Advertisement

John Fredrick Herring

Advertisement

John Fredrick Herring Famous memorial

Birth
Surrey, England
Death
23 Sep 1865 (aged 70)
Meopham, Gravesham Borough, Kent, England
Burial
Hildenborough, Tonbridge and Malling Borough, Kent, England Add to Map
Plot
Immediately to the East of the church
Memorial ID
View Source
Artist. Born in Surrey, but spent most of his first eighteen years in the City of London, where his father, an American of Dutch parentage, was a fringe-maker in Newgate Street, just West of St. Paul's Cathedral. In 1874, however, he married against the wishes of his father and, without any settled plans, arrived in Doncaster that September, at the time of the race meeting, where he saw the Duke of Hamilton's horse, William, win the St. Leger. This inspired him to take up painting horses. At first, he did not succeed in this, and did rather better in painting coaches, which encouraged him to become a coach driver, firstly (for two years) from Wakefield to Lincoln, then from Doncaster to Halifax. Whilst on the latter route, his artistic skills were discovered, and he received many commissions to paint racehorses, including several from Queen Victoria. Even after he became well-known as a painter, he continued to work for some years as a coachman, on the London to York route, before retiring from the road to devote himself entirely to painting and settling, firstly in Doncaster, then in Meopham in Kent. For 32 years in succession, beginning in 1815, he painted every winner of the St. Leger. His three sons, John Fredrick, Charles, and Benjamin, all became painters.
Artist. Born in Surrey, but spent most of his first eighteen years in the City of London, where his father, an American of Dutch parentage, was a fringe-maker in Newgate Street, just West of St. Paul's Cathedral. In 1874, however, he married against the wishes of his father and, without any settled plans, arrived in Doncaster that September, at the time of the race meeting, where he saw the Duke of Hamilton's horse, William, win the St. Leger. This inspired him to take up painting horses. At first, he did not succeed in this, and did rather better in painting coaches, which encouraged him to become a coach driver, firstly (for two years) from Wakefield to Lincoln, then from Doncaster to Halifax. Whilst on the latter route, his artistic skills were discovered, and he received many commissions to paint racehorses, including several from Queen Victoria. Even after he became well-known as a painter, he continued to work for some years as a coachman, on the London to York route, before retiring from the road to devote himself entirely to painting and settling, firstly in Doncaster, then in Meopham in Kent. For 32 years in succession, beginning in 1815, he painted every winner of the St. Leger. His three sons, John Fredrick, Charles, and Benjamin, all became painters.

Bio by: Iain MacFarlaine



Advertisement

Advertisement

How famous was John Fredrick Herring ?

Current rating: 3.78571 out of 5 stars

14 votes

Sign-in to cast your vote.

  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Iain MacFarlaine
  • Added: Feb 12, 2005
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/10464536/john_fredrick-herring: accessed ), memorial page for John Fredrick Herring (12 Sep 1795–23 Sep 1865), Find a Grave Memorial ID 10464536, citing St John the Evangelist Churchyard, Hildenborough, Tonbridge and Malling Borough, Kent, England; Maintained by Find a Grave.