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Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent
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==Biography== {{Moresources|section|date=December 2022}} Jesse Boot sold his controlling interest to American investors in 1920. Boot offered his close friend and business associate John Harston, the opportunity of going into business with him, but Harston declined, feeling the venture was not worth investing in. Boot was a great benefactor to the [[Nottingham|City of Nottingham]]. In 1920, Boot purchased, and presented to the City of Nottingham, 36 acres of open land that lay along the northern side of the Victoria Embankment alongside the River Trent, opposite Plaisaunce, Jesse Boot's summer house which was demolished in 1961. Initially named the 'New Park', it was laid out with grass and trees, and provided a barrier against flooding as well as a pleasant walkway alongside the river. As part of the development an imposing war memorial gateway was built, with the aid of funds from Jesse Boot. He also donated land for the new University College at Highfields, now the [[University of Nottingham]], which opened in 1928. and was presented with the Freedom of the City of Nottingham in 1920. He was also a significant benefactor to his wife's home, [[Jersey]]. Boot was [[Knight Bachelor|knighted]] in 1909,<ref>{{London Gazette |issue=28321 |date=24 December 1909 |pages=9763β9764 }}</ref> created a [[baronet]] in 1917,<ref>{{London Gazette |issue=29982 |date=13 March 1917 |page=2512}}</ref> and announced in the New Year's Honours of 1929 was elevated to the peerage, and created '''Baron Trent''', of [[Nottingham]] in the [[County of Nottingham]] on 18 March 1929.<ref>{{London Gazette |issue=33479 |date=22 March 1929 |page=1968}}</ref> These latter honours probably owed as much to his solid support of the Liberal Party as to his [[philanthropy]] to the city of his birth.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Oxbury|first=Harold|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9coZAAAAYAAJ&q=Jesse+Boot,+1st+Baron+Trent:+philanthropy|title=Great Britons: Twentieth-Century Lives|date=1985|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-211599-7|language=en}}</ref> [[File:Jesse Boot memorial - geograph.org.uk - 680917.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Memorial in Highfields Park]] He died in [[Jersey]] in 1931. The Sir Jesse Boot Chair in Chemistry at the [[University of Nottingham]] was named in his honour. His widow commissioned the French glass artist [[RenΓ© Lalique]] to refit the church of [[St Matthew's Church, Millbrook|St Matthew, Millbrook]] (popularly known as the "Glass Church") as a memorial to him. In 1935 a Primary school was built in Nottingham, Jesse Boot's home town. The School was titled [[The Jesse Boot Primary School]] and was located in Bakersfield, Nottingham. The School closed in 2009 after becoming an academy school. There is a pub named after him in the nearby Nottinghamshire town of Beeston, around 1 mile from Highfields Park. His portrait, by [[Noel Denholm Davis]], is in the collection of the [[University of Nottingham]].<ref name="YP">{{cite web|url=https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/sir-jesse-boot-18501931-bt-jp-46629|title=Sir Jesse Boot (1850β1931), Bt, JP (later 1st Baron Trent)|work=[[Art UK]]|access-date=15 July 2014}}</ref> Another, by the same artist, is on loan to the [[National Portrait Gallery, London|National Portrait Gallery]].<ref name="NPG">{{cite web|url=http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw206648/Jesse-Boot-1st-Baron-Trent?LinkID=mp127848&role=art&rNo=0|title=NPG L247; Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent|publisher=[[National Portrait Gallery, London|National Portrait Gallery]]|access-date=15 July 2014}}</ref>
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