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・ John Brown Clark
・ John Broman
・ John Brombaugh
・ John Bromfield
・ John Bromfield, Jr.
・ John Bromley
・ John Bromley (politician)
・ John Bromley (the elder)
・ John Bromley (the younger)
・ John Bromley (translator)
・ John Brompton
・ John Bromwich
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・ John Bronson
・ John Brooke
John Brooke (1755–1802)
・ John Brooke (British historian)
・ John Brooke (priest)
・ John Brooke (translator)
・ John Brooke alias Cobham
・ John Brooke, 1st Baron Cobham
・ John Brooke, 2nd Viscount Brookeborough
・ John Brooke-Little
・ John Brookes
・ John Brookes (footballer, born 1945)
・ John Brookfield
・ John Brooks
・ John Brooks (athlete)
・ John Brooks (engraver)
・ John Brooks (footballer, born 1927)


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John Brooke (1755–1802) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Brooke (1755–1802)
John Brooke (1755–1802) was an English politician in Warwickshire. He developed the Ashted estate near Birmingham and is principally known for his role during and after the Priestley Riots of 1791.
==Life==
Brooke was born in 1755 in Daventry and in 1773 was articled as law clerk to John Meredith of Birmingham. He was admitted to the King’s Bench at Westminster and practiced in Birmingham.〔From John Brooke’s obituary in Gent’s Magazine, July 1802.〕 As an attorney, he acted as secretary to various organizations in Birmingham, most notably, to the Foundation of the Schools of King Edward VI (King Edward's School).
In 1787, Brooke purchased the estate of Dr. John Ash (physician) and developed the hamlet of Ashted. The development included a grid of streets featuring a main thoroughfare, Great Brooke Street, and a crescent known as Ashted Row. A chapel was created from Dr. Ash’s house, known as Ashted Chapel or St. James the Less, which opened on October 9, 1791.
As Under Sheriff of the County of Warwickshire, together with magistrates Joseph Carles and Dr. Benjamin Spencer, Brooke had responsibility for public order in Birmingham during the Priestley Riots in 1791. Unable to stop the violence, which erupted at a dinner commemorating the French Revolution on July 14, Brooke reported to the Home Office of “this most ungovernable mob.”〔Reference to letter by Brooke to Dundas, 19/7/1791 (PC 1/19/A23, unnumbered fo.).〕
There is some evidence that the episode represented the deliberate unleashing of a looting, drunken, unruly mob by the magistrates against the dissenters and the reformers, in an attempt to check their new political aggressiveness in Birmingham. Numerous affidavits providing evidence that Brooke, Carles, and Spencer had acted with neglect, if not worse, were collected and made available to the House of Commons. The refusal of the Prime Minister (William Pitt the Younger) to act on these dispositions and of the House of Commons to listen to them provides the basis for allegations of the government’s complicity in the riots.
Following the riots, the government in London erected military barracks at a number of nerve centers throughout the nation. In Birmingham, Brooke made four acres of land available, next to Ashted Chapel, for military barracks.〔Martin Smith, “Conflict and Society in Late Eighteenth Century Birmingham,” a dissertation submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University of Cambridge, Sidney Sussex College, December 1977, p. 51.〕 Brooke also helped to organize associations designed to observe and control the political opposition, including the Church and King Club and the Association for the Protection of Liberty and Property Against Republicans and Levelers. In 1792, he was appointed Steward of the Manor of Aston, in which capacity he secured the election of a churchman as Low Bailiff, a position which had been customarily filled by a dissenter.〔Pugh, p. 281.〕 The legality of this proceeding was vigorously challenged and ultimately reversed, thus maintaining the popular franchise against the Lord and his nominated officer.〔John Thackray Bunce, History of the Corporation of Birmingham, 1878, vol.1., p. 19-20.〕
In February 1793, Brooke was elected Coroner of the Country of Warwick by the County’s landholders. As a legal function, the coroner was responsible for selecting juries, holding inquests before these juries, and reporting to the court of the King’s Bench on all sudden or unexplained deaths. During the Scarcity Riots of 1795, Brooke presided over the inquest of the rioters who had been shot by the troops.〔John Alfred Langford, ''A Century of Birmingham Life: or a Chronicle of Local Events, from 1741 to 1841'', volumes 1 and 2, Birmingham: E.C. Osborne, 84 New Street, 1868, p. 53.〕
John Brooke was married to Elizabeth Green and was father to John Rose Brooke, Mathilda Brooke, and Henry Brooke. He died on June 26, 1802,〔Aris Birmingham Gazette obituaries.〕 at the age of 47, and was buried in Aston Parish Church.

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