George Kitson Clark
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George Sidney Roberts Kitson Clark (1900-1975) was an English historian, a specialist in the nineteenth century.
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[edit] Historian
He is known as a revisionist historian of the Repeal of the Corn Laws[1][2][3]. G. D. H. Cole identified a "Kitson Clark" school of historians revising the assessment of the Anti-Corn Law League and the Chartists[4].
He was educated at Shrewsbury School and Trinity College, Cambridge. He lived the life of a bachelor don as Fellow of Trinity, from 1922 to 1975. He was Reader in Constitutional History from 1954 to 1967.[5].
Jack Plumb, who disliked Kitson Clark, describes him as a reformer of the History Tripos[6], and obstacle to Lewis Namier[7], with various swipes .
[edit] Family
He was the son of the engineer Edwin Kitson Clark, and brother of Mary Kitson Clark.[8]
[edit] Works
- Guide for Research Students Working on Historical Subjects (1958)
- Making of Victorian England (1962)
- Peel and the Conservative Party (1964)
- An Expanding Society: Britain 1830-1900 (1967)
- The Critical Historian (1967)
- Churchmen and the Condition of England 1832–1885 (1973)
- Portrait of an Age (1977) editor
[edit] Reference
- Robert Robson (editor) (1967), Ideas and Institutions of Victorian Britain: Essays in honour of George Kitson Clark
[edit] Notes
- ^ G. S. R. Kitson Clark, The Electorate and the Repeal of the Corn Laws, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th Ser., Vol. 1, 1951 (1951), pp. 109-126.
- ^ G. Kitson Clark, Hunger and Politics in 1842, The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 25, No. 4 (December 1953), pp. 355-374.
- ^ E. Sreedharan, A Textbook of Historiography, 500 B.C. to A.D. 2000 (2004), p. 249.
- ^ Paul A. Pickering, Alex Tyrrell, The People's Bread: A History of the Anti-Corn Law League (2000), p. 4.
- ^ Maurice Cowling, Religion and Public Doctrine in Modern England (1980), p. 197.
- ^ J. H. Plumb, The Making of An Historian I, p. 164-5.
- ^ Plumb, pp. 98-9.
- ^ Obituary, Mary Kitson Clark