John Dyer MSS

Scope and Content

Papers, c. 1722-c. 1855, of, or relating to, poet and artist John Dyer and including notebooks, c. 1722-1756, of John Dyer containing farming accounts, draft poems, extracts and miscellaneous memoranda; with additional material by William Hylton Dyer Longstaffe which includes genealogical notes, c. 1850, relating to John Dyer, and transcripts, [1847x1855], of his poems. See also Goodridge, John (ed.): John Dyer, Selected Poetry and Prose (Nottingham, 2000).

Administrative / Biographical History

John Dyer, poet, artist and priest, was born in Llanfynydd, Carmarthenshire. He was educated locally, then later sent to Westminster School, from where he returned to Wales to study law. In 1720 he went to London to study poetry and painting and was apprenticed to the portrait painter Jonathan Richardson. In London Dyer met many influential figures of the literary and artistic world, including Arthur Pond, George Vertue, Daniel Wray, Aaron Hill and Richard Savage. His sojourn in Italy from 1724 to 1725 yielded such poetic works as 'Written at Ocriculum' and 'The Ruins of Rome'. Publication of Dyer's poetry began in 1726 with 'Grongar Hill', a work inspired by his home landscape near Aberglasne. From 1730 to 1738 Dyer took over his aunt's farm at Mapleton in Worcestershire then, in 1738, he bought two farms of his own near Nuneaton in Warwickshire. In 1741 Dyer was ordained deacon and priest and served as rector of Catthorpe in Leicestershire until 1751; it was in Leicestershire that he began The Fleece, a major work on British wool production and world trade published in four books from 1750 to 1757. In 1751 Dyer moved to livings in Lincolnshire, where, at his home in Coningsby rectory, he died of consumption. Only seven of Dyer's paintings are known to survive. They include a self-portrait of the 1720s and sketches executed whilst in Italy.

Arrangement

Arranged according to NLW MSS reference numbers: NLW MSS 23294-23297.

Access Information

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Acquisition Information

Mr Fabian T. Smith; Cottingham; Donation; 1994.

Note

John Dyer, poet, artist and priest, was born in Llanfynydd, Carmarthenshire. He was educated locally, then later sent to Westminster School, from where he returned to Wales to study law. In 1720 he went to London to study poetry and painting and was apprenticed to the portrait painter Jonathan Richardson. In London Dyer met many influential figures of the literary and artistic world, including Arthur Pond, George Vertue, Daniel Wray, Aaron Hill and Richard Savage. His sojourn in Italy from 1724 to 1725 yielded such poetic works as 'Written at Ocriculum' and 'The Ruins of Rome'. Publication of Dyer's poetry began in 1726 with 'Grongar Hill', a work inspired by his home landscape near Aberglasne. From 1730 to 1738 Dyer took over his aunt's farm at Mapleton in Worcestershire then, in 1738, he bought two farms of his own near Nuneaton in Warwickshire. In 1741 Dyer was ordained deacon and priest and served as rector of Catthorpe in Leicestershire until 1751; it was in Leicestershire that he began The Fleece, a major work on British wool production and world trade published in four books from 1750 to 1757. In 1751 Dyer moved to livings in Lincolnshire, where, at his home in Coningsby rectory, he died of consumption. Only seven of Dyer's paintings are known to survive. They include a self-portrait of the 1720s and sketches executed whilst in Italy.

Title based on contents of fonds.

Archivist's Note

March 2009.

Description compiled by Bethan Ifans for the retrospective conversion project of NLW MSS. The following sources were used in the compilation of this description: Handlist of Manuscripts in the National Library of Wales, Volume IX (Aberystwyth, 2003); Oxford Dictionary of National Biography WWW site;

Custodial History

The notes in Dyer's hand (MSS 23294-23295) apparently came into the possession of the donor's great-grandfather, solicitor and antiquarian William Hylton Dyer Longstaffe of Gateshead, great-grandson of Dyer's daughter Elizabeth, by direct descent, but he also had sight of other manuscripts, now lost, perhaps through the Reverend John Meade, a descendant of John Dyer's brother Thomas. The Dyer manuscripts and their dispersal are discussed in Williams, Ralph M.: Poet, Painter and Parson. The Life of John Dyer (New York, 1956).

Additional Information

Published

Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales