John Thistlewood Davenport

John Thistlewood Davenport (1817–1901) was an English pharmacist and businessman.

[1] He was the founder of J. T. Davenport & Sons, a pharmaceuticals company based in Great Russell Street, London which bought the patent for Dr. John Collis Browne's 'chlorodyne'[citation needed] and sold the famous drug for ailments including headache, stomachache, insomnia, and cholera.

Davenport served as Vice-President of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain (formerly the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain) from 1853–55 and as its President, 1855-56.

An obituary for him in the Society's Pharmaceutical Journal gave this credit to him: “the first official recognition of the Society in connection with the British Pharmacopoeia may be said to date from the time of Mr. Davenport’s presidency.”[2] Davenport was nephew of Arthur Thistlewood, the leader of the Cato Street conspiracy.

Amongst his children were Horace Davenport the athlete and Cambridge University's one time representative in the 'mile dash' and Rev.

1891 advertisement for J. Collis Browne's Chlorodyne