He was best known for English Landed Society in the Nineteenth Century (1963), which made the role of the landed gentry a high-priority topic for agrarian and political history. He also studied urban middle and working classes, and suburbia. He added to the long-standing debate on British class history by new emphasis on "respectability." Thompson argued that it operated across class boundaries and provided a powerful stabilizing counterbalance to the working class upheavals of Victorian society. His model of society contradicted the more commonly employed Marxist assumptions. He opened up a field that has attracted many younger scholars.[5]
Personal life
In 1951 Thompson married Anne Challoner; they had two sons and a daughter.[2][6]
Thompson died on 23 August 2017, aged 92.[6] Anne Thompson died on 27 March 2024.[7]
Works
Victorian England: the horse-drawn society; an inaugural lecture (1970) at Bedford College LCCN76-596277ISBN0900145048
English Landed Society in the Nineteenth Century (1963); 2013 edition. ISBN0415848482.
^Robbins, Michael (1985). "review of Horses in European Economic History: A Preliminary Canter, edited by F. M. L. Thompson". The Antiquaries Journal. 65: 198–199. doi:10.1017/S0003581500025245. p. 199