James Norris Brewer


James Norris Brewer, was an English topographer and novelist.
He wrote many romances and topographical compilations, the best of the latter being his contributions to the series called the Beauties of England and Wales. All the former are now forgotten.

Life

According to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Brewer "was the eldest son of a merchant of London. He married the daughter of a gentleman at Clapham... Nothing is recorded of his death."
From genealogical sources, a little more can be added. Brewer was born in London on 11 September 1777. He was baptised on 8 October 1777 with full name James Jupp Norris Brewer, at St Sepulchre Church in Holborn, where his parents James Brewer and Sarah Sparrow had been married on 4 May the previous year.
He too would be married at St Sepulchre, to Mary Hanscomb on 27 December 1800; and their son Edward Norris Brewer, who was born on 9 December 1801, was christened there on 7 January 1802. In the meantime it appears the two were involved in a court case, apparently against relatives of Mary's. Four further children, Mary Ann, Sarah Hanscomb, Emily, and Louisa, born between 1804 and 1812, were all christened at Hurst, Berkshire, from where Brewer also addressed the dedication of his first topographical book, dated February 1810.
Brewer was buried on 22 March 1839 at St Lawrence's Church, on Jersey. Probate was granted on 15 August 1839, and a copy of his will is available online from the National Archives. Assets included the freehold of a public house, which would be auctioned on 4 September. According to a notice of the death of Brewer's widow Mary, which appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine in November 1851, the couple had also lived for a time at Pillaton House, Warwickshire, as well as Jersey.

Works

Romances

Brewer was also a contributor to the Universal, Monthly, and Gentleman's magazines.