Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 52.djvu/401

 Kensal Green. He married Frances Margaret Hope, daughter of the Rev. C. S. Hope of Derby, on 28 Feb. 1832, and had one daughter.

Sir George Smart had a wide knowledge of the Handelian traditions, obtained from singers who had appeared under Handel. He was a fine conductor, and his abundant notes to the Norwich festival programmes he conducted (now in the British Museum) attest his scrupulous care. He wrote some church music and glees, and edited Gibbons's first set of madrigals, and Handel's Dettingen ‘Te Deum’ for the Musical Antiquarian Society. A portrait of him is in the possession of the Royal Society of Musicians.

(1778–1823), musician, brother of the foregoing, born in 1778, studied the violin under [q. v.], and was engaged as violinist in the orchestras at Covent Garden, the Haymarket, and the Concerts of Ancient Music (wherein he was also principal viola). In 1803 he retired from the musical profession to join a brewery with his father, but on its failure he resumed his original profession, and, besides teaching, led the bands of the English Opera House, the Lent oratorios, the Philharmonic concerts, and Drury Lane till 1821. It was his boast that he had made the latter orchestra an entirely English concern. In 1821 he opened a pianoforte factory in Berners Street, to further a patent for an improved mechanism for ‘touch,’ and he invented a metronome which ‘gave simultaneously a visible and an audible beating of every possible division of time’ (Quart. Mus. Mag. and Rev. iii. 303). He composed a successful ballet, ‘Laurette,’ produced at the King's Theatre. He was highly esteemed by his orchestral colleagues. He died at Dublin on 27 Nov. 1823. About 1810 he married Ann Stanton Bagnold, and had issue,

(1813–1879), organist and composer, who was born in London on 26 Oct. 1813, was educated at Highgate, and while a boy frequently visited Robson's organ factory, where he learnt the elements of his ultimately profound knowledge of organ construction and practical mechanics. He subsequently was articled to a solicitor, but soon abandoned law for music, and built himself a set of organ pedals for his piano. In 1831 he became organist at Blackburn, Lancashire, and four years later wrote his first important composition, an anthem for the three-hundredth anniversary of the Reformation, which was performed at Blackburn parish church on 4 Oct. 1835. Leaving Lancashire on being appointed organist to St. Philip's, Regent Street, London, he started as a teacher of music, and became critic for the ‘Atlas’ newspaper. In March 1844 he was appointed organist to St. Luke's, Old Street, E.C., a post he held twenty-one years; and later to St. Pancras Church, where he remained fourteen years. All his life Smart suffered from a weakness of the eyes which ultimately became total blindness, when his numerous compositions had to be dictated to an amanuensis. He designed, among many organs, those in the City and St. Andrew's halls in Glasgow, and the town-hall at Leeds. In 1878 he went to Dublin to examine and report on the organ in Christ Church Cathedral. He died in London on 6 July 1879, and was buried at Hampstead. A civil list pension of 100l. a year was granted to Smart, but not gazetted until two days after his death. His portrait was painted by [q. v.]

As an organist Henry Thomas Smart was esteemed, and is said to have possessed great skill in extemporisation. His compositions were numerous, and in many cases extremely popular. He wrote an opera, ‘Berta,’ produced at the Haymarket with scant success in 1855; and left ‘Undine’ and ‘The Surrender of Calais’ unfinished. Of his church music, a service in F has enjoyed a great vogue; he also wrote other services in G (about 1850); in G for ‘The Practical Choirmaster,’ 1870; and an evening service in B flat for the Festival of the Sons of the Clergy, 1870. His anthems include ‘O God the King of Glory,’ ‘Sing to the Lord,’ and ‘Thou hast been our Refuge,’ written for the fourth and sixth annual festivals of the London Church Choir Association, 1876 and 1878. Smart wrote upwards of eighty part-songs, of which the following may be mentioned either for their popularity or merit: ‘Shepherd's Lament,’ and ‘Nature's Praise;’ about forty vocal trios, fifty duets, and 167 songs, of which ‘Estelle’ was often sung by Madame Dolby; ‘The Lady of the Sea’ (1862); ‘The Abbess.’

A cantata, ‘The Bride of Dunkerron’ (text by F. Enoch), which brought him much fame, was produced at the Birmingham Festival, 1864; he also wrote ‘King René's Daughter,’ ‘Jacob,’ and ‘The Fisher-maidens.’ His organ works are perhaps the most popular (in the best sense) of all his works. The list includes: ‘A series of Organ Pieces,’ and many pieces written for the ‘Organist's Quarterly.’ Smart edited ‘A Choral Book,’ 1856, and ‘A Presbyterian Hymnal,’ 1875. [Information from Mrs. Henry Joachim; Cox's Mus. Recoll. i. 80 et seq.; R. H. Legge's Annals of the Norwich Festivals; Illustrated London News, 16 March 1867; Musical World, xii.; Times, 10 Sept. 1864; a list of H. T. Smart's