Charles Parke

Charles Parke (10 June 1791 – 1860) was an English landowner and Deputy Lieutenant of Dorset.

Life

He was the son of William Parke of the Thickets, Jamaica, and his wife Eleanor Baldwin Crosse.[1] In 1810 he was HBM Commissioner to Mexico where he was tasked with purchasing bullion for the British Government.[2] The family were slave-owners in Jamaica. The compensation money paid to them on emancipation was shared between Charles's brother William Parke (1784–1863) and his mother.[3]

Parke's father died in 1813. In 1847 Charles Parke purchased the Henbury estate in Dorset, and resided there.[4][5]

Family

In 1820 Parke married Letitia Alcock, daughter of Joseph Alcock of Roehampton.[4] Their children included Charles Joseph Parke;[6] and William Parke, at Eton College with him.[7]

gollark: What? That's ridiculous.
gollark: I'm kind of conflicted on the Nvidia thing, because on the one hand I really don't like hardware being artificially limited and on the other I also don't like mining and want cheap GPUs.
gollark: Can't wait for rapid ~~superconducting~~ flux quantum CPUs operating at several tens of GHz under liquid nitrogen cooling.
gollark: Arguably low headroom is good, as it means that regular people get as much out of the CPU as possible out of the box.
gollark: I would mine things, but the fans would be loud and I don't want to contribute to a deranged zero sum (negative sum really) mess.

References

  1. "Summary of Individual Eleanor Baldwin Parke, Legacies of British Slave-ownership". www.ucl.ac.uk.
  2. "Parke family". Retrieved 23 June 2018.
  3. "William Parke Profile Legacies Summary".
  4. Burke, Bernard (1898). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland. Harrison & sons. p. 1145.
  5. The county families of the United Kingdom, P 494, E Walford, 1882
  6. Foster, Joseph (1888–1892). "Parke, Charles Joseph" . Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715–1886. Oxford: Parker and Co via Wikisource.
  7. Eton school lists from 1791 to 1877, with notes and index. London, Simpkin, Marshall, and co. 1884. pp. 164 and 167.
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