Henry Thomas Hope (30 April 1808, London – 4 December 1862, 116 Piccadilly, London) was a British MP and patron of the arts.
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He was the eldest of Thomas Hope (1769–1831) and Louisa de la Poer Beresford's three sons, but was estranged from his brothers (including Alexander James Beresford Hope) when he inherited their father's art collections, wealth and property along with those of their uncle Henry Phillip Hope (died 1839).
He entered a political career after an education at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge (1825–29).[1] He also founded the Art Union of London and the Royal Botanical Society, as well as serving as vice-president of the Society of Arts and president of the Surrey Archaeological Society. Displaying his old masters collection to the public at his London house on Duchess Street, a mansion at 116 Piccadilly and at Deepdene, Surrey, he was also a patron to idealists such as Young England and the Spanish Carlists and helped organise the 1851 Great Exhibition. He also bought and restored the Castle Blayney in county Monaghan. He chaired the Eastern Steam Navigation Company for Isambard Kingdom Brunel from 1851 to 1858 and, with Henry having been the Great Eastern's chief fundraiser, it was his daughter Henrietta who named it 1857.
In 1851 he married Anne Adele Bichat, having already had a daughter named Henrietta with her in 1843. The marriage legitimated Henrietta, who in 1861 married Lord Lincoln (later sixth duke of Newcastle).
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