1884-06-21. Retrieved 2022-11-21.
  10. The Red Dragon the national magazine of Wales Cyf VI Rhif. 1 Gorffennaf 1884 " LITERARY AND ART NOTES"
  11. "Monmouthshire Merlin: PONTNEWYDD - The Late Mr Charles Conway". Charles Hough. 1884-06-20. Retrieved 2022-11-21.

External links

Add External links

This article "Charles Conway (Pontnewydd)" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical. Articles taken from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be accessed on Wikipedia's Draft Namespace.