Thomas Edward Plint (1823–1861) was a British stockbroker and important Pre-Raphaelite art collector who commissioned and owned several notable paintings.[1] In 1839, with his friend Charles Reed, he started and edited a magazine called The Leeds Repository.
A religious evangelical, Plint served as a lay preacher at LeedsCongregational Chapel. In 1852, he commissioned Ford Madox Brown to complete Work, a celebration of the protestant work ethic.[1] He demanded changes to the composition, notably the inclusion of a distributor of evangelical tracts, but died before its completion.[2]