Caleb Whitefoord

Scottish businessman and diplomat
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroScottish businessman and diplomat
PlacesUnited Kingdom Scotland
isDiplomat
Work fieldPolitics
Gender
Male
BirthEdinburgh
Death25 January 1810
The details

Biography

"Whitefoord" redirects here. Not to be confused with the Whitefoord baronets.
Caleb Whitefoord FRS FRSE RSA (Edinburgh 1734 – 25 January 1810 London) was a Scottish merchant, diplomat, and political satirist.
Born in Edinburgh in 1734, the illegitimate son of Colonel Charles (James) Whitefoord of the Royal Marines (son of Sir Adam Whitefoord, 1st Baronet), he was educated at James Mundell's School and Edinburgh University.
He moved to London, and in 1756 became a wine merchant.
In 1782 he served as Lord Shelburne's envoy to Benjamin Franklin on the Peace Commission at Paris.
In 1784 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London, and in 1788, upon the proposal of Robert Arbuthnot, Sir William Forbes and Alexander Fraser Tytler he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Whitefoord married, in 1800, a Miss Craven, and had issue, amongst whom an eldest son, Rev. Caleb Whitefoord, M.A. (Oxon.), rector of Burford with Whitton, Herefordshire, had five sons. He died at 28 Argyll Street, London, on 25 January 1810, and was interred at Paddington Churchyard.

Works

  • Whitefoord, Caleb (1781). The daily advertiser, in metre. G. Keasly. 
  • Whitefoord, Caleb (1799). Advice to Editors of Newspapers. ISBN 978-1-140-69119-8. 

Co-authored

  • Dobson, Austin; Whitefoord, Caleb (1896). A postscript to Dr. Goldsmith's retaliation: being an epitaph on Samuel Johnson, LL.D. 
  • Whitefoord, Charles; Whitefoord, Caleb (1898). William Albert Samuel Hewins, ed. The Whitefoord papers: being the correspondence and other manuscripts of Colonel Charles Whitefoord and Caleb Whiteford, from 1739 to 1810. Clarendon Press. p. 292.  - Charles Whitefoord served in Wynyard's (4th Marines), Gooch's, and the 5th Marines in the 1740s.

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