Daniel Dancer (
1716-
1794) was a
notorious 18th century
miser.
His entire life was devoted to miserly
pursuits. He inherited a some land north of London, England, and
with it a considerable yearly income. However, he ate only one meal
a day: a scrap of meat and a single cold dumpling. He once found a
dead sheep in a field and, despite the fact that it was starting to
docompose, Dancer took it home and had it made into mutton
pies-which he kept locked in a trunk.
Dancer slept in a sack,
and wore rags filled with bundles of straw. He would buy a second
hand shirt annually and wear it until it fell to pieces. If offered
a pinch of snuff, he would take it and place it in a box. When the
box was full, he traded it for candles. If he had insufficient
snuff for candles, he sat in the dark.
in 1766 Dancer's sister
was dying. However he refused to call a doctor "Why should i waste
my money in wickedly endeavouring to counteract the will of the
Providence? If the old girl's time is come.. she may as well die
now as at any any future period."
Two portraits of Daniel Dancer
- one by
Richard Cooper, the other by an unknown
artist - hang in the
National Portrait
Gallery.
Daniel Dancer was the great-grandfather of
John Benjamin Dancer, inventor of
microphotography.