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[[Image:ThomasCombe.jpg|thumb|right|[[Blue plaque]] on the outside of St Barnabas Church]]
[[Image:Thomas Combe.jpg|thumb|right|Bust of Thomas Combe by [[Thomas Woolner]], 1863, on display at the [[Ashmolean Museum]]]]


'''Thomas Combe''' (1796–1872) was a Superintendent of the [[Oxford University Press]] in [[Oxford]], [[England]], and a patron of the arts. He was also a founder and benefactor of [[St Barnabas Church, Oxford|St Barnabas Church]], near the Press in [[Jericho, Oxford|Jericho]] and close to [[Oxford Canal]].
'''Thomas Combe''' (1796–1872) was a Superintendent of the [[Oxford University Press]] in [[Oxford]], [[England]], and a patron of the arts. He was also a founder and benefactor of [[St Barnabas Church, Oxford|St Barnabas Church]], near the Press in [[Jericho, Oxford|Jericho]] and close to [[Oxford Canal]].

Revision as of 15:53, 25 June 2008

Bust of Thomas Combe by Thomas Woolner, 1863, on display at the Ashmolean Museum

Thomas Combe (1796–1872) was a Superintendent of the Oxford University Press in Oxford, England, and a patron of the arts. He was also a founder and benefactor of St Barnabas Church, near the Press in Jericho and close to Oxford Canal.

Combe was the son of a bookseller in Leicestershire. He joined the University Press (or Clarendon Press) in 1837 at its then new (1830) building in Walton Street. Eventually he rose to manage it[1].

He and his wife Martha (1806-1893) were keen patrons of the arts and particularly appreciated Pre-Raphaelite art. In 1849, he met the Pre-Raphaelite artist John Everett Millais in Oxford, who painted portraits of Combe's family[2].

They were also devotees of the Tractarian or Oxford Movement.

Combe is buried in St Sepulchre's Cemetery, off Walton Street, near the University Press.

References

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