Boothroyd's Pontefract.

By B Boothroyd

Printed: 1807

Publisher: B Boothroyd. Pontefract

Dimensions 14 × 22 × 4 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 14 x 22 x 4

Condition: Very good  (See explanation of ratings)

£65.00
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Item information

Description

Tan leather binding with red title plate, gilt banding and title on the spine .

F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.

Leather. Condition: Near Fine. None (illustrator). First edition. A very smartly bound first edition of this study of the borough of Pontefract with details of its castle. First edition. Illustrated with a frontispiece, plates, and one folding map. A detailed account of the history of Pontefract, a market town in West Yorkshire, England. With reference to the Royalist sympathies in the English Civil War and information on the sieges upon its castle. Written by Benjamin Boothroyd, an English minister and scholar.

 

                                                   

 

A portrait from the Welsh Portrait Collection at the National Library of Wales. Depicted person: Benjamin Boothroyd – English Independent minister and Hebrew scholar.

Benjamin Boothroyd (1768 – 8 September 1836) was an English Independent minister and Hebrew scholar. He had the degrees of D.D. and L.L.D.

Born at Warley Town, in the parish of Halifax, Yorkshire, on 10 October 1768, Booth was the son of a shoemaker there. He was sent to the village school, leaving it when six years old. He helped his father to make shoes for a time, but when about 14 years old he ran away. In Lancashire he found work with a Methodist; and later returned to Warley to superintend his father’s trade.

About 1785 Boothroyd devoted himself to religion, attended prayer meetings and spoke at them; he read Philip Doddridge’s works and was admitted a student of the North Howram dissenting academy. In 1790 he was chosen minister at Pontefract. Ordained there, he succeeded in filling his chapel and a new one was built. He also opened a shop as a bookseller and printer.

In 1807, having had materials for a history of the town given to him by a Richard Hepworth, Booth added to them, and brought out, at his own press, History of the Ancient Borough of Pontefract. He then studied Hebrew, to produce a new Hebrew bible. He printed the work himself, and his wife helped him in correcting the proofs. It was brought out in quarterly parts, beginning in 1810, and finishing in 1813, under the title of Biblia Hebraica : or the Hebrew scriptures of the Old Testament, without points, after the text of Kennicott, with the chief various readings…accompanied with English notes, critical, philological, and explanatory, selected from the…Biblical critics, and formed finally two volumes, as a project taking seven years.

Boothroyd published standard works, and sermons of his own. His Sermon occasioned by the Death of Miss B. Shillito (1813) included Miss Shilito’s conversion narrative.

In 1818 Booth completed his New Family Bible and Improved Version in three vols. 4to, which had been suggested to him on a visit to York by Henry Tuke, a Quaker. He printed many copies of it at his own press. It contained notes, and in recognition of his achievement the university of Glasgow conferred on Boothroyd the degree of D.D. in 1824. In 1835 he completed an octavo edition of the Family Bible.

In 1818 Boothroyd (who had accepted the degree of LL.D.) became co-pastor at Highfield Chapel, Huddersfield, with the Rev. William Moorhouse. On 10 January 1836 he went down

Condition notes

Rebacked

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