Miles Peter Andrews

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Miles Peter Andrews (1742-18 July 1814) was an eighteenth century English playwright, gunpowder manufacturer and a member of the British House of Commons representing Bewdley from 1796-1814.

Andrews was the son of William Andrews, a drysalter of Watling Street and his wife Catherine Pigou. After helping his father in business in the day time, he was accustomed to sally forth in the evening with sword and bag to Ranelagh or some other public place. He gradually made useful social connections and wrote plays musical and operas for London theatres from 1774. He became a constant companion of Lord Lyttleton. In 1775 the opera diva Ann Cargill aged 15 ran away with him and she then had to be restrained at home by a court order. Andrews lived in a mansion at Green Park where he entertained the fashionable society of London, and was a member of several clubs.

With his uncle Frederick Pigou, a director of the British East India Company, he became the owner of an extensive gunpowder factory at Dartford, Kent. George Colman the Younger described Andrews as ‘one of the most perservering poetical pests’, and his plays as ‘like his powder mills, particularly hazardous affairs, and in great danger of going off with a sudden and violent explosion'. This was no idle comparison as a report of an explosion appeared in The World on the 14th October 1790.

"Between four and five o'clock this afternoon (October 12th 1790) the people here, and in the neighbourhood, were terribly alarmed by the blowing up of Mr Pegu (sic)'s Powder Mills, within a short mile of this town.."

In 1796 Andrews succeeded Lord Lyttleton as Member of Parliament for Bewdley which he represented until his death in 1814. There is a memorial to him in St James Church, Piccadilly.

[edit] Works

  • The Conjuror - a farce - Drury Lane 1774
  • The Election - a musical interlude - Drury Lane 1774
  • Belphegor, or the Wishes, a comic opera - Drury Lane 1778
  • Summer Amusement, or an Adventure at Margate, written with William Augustus Miles, - the Haymarket 1779
  • Fire and Water, a ballad opera, - the Haymarket in 1780
  • Dissipation, a comedy - Drury Lane 1781;
  • The Baron Kinkvervankotsdorsprakingatchdern, a musical comedy - the Haymarket 1781
  • The Best Bidder, a farce - the Haymarket 1782
  • Reparation, a comedy - Drury Lane 1784
  • Better Late than Never - Drury Lane 1790
  • The Mysteries of the Castle - Covent Garden 1795.

[edit] References

  • Dictionary of National Biography
  • R G Thorne History of Parliament: The Commons 1790-1820