Edward Kimber

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Edward Kimber (1719–1769) was an English novelist, journalist and compiler of reference works.

Life

He was son of Isaac Kimber;[1] and in early life apprentice to a bookseller, John Noon of Cheapside.[2] He made a living by compilation and editorial work for booksellers.[1]

Kimber spent the years 1742 to 1744 in British North America, and drew on his travels in subsequent writing.[3] In 1745–6 he published a series of Itinerant Observations in America in The London Magazine, at that point edited by his father.[4]

Works

Kimber wrote:[1]

  • A Relation, or Journal, of a Late Expedition to the Gates of St. Augustine, on Florida (1744). Kimber had served in the militia of James Oglethorpe, and participated in a raid in 1743 that was a sequel to the 1740 siege of St. Augustine, Florida.[5]
  • The Life and Adventures of Joe Thompson, a Narrative founded on fact, written by himself [anon.], 2 vols., London, 1750; other editions, 1751, 1775, 1783. A French translation appeared in 1762. A "ramble novel", it sold well at the time, and was then condemned to neglect.[6]
  • The History of the Life and Adventures of Mr. Anderson (1754).[5] A sentimental novel, it was based on a real-life narrative Kimber had heard in Georgia.[7][8] Kimber denounced slavery, but is now found to be equivocal on the related issue, in the American context, of white supremacy.[9]
  • The Life and Adventures of James Ramble (1754)[5]
  • The Juvenile Adventures of David Ranger (1756)[5]
  • The Life, Extraordinary Adventures, Voyages, and Surprizing Escapes of Capt. Neville Frowde, of Cork (1758)[5]
  • The Happy Orphans (1759), translation from the French.[5] The French original of 1754 was itself imitated from the Fortunate Foundlings of Eliza Haywood.[10]
  • Maria: The Genuine Memoirs of an Admired Lady of Rank and Fortune (1764)[5]
  • The Generous Briton: or, the Authentic Memoirs of William Goldsmith (1765)[5]
  • The Peerage of England, London, 1766; 2nd edit. 1769.
  • The Peerage of Scotland, London, 1767.
  • The Peerage of Ireland, London, 1768.
  • The Extinct Peerage of England, London, 1769.

He also wrote memoirs of his father, together with a poem to his memory, prefixed to Isaac Kimber's Sermons, 1756. With Richard Johnson he edited and continued Thomas Wooton's Baronetage of England, 3 vols., London, 1771.[1]

Notes

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Attribution

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