Tuke family
The Tuke family of York were family of Quaker innovators involved in establishing:
- Rowntree's Cocoa Works
- The Retreat Mental Hospital
- three Quaker schools - Ackworth, Bootham, and The Mount
They included four generations. The main Tukes were:
- William Tuke III (1732-1822), founder of The Retreat at York, one of the first modern insane asylums, in 1792
- Henry Tuke (1755-1814)
- Samuel Tuke (1784-1857)
- James Hack Tuke (1819-1896)
- Hannah Tuke (1811-1869)
Others included:
- John Tuke (cartographer and surveyor)
- William Murray Tuke (1822-1903), who gained his second name from Lindley Murray
- Dame Margaret Jansen Tuke, D.B.E., M.A. (1862-1947) Principal of Bedford College, London University
- Henry Scott Tuke (12 June 1858 – 13 March 1929), British painter and photographer, is best remembered for his paintings of naked boys and young men, which have earned him a status as a pioneer of gay male culture
- Daniel Hack Tuke (1827–1895), was a prominent campaigner for humane treatment of the insane
See also
- "John Tuke, of the city of York, linen-draper, dealer, and chapman" announced on list of "B_K_TS"
- Tuke pedigree
Sources
- Willam K Sessions and E.Margaret Sessions (1971) The Tukes of York in the Seventeenth, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Ebor Press, York. (Includes family tree of 12 generations, pp. 116–117.)
External links
History of York: Tuke family and Rowntree's
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