As well as individual achievements, the Sharp family functioned collectively. The son of an archdeacon, William Sharp (1729-1810) lived with his 3 brothers & 3 sisters in a Northumberland rectory, where they created strong family ties that lasted for life. Clearly the Sharps had a common value system of free thinking; they negotiated the competing demands of an elevated social position with their commitment to social reform.
The Sharp family by Zoffany, c1780. Wiki
The Union, William’s large, elegant pleasure boat, sailed from Kew Bridge in 1777 on its first voyage. As she sailed along the Thames to Reading, her passengers lived in great comfort with all amenities. And the entire Sharp family gave fortnightly orchestral concerts on board.
Despite the boat and orchestra, William Sharp was not a gilded aristocrat of independent means, but a hardworking London surgeon from an educated background. He was accompanied on the voyage by most of his siblings, demonstrating the extent of the doctor’s professional success and his fame as surgeon to King George III.
The siblings were known by the art world as the subject of Johan Zoffany’s celebrated group portrait, The Sharp Family. William, who commissioned the work in 1779, wanted the artist to depict the 7 siblings playing music on their Thames barge. The Zoffany masterpiece commemorated the concerts they gave on board their barge Apollo at Fulham, when Sharps were at the height of their social success. Their harmonies were an apt metaphor for the strong ties that bound them together.
How appropriate! Sharps were a famously musical family, who had played music together from early childhood and between them mastered a wide array of instruments. Youngest brother Granville Sharp (1735–1813) was skilled on the oboe, clarinet, flute, double flute, traverse harp & kettledrums. William gave famous concerts at his City mansion, with performances by the most popular virtuosi back then; and the family hosted water parties on barges sailing along the Thames in summer. In the Sharp band, often led by the Italian violinist Felice Giardini, family members and professional musicians played chamber music. To a rousing Handel overture, the Sharp barge was accompanied by many boats who sailed to enjoy the festivities.
Examine the painting carefully. Granville held his favoured flutes in one hand, his clarinet being nearby on the piano he was shown holding a sheet of music. Beside him was his sister, Elizabeth Sharp Prowse (1733-1810), who was playing the harpsichord /forte-piano. Dr John Sharp was on the right and had laid his cello aside, next to Frances Sharp (1738-1799) with an oboe, in blue. James Sharp, an engineer, held a serpent brass instrument. James’ wife was Mrs Lodge Sharp, his daughter was Catherine Sharp (1770-1843). William Sharp was seen standing at the tiller, hat raised, wearing the Windsor uniform with its distinctive red collar. His instruments were the French horns that rested on the piano. William’s daughter was Mary Sharp Lloyd-Baker (1778-1812), his wife was Catherine Barwick Sharp (c1741-1814). Judith Sharp (1733-1809), music in hand, played the lute.
These amateur musicians illustrated the transition between private music parties and public concerts in C18th musical life. The private world of the barge opened into that of an invisible audience listening from the bank to the open-air concert, a fashion set by Handel’s Water Music.
Johan Zoffany’s glowing depiction of the siblings was their defining image. But the family was not just about music. Granville Sharp was a civil servant, philanthropist and a leading campaigner for the abolition of slavery. In 1772 Granville was visited and asked for help by a young African who had been sold into slavery. This eventually led to one of the great set pieces of English legal history, delivered by Lord Mansfield in Westminster Hall in 1772: the slave was freed since no English law sanctioned slavery. So Sharp co-founded the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade!
When Granville gave up his Ordnance Office post, he totally relied on his brothers’ incomes. Fortunately William was a noted surgeon. Was Granville’s commitment to the emancipation of slaves supported by his family? Yes! His political idealism began at William’s Surgery for the Poor, Mincing Lane; it was James’ membership of the Common Council of London that most supported Granville.
4 siblings contributed to John’s charitable enterprises at Bamburgh, which in turn provided the model for Elizabeth’s philanthropy at Wicken Park. The 2 unmarried sisters, Judith and Frances, enjoyed privileged positions in their brothers’ households in their adult lives. Judith actually turned down two good marriage offers, concluding that female autonomy would flourish better in the household of a compliant brother. And when James became paralysed in 1783, 9 members of the extended family accompanied him to Weymouth for a seaside cure.
The Sharps were remarkable late C18th individuals in their own right. John, the eldest brother, established an extra-ordinary social enterprise at Bamburgh Castle in Northumberland, providing free healthcare and education and subsidised food to the poor. Elizabeth ran a large estate in Northamptonshire on the philanthropic principles espoused by her brothers. James was a manufacturer, inventor and canal pioneer.
William Sharp
surgeon

Granville Sharp
Clerk in the Ordnance Office and abolitionist
Clerk in the Ordnance Office and abolitionist


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