Thomas William Shore
Thomas William Shore, sometimes given as William Thomas Shore was an English geologist and antiquarian who founded the Hampshire [Field Club & Archaeological Society|Hampshire Field Club] in 1885.
Life
Born on 5 April 1840 at Wantage, he was son of William Shore, architect, by his wife Susannah Carter. Brought up at Wantage, he became organising secretary to the East Lancashire Union of Institutions at Burnley. In 1867 he was sent by the Science and Art Department to the Paris Exhibition to report on scientific and technical education, and gave evidence on the subject before a select committee of the House of Commons in 1868.In 1873 Shore was appointed secretary to the Hartley Institution at Southampton and curator of the museum, and later became executive officer of the Institution. In 1882 he was secretary of the geological section of the Southampton meeting of the British Association. He was elected fellow of the Geological Society on 3 April 1878. Both as a geologist and an antiquary he was considered an authority on Hampshire.
In 1896 Shore moved to London and founded the Balham Antiquarian Society. He died suddenly at his residence, 157 Bedford Hill, Balham, on 15 January 1905, and was buried at the cemetery of St. Mary Extra, Woolston, Southampton.
Works
Shore published:Guide to Southampton and Neighbourhood, 1882.- Letter-press description to Vestiges of Old Southampton, by Frank McFadden, 1891. A History of Hampshire, including the Isle of Wight, 1892.
Shore was the founder of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society, and remained its honorary secretary until his death. He contributed papers to the society's Transactions, including "Ancient Hampshire Forests", "The Clays of Hampshire and their Economic Uses", and "Hampshire Valleys and Waterways". The Shore Memorial Volume, undertaken by the Society, contains his contributions to the society and other papers. Shortly before 1901 he became joint honorary secretary of the London and Middlesex Archæological Society, and contributed to its Transactions a series of papers on "Anglo-Saxon London and Middlesex".