Thomas Williams (1737-1802) - Collections Online | Museum Wales
This site uses cookies to improve your experience. View our Cookie Policy
Preferences

Cookie Preferences

Essential

These cookies are absolutely essential for our website to function properly.

 

Cookies that measure website use

We use Google Analytics to measure how you use the website so we can improve it based on user needs.

 

Cookies that help with communications and marketing

These cookies may be set by third party websites and do things like measure how you view YouTube videos.

 
 
View our Cookie Policy
Locations +
Amgueddfa Cymru
Cymraeg
My account
Collections & Research
Departments Collections Online National Collections Centre

Amgueddfa
Cymru
Family

National Museum Cardiff

St Fagans National Museum of History

National Waterfront Museum

Big Pit National Coal Museum

National Slate Museum

National Wool Museum

National Roman Legion Museum

  • Collections & Research
  • Departments
  • Collections Online
  • National Collections Centre
  • Articles
  • Ancient Wales
  • Art
  • Celf ar y Cyd
  • History
  • Natural History
  • The Museum at Work
  • Health, Wellbeing and Amgueddfa Cymru

Collections Online

Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales

Advanced Search

Advanced Search

Image filter options
Back to search results

Thomas Williams (1737-1802)

Hailing from Anglesey, Thomas Williams (1737-1802) was, from 1785, chief agent of the Mynydd Parys copper mines near Amlwch. He also established numerous smelting works and a distribution network for shipping copper. A leading figure in the early Industrial Revolution, in 1790 he became MP for Great Marlow.

Having played a prominent role in the success of Wales’s Copper Industry and amassed great personal wealth, Williams commissioned this portrait of himself by Sir Thomas Lawrence, established as the leader portrait painter of Britain’s Regency era. This portrait depicts Williams at the height of his power during the 1790s and hung at his country seat in Berkshire.

Money from the Slave trade was vital in driving forward the Industrial Revolution and the copper industry, which in turn was able to grow the wealth of the white individuals and institutions who would reinvest this wealth in enslaving more Africans; an ever-expanding and entangled circle of excess and exploitation, which we are still trying to unravel ourselves from.

This work is included in the PITCH BLACK digital Black History tours of the National Museum Wales collections.

Thomas Williams (1737-1802)
Image: By permission of Amgueddfa Cymru — Museum Wales
 Zoom

Collection Area

Art

Item Number

NMW A 451

Measurements

Height (cm): 127.5
Width (cm): 102.1
Height (in): 50
Width (in): 40
h(cm) frame:153
h(cm)
w(cm) frame:127.5
w(cm)
d(cm) frame:9
d(cm)

Categories

Painting Fine Art Pitch Black Tour Faces of Wales 2006 Named portrait
Comments are currently unavailable. We apologise for the inconvenience.

Related Items

Art

Untitled

NMW A 9847
More information
Art

Sara Rees

NMW A 56276
More information
Art

Girl with a Siamese Cat

NMW A 25732
More information
Art

Dwynwen Deg in Livia's Frock

NMW A 18571
More information

Site Map

Amgueddfa Cymru

Amgueddfa Cymru

  • Visiting
  • Collections & Research
  • Learn
  • Blog
  • Support Us
  • Shop
  • Venue Hire

Our Museums

  • National Museum Cardiff
  • St Fagans National Museum of History
  • National Waterfront Museum
  • Big Pit National Coal Museum
  • National Slate Museum
  • National Wool Museum
  • National Roman Legion Museum

Connect With Us

  • Contact Us
  • Get Involved
  • Join the Mailing List
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Corporate

  • About Us
  • Jobs
  • Press Office
  • Picture Library
  • National Collections Centre
  • Working with Others
  • Accessibility statement
  • Cookies
  • Copyright
Sponsored by Welsh Government
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
Charity No. 525774
× ❮ ❯