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Colonel Thomas Walter Harding (22 January 1843 – 26 March 1927) was a British industrialist and civic figure in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England.
Early life and family
Harding was born in Lille, France, where his Leeds-based father Thomas Richards Harding (1812–1895) had a factory, and was educated at Leeds Grammar School.
On 19 May 1869 he married Anne Heycock Butler (1846–1923), daughter of Ambrose Edmund Heath Buckley Butler, ironmaster, of Kirkstall, Leeds; they had a son, born in Leeds in 1870, and a daughter, who died in infancy.
Career
He built extensions to Tower Works in Holbeck in 1899 and the 1920s and, when City Square was remodelled, proposed and financed the sculptures including the Black Prince.
Harding used the title "Colonel" after the Leeds Artillery Volunteers gave him the title of Honorary Colonel when he retired after 33 years service in 1893. He was involved in local politics and actively championed the foundation of Leeds City Art Gallery which opened in 1888. He donated a number of pictures to the collection including Scotland Forever! by Butler in 1888. He was Chairman of the Art Gallery Committee between 1887 and 1904.
Harding was also a writer. In 1912, he produced Tales of Madingley, a romance loosely based on the history of the house and vicinity.[3] In 1926, he published The Abbot of Kirkstall, a novel about the Black Prince, John of Gaunt, and John Wycliffe.[4]
Death and legacy
Harding died in 1927.
Selected publications
Tales of Madingley. Bowes and Bowes, Cambridge, 1912.
^McGarry, Daniel D., White, Sarah Harriman, Historical Fiction Guide: Annotated Chronological, Geographical, and Topical List of Five Thousand Selected Historical Novels. Scarecrow Press, New York, 1963 (p.77).
Further reading
Hall, Melanie (October 2007). "Harding, (Thomas) Walter (1843–1927)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/96377. Retrieved 1 November 2009.. Available online to subscribers and via UK public libraries.