Thomas Clark was a Canterbury shoemaker and a prolific composer of West Gallery music, especially for the Nonconformist churches of the South East of England.
Background
Clark was born in Street Peter"s parish in Canterbury and baptized on 5 February 1775. He was apprenticed as a shoemaker to his father, William Clark, and became a Freeman of the City of Canterbury in 1796 on completion of his apprenticeship as he was the son of a Freeman.
Career
Sally Drage, writing in the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, notes that he was "particularly influential as the composer of early Sunday School collections"
He took over the family business on his father"s death in 1823. He retired from business in about 1842-1843. He died in Canterbury on 30 May 1859, aged 84.
The best-known of his hymn tunes is Cranbrook: it was originally set to the words "Grace "tis a charming sound" written by Philip Doddridge, and published in Clark"s first book A Sett of Psalm & Hymn Tunes.
Cranbrook was later used as a tune for the Christmas hymn "While shepherds watched their flocks by night" and is now better known as the tune of the Yorkshire song "On Ilkla Moor Baht "at". Two other tunes by Clark were included in the 1933 Methodist Hymn Book with Tunes: they are Crediton (tune 565), which was first published in Clark"s Second Secretariat of Psalm Tunes.. with symphonies & an instrumental bass, adapted to the use of country choirs, and Warsaw (tune 606), which was first published in his Third Secretariat of Psalm & Hymn Tunes.