Frederick William Hulme

Frederick William Hulme (22 October 1816 – 14 November 1884) was an English landscape painter and illustrator.

Their only son, Frederick Edward Hulme, born in March 1841 in Hanley, Staffordshire, became a notable teacher, writer and amateur botanist known for his drawings of flowers.

[4] A part work publication entitled "The land we live in" included several views of the Potteries in Staffordshire.

The brightness and precision of his landscapes have been compared to those of William Shayer[4] and to Thomas Creswick - another Birmingham artist who had first exhibited fourteen years before.

In 2002, an 1865 Hulme landscape, "Sheep resting in a woodland glade" sold for £33,000 at Christie's auction house, London.

Sheep resting in a woodland glade (1865)
Pont Hoogan Mill