Sir Thomas Rich, 1st Baronet

Sir Thomas Rich
Member of Parliament
for Reading
In office
1660–1660
Preceded byDaniel Blagrave
Succeeded bySir Thomas Dolman
Richard Aldworth
High Sheriff of Berkshire
In office
1657–1658
Preceded byWilliam Bigg
Succeeded byOliver Pleydell
Personal details
Born1601
Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England
Died15 October 1667
Resting placeSonning, Berkshire, England
ChildrenSir William Rich, 2nd Baronet, 2 others
Relatives
Alma materWadham College, Oxford
Occupationmerchant, politician

Sir Thomas Rich, 1st Baronet (c. 1601 – 15 October 1667) was an English merchant and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1660. He established Sir Thomas Rich's School, a grammar school.[1]

Rich was born in Gloucester, son of Thomas Rich, an alderman of the city, and Anne, daughter of Thomas Machin, in 1601. He was sent to school in London and went on to study at the newly founded Wadham College, Oxford. Afterwards, he worked in the city of London in the wine importing trade. Rich later purchased the manor of Sonning, near Reading.

In 1657 Rich was appointed High Sheriff of Berkshire and in 1660 elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Reading in the Convention Parliament.[2] In 1661, Charles II created him Baronet of Sunning, Berkshire. Rich died in 1667[3] and was buried in the Rich Chapel in the parish church at Sonning – his monument has been moved to under the church tower.

In his will, Rich left £6000 and his house in Gloucester to establish a school for poor boys. The money was invested in local farmland, and the rent generated by the house was used to pay for the upkeep and operation of the school. Sir Thomas Rich's School opened in 1668, one year after Rich's death, and is still in use today as a grammar school, although not in its original location. The Tommy Psalm (the School Song) describes the history of the school (albeit incorrectly).

  1. ^ A Potted History of Sir Thomas Rich's School Archived 21 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Sir Thomas Rich's School, Gloucester.
  2. ^ History of Parliament Online – Rich, Thomas
  3. ^ Ford, David Nash (2001). "Berkshire History: Sonning Church: Sir Thomas Rich". Nash Ford Publishing. Retrieved 9 May 2008.