Thorp then became rector of Ryton in 1811,[6] joining a prestigious group with previous rectors including Thomas Secker, later Archbishop of Canterbury. After his time as rector of Holy Cross Church, Ryton, he became Canon (1829) and then Archdeacon of Durham in 1831 and, a year later, became the first warden of the University of Durham.[7] Thorp remained heavily involved with the university, also being the first master of University College. This was a position he held until his death in Durham in 1862. He was buried at Ryton Church. He had married twice.
Achievements
Thorp was a prime mover in introducing free education to Ryton. He worked with the Church Missionary Society to set up a university in Freetown, Sierra Leone, to ensure that freed slaves had access to education. He set up the first penny bank in England, in Ryton, allowing those with small incomes to borrow. He also arranged for his family to buy the Farne Islands, employing a wildlife warden to protect threatened bird species.[8]
Thorp was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in May 1839.[9] His name was chosen as the identity of a secondary school in West Gateshead in 2011, Charles Thorp Comprehensive School (now Thorp Academy), following the amalgamation of Hookergate School and Ryton Comprehensive School, on the site of the school he sponsored in his lifetime.
References
↑Deaths.The Times (London, England), Wednesday, 15 October 1862; pg. 1; Issue 24377
↑"Classical Victorians: Scholars, Scoundrels and Generals in Pursuit of Antiquity" Richardson,E p193: Cambridge, CUP, 2013 ISBN978-1-107-02677-3