William Godwin's Diary

Hill, (Thomas)

Hover over a bar to see number of appearances/year.
Click on a bar to jump to that year.

This person is mentioned in the diary a total of 160 times, but was not at home (N) 11 times, and was a venue (V) 33 times.

You may also examine their meals and meetings in more detail.

1801

11  June  1801 (V) 19  June  1801 (NV) 25  June  1801 (NV) 24  July  1801 29  July  1801 2  August  1801 (V) 7  September  1801 (NV) 13  September  1801 (V) 27  September  1801 (V) 15  November  1801 (V)

1802

22  January  1802 9  February  1802 26  February  1802 27  February  1802 14  March  1802 (NV) 6  April  1802 (NV) 17  April  1802 28  June  1802 5  July  1802 (V) 16  July  1802 (V) 1  August  1802 (NV) 15  August  1802 10  September  1802 19  September  1802 (NV) 27  November  1802

1803

23  January  1803 20  February  1803 (V) 9  April  1803 30  April  1803 13  May  1803 29  June  1803 (NV) 25  July  1803 30  July  1803 17  August  1803 16  September  1803 (NV) 4  November  1803 5  November  1803 14  November  1803

1804

13  April  1804 26  May  1804 13  December  1804

1805

12  February  1805 4  May  1805 8  May  1805 24  May  1805 29  October  1805 6  December  1805 10  December  1805 16  December  1805

1807

24  January  1807

1808

22  January  1808 29  July  1808 26  September  1808

1809

1  February  1809 21  September  1809 25  December  1809

1810

15  February  1810 5  April  1810 10  May  1810 6  June  1810 (V) 7  September  1810 (V) 30  December  1810

1811

27  January  1811 (V) 15  November  1811 18  November  1811 19  November  1811 21  November  1811 25  November  1811 11  December  1811

1812

31  January  1812 29  February  1812 12  May  1812

1813

11  January  1813 1  February  1813 (NV) 23  March  1813 12  October  1813 29  November  1813 30  November  1813

1814

22  February  1814 (V) 11  March  1814 (V) 2  June  1814 2  June  1814 28  November  1814 6  December  1814 (V)

1815

10  January  1815 (V) 20  January  1815 23  March  1815 (V) 29  April  1815 1  May  1815 1  June  1815 30  September  1815 (NV) 25  October  1815 (V)

1816

25  June  1816

1817

19  April  1817 5  May  1817 8  July  1817 14  August  1817

1818

25  January  1818 3  March  1818 27  March  1818 30  March  1818 3  April  1818 10  April  1818 13  April  1818 17  April  1818 4  May  1818 26  August  1818

1819

14  February  1819 28  March  1819 5  November  1819 12  November  1819

1820

22  April  1820 18  May  1820 23  June  1820 14  November  1820 15  November  1820

1821

12  March  1821 2  April  1821 7  May  1821 28  May  1821 11  October  1821 (V)

1822

25  July  1822 19  August  1822 9  October  1822 (V) 11  October  1822 21  October  1822 25  October  1822 26  October  1822 29  October  1822

1823

7  April  1823 25  June  1823 18  July  1823 23  September  1823 (V) 3  October  1823

1824

22  July  1824 4  August  1824 (V) 19  August  1824 (V)

1825

15  April  1825 3  May  1825 4  September  1825

1826

18  February  1826 25  July  1826

1827

21  July  1827 1  October  1827 3  November  1827

1828

29  July  1828

1830

20  March  1830 29  September  1830

1831

20  February  1831 25  March  1831 13  May  1831

1832

23  March  1832 26  April  1832 3  November  1832

1833

31  March  1833 24  April  1833

1834

22  March  1834 1  April  1834 20  June  1834

1835

14  March  1835

  • Name: Hill, (Thomas)
  • Gender: Unknown
  • Birth Date: 1760
  • Death Date: 20  December  1840

Thomas Hill, is mentioned in the Lamb biography and mixed in contemporary literary circles. See the account below from Thornbury and Walford's Old and New London, vol. 6 (1878). It notes Hill's connections in the literary and theatrical worlds and given that many of the entries are with theatrical figures and/or occur in the playhouse, the identification is extremely likely. He also appears in Godwin's diary with figures associated with him below and in the DNB. A letter from Thomas Hill to Godwin from July 1801 coincides with the beginning of regular appearances of Hill in the diary.

'Thomas Hill, whom we have mentioned above, was a well-known man in his day and generation. He was an eccentric drysalter in the City, who, gathering around him Horace and James Smith, John and Leigh Hunt, George Colman, Campbell, Theodore Hook, Barnes, Mathews, Redding, and a knot of literary acquaintances, set up in the days of the Regency as a sort of City Mæcenas. He was something of an antiquary; knew everybody, and apparently everything about everybody; and was always bustling about the offices of the newspapers and magazines. Poole, the author of "Paul Pry," is said to have drawn that character from him. He was a sort of walking chronicle, especially where literary men and newspapers were concerned. It was once said of him that if he stood at Charing Cross at noonday, he would tell the name and business of everybody that passed Northumberland House. Mathews always declared "Tom Hill," as he was called by all who loved him, one of the oldest men he knew; and a writer in the "Railway Anecdote Book" thus speaks of him:—"Mr. Hill was the Hull of his friend Mr Theodore Hook's clever novel of 'Gilbert Gurney,' beyond comparison the best book of its class produced in our time. It is also related that Hill furnished Mr. Poole with the original of his humorous character of 'Paul Pry;' but this statement is very doubtful, for 'Paul Pry,' if we mistake not, is of French extraction. It is, however, more certain that 'Pooh, pooh!' and other habitual expressions of Mr. Hill's, may have been introduced by Mr. Poole into the character. Mr. Hill, it may here be added, had the entrée to both Houses of Parliament, the theatres, and almost all places of public resort. He was to be met with at the private view of the Royal Academy, and every kind of exhibition. So especially was he favoured, that it was recorded by a wag that, when asked whether he had seen the new comet, he replied, 'Pooh, pooh! I was present at the private view!' Mr. Hill, to borrow from Mr. Hook's portrait, 'happened to know everything that was going forward in all circles—mercantile, political, fashionable, literary, or theatrical; in addition to all matters connected with military and naval affairs, agriculture, finance, art, and science—everything came alike to him.'"

'Hill established the Monthly Mirror, which brought him much into connection with dramatic poets, actors, and managers. To this periodical Kirke White became a contributor; and this encouragement induced him, about the close of the year 1802, to commit a little volume of poetry to the press. Southey, in his Life of Kirke White, refers to Mr. Hill as possessing one of the most copious collections of English poetry in existence.'

While living at Sydenham (prior to 1810), Mr. Hill received his numerous visitors in magnificent style. On one occasion some of the party had to walk to Dulwich to get a conveyance to town. Campbell accompanied his friends. When they separated it was with hats off and three boisterous cheers, "Campbell snatching off his hat," says Cyrus Redding , "not wisely, but too well, pulled off his wig with it, and then, to enhance the merriment upon the occasion, flung both up in the air amidst unbridled laughter." Mr. Adolphus was intimate with Hill for upwards of forty years, and spoke of him as looking fresh and youthful to the last. With reference to his cottage at Sydenham, Mr. Adolphus remarks: "I have dined there with Campbell, James Smith, Jack Johnstone, Mathews, and other celebrities. Burgundy and champagne were given in abundance, and at that time, owing to the state of the war, they were of enormous price—I believe a guinea a bottle." As was to be expected, Hill's affairs soon became deranged, and he was made a bankrupt. His fine library was not sold by auction, but by private contract to Messrs. Longman and Co., and formed the ground-work of that collection of which they published a catalogue, under the title of Bibliotheca Poetica Anglicana. He died in chambers in the Adelphi, at the age of eighty-one, in the year 1840, leaving a fortune of £15,000 to a stray friend who used to dine with him on Sundays at Hampstead. '

  • MS. Abinger c. 7, fols. 45r-46v.
  • DNB
  • George Walter Thornbury and Edward Walford, Old and New London: A Narrative of its History, its People and its Places (London, 1879-85).

This table lists the people this person is most frequently noted with in the diary.

Name Number of Meetings
Lamb, Charles 7
Lamb, Mary Anne 7
Fillingham, William 7
Taylor, John 7
Morton, Thomas 7
Hofland, Thomas Christopher 5
Collier, John Payne 5
O'Bryen, Dennis (O'Brien) 5
Perry, James (Pirie) 5
Barham, Richard Harris 5
Aldis, Charles 4
Aldis, Lady Mary Frances (née Berridge) 4
Robinson, Henry Crabb 4
Prentis, Edward 4
Dawe, George 4
Collier, John Dyer 3
Dawe, Mary Margaret (Wright) 3
Godwin, William 3
Landseer, John George 3
Rogers, Samuel 3
Marshall, James 3
Skeffington, Sir Lumley St George 3
Dubois, Edward 3
Burney, Martin Charles 3
Godwin, Mary Jane (Clairmont) (née de Vial) 3
Martin, John 3
Holcroft, Louisa (née Mercier) 3
Gent, Thomas 3
Miller, 2
Wallace, 2
Adams, Dr Joseph 2
Kemble, Maria Theresa 2
Northcote, James 2
Burney, Captain James 2
Hume, Joseph 2
Reynolds, Richard 2
Bowring, Sir John 2
Holcroft, Thomas 2
Poole, John 2
Pickersgill, Henry William 2
Rosser, Henry (Blanche) 2
Taylor, Richard 2
Boaden, James 2
Reynolds, Frederick 2
Este, Reverend Charles 2
Nicholson, William 2
Reid, William Hamilton 2
Montagu, Basil 2
Hone, William 2
Botwright, 2
Murray, John Samuel 1
Goldsmith, Lewis 1
Plowden, Francis Peter 1
Cunningham, Allan (Hidallan) 1
Morgan, Lady Sydney (née Owenson) 1
Cartwright, Major John 1
Morgan, Sir Thomas Charles 1
Shepherd, Lady Mary (née Primrose) 1
Stepney, Lady Catherine (née Pollok) (Manners) 1
Bury, Lady Charlotte Susan Maria (née Campbell) 1
Hoare, Prince 1
Knowles, John 1
Hume, Alexia 1
Czartoryski, Prince Adam Jerzy 1
Foggo, James/George 1
Kemble, Charles 1
Ayrton, William 1
Plowden, Anna Maria (Countess Dundonald) 1
Poole, Edward Richard 1
Leslie, Sir John 1
Stanhope, Lincoln (Edwin Robert) 1
Plowden, Dorothea (née Philipps) 1
Clairmont, Charles 1
Rees, Owen 1
Holcroft, Louisa 1
Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft (née Godwin) 1
White, 1
White, James 1
Phillips, Sir Richard (Philip Richards) 1
Phillips, Charles 1
Gifford, William 1
Moore, Thomas 1
Harlow, George Henry (Harlowe) 1
Mulready, William 1
Hayward, Richard 1
Curran, Amelia 1
Richter, Henry James 1
Orme, Cosmo 1
Wordsworth, William 1
Holcroft, Thomas 1
Owen, Robert 1
Foulkes, John 1
Cooper, Thomas (Abthorpe) 1
Gawler, Charles Henry Bellenden (Ker) 1
Quin, Edward Turnly 1
Place, Francis 1
Dyer, George 1
Hazlitt, William 1
Talfourd, Sir Thomas Noon (Talford) 1