Background
He was born at Fenny Park, Tiverton, Devon, educated at Blundell"s School and went to India at the age of 17 with Benjamin Robins, the chief engineer and captain-general of artillery in the East India Company"s settlements.
He was born at Fenny Park, Tiverton, Devon, educated at Blundell"s School and went to India at the age of 17 with Benjamin Robins, the chief engineer and captain-general of artillery in the East India Company"s settlements.
After the death of Robins, Call became engineer-in-chief, and eventually chief engineer with a seat on the Governor"s Council. Robert Clive strongly recommended Call for the Governorship of Madras, but he had to return to England on the death of his father on 31 December 1766. On his return, he became High Sheriff of Cornwall for 1771-1772 and was elected Member of Parliament for Callington in 1784, a seat he held until his death.
Call built Whiteford House near Stoke Climsland, Cornwall (demolished in 1913) and the nearby folly, Whiteford Temple, now owned by the Landmark Trust.
He also built the reproduction Civil War fort on the summit of Kit Hill and was responsible for the construction of Bodmin Gaol in 1779. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1775, and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1785.
He became blind seven years before he died, of apoplexy, at his home in Old Burlington Street, London, and was buried at Street Margaret"s old churchyard, Lee, Kent (now in the borough of Lewisham), where there is a grade II* listed monument to his memory.
Royal Society.