How Much Is The English TV Presenter Net Worth In 2022?
#English #Presenter #Net #Worth
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Henry Cole was the drummer for a punk band. In his late teens and early twenties, he was addicted to heroin. When he entered the entertainment business, everything changed.
He is an English director, producer and TV show host. He also became known because he was on several motorcycle shows and because he had his own production company.
Also, in 2013, when he drove a Brough Superior at the Bonneville Salt Flats, he set a world record. It had the highest land speed for a 750cc motorcycle made before 1995. He has been working hard on two books, the first coming out in 2018 and the second in 2020.
Janie Cole is Henry Cole’s wife
Find it. Fix it. Henry Cole is married to Janie Cole, whom he loves very much. The couple would live in the Cotswold. His fans wanted him to talk about his partner, but he kept avoiding the topic.
A 57-year-old TV presenter was born in 1965, so maybe he had other relationships before finding his life partner. But if you’re a huge Cole fan, you know he doesn’t let the media into his private life.
He is also written about on Wikipedia where we can learn more about the books he has written, the production company he runs and the world record he set.
Henry kept his married life a secret, so no one knew when he married his loving wife. But he has appeared with her at some events. There are also a few photos of the two together.
What is Henry Cole’s net worth?
Cole has worked in the entertainment industry for over 30 years and made a lot of money. His estimated net worth is between $1 million and $5 million. He was able to tell his side of the story to the whole world because he loved motorcycling.
Most fans know him from World’s Greatest Motorcycle Rides, The Motorbike Show, Shed and Buried and other shows. He is also the CEO of Gladstone Motorcycle, a company that makes custom bikes. He started the company.
According to what has been said, he started his career as a cameraman for news channels. Later he got the chance to make rockumentaries. After that, he mainly worked with heavy rock bands until he started directing TV commercials. And slowly progressed until he made films like Mad Dogs and Englishmen.
In 1995 he also started HCA Entertainment, an independent company that makes TV shows. It focuses on programs that are both interesting and true.
Henry Cole has how many children? Who are his relatives?
Henry and his lovely wife Jaine have two children, Charlie and Tom. It was written about on the English presenter’s personal website. But it’s not just the four people in the family. Jelly Bean, their dog, also lives with them.
Cole’s family gets along well, and maybe he’ll show his boys how much he loves motorcycles and other things he’s passionate about, like fishing and cycling.
When we looked at his Instagram, it was hard to see the pictures of his kids. But he keeps posting pictures of his motorcycles and him and his friends having fun. But Henry’s fans want to meet and interact with his family if they can.
Henry Cole Bio/Wiki
In 1843, artist John Callcott Horsley created the first Christmas card to be sold to the public. It was made for Henry Cole.
Henry Cole’s parents, Captain Henry Robert Cole of the 1st Dragoon Guards and Laetitia Dormer, had him in Bath. In 1817 he was sent to Christ’s Hospital. When he graduated in 1823, he worked as a clerk for Francis Palgrave and then as a subcommissioner for the Record Commission. Cole worked as a record typist, but he still had time to study watercolors with David Cox and show sketches at the Royal Academy. He lived with his father in a house that belonged to the author Thomas Love Peacock. Peacock had two rooms in the house and young Cole became his friend. Cole signed for him and helped him write musical performance reviews. He also introduced Cole to John Stuart Mill, Charles Buller and George Grote. The friends spoke twice a week at Grote’s house on Threadneedle Street. In 1831 a new Record Commission was created and in 1833 Cole was given the position of sub-commissioner. Charles Purton Cooper, the secretary, got into an argument with the committee and with Cole. Cole then asked Charles Buller to protect him. Buller asked the House of Commons in 1836 to set up a committee to report against the current system. When William IV died on June 20, 1837, the assignment ended. Cole wrote many articles to support Buller. Lord Langdale, who was the Master of the Rolls and ran the committee’s affairs, asked him to manage the Treasury’s administration.
Under the Public Record Office Act of 1838, the record office was established in 1838, and Cole was one of four senior assistant keepers. He made many records at the Carlton House Riding School, to which he was sent on November 2, 1841. His reports of how bad this place was made it possible to build the building in Fetter Lane (begun in 1851). Cole’s work at the record company didn’t take all of his energy. In 1838, with the approval of his bosses, he became the secretary of a group working to improve the postal service. He was in charge of their newspaper, the Post Circular. He came up with the idea and the first issue came out on March 14, 1838. He worked hard to get petitions and meetings going, and in 1839 Cobden asked him to become the secretary of the Anti-Cornlaw League. In August 1839, Parliament gave the power to implement the new postal plan, and the Treasury offered prizes for the best stamp ideas. Cole got one of the bounties. He went to the Treasury to discuss details and worked there until early 1842 to find out how the plan would work.
From 1837 to 1840 he worked as an assistant to Rowland Hill. During that time, he was a key part of the Penny Post launch. He is sometimes credited with creating the Penny Black, the world’s first postage stamp.
Cole sold the first commercial Christmas card in 1843. He asked the artist John Callcott Horsley to create the image of the card.
A false name for Felix Summerly
Cole was interested in industrial design and under the name Felix Summerly designed a number of things that were made, including a Minton teapot that won an award. As Felix Summerly, he also wrote a number of children’s books, such as The home treasury (1843-1855), A handbook for the architecture, sculpture, tombs, and decorations of Westminster Abbey (1859), Beauty and the beast: an entirely new edition (1843). ), An alphabet of quadrupeds (1844), and The pleasant history of Reynaert de Vos, told through the photographs of Albert van Everdingen (1843).
The Great Exhibition of 1851 was held in Hyde Park.
Cole used his membership in the Society for the Promotion of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce to get the government to support his campaign to raise standards in industrial design. Prince Albert agreed to help, and in 1847 the Royal Society for the Promotion of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce was awarded a Royal Charter (RSA). With the support of Prince Albert, Cole set up a successful Exhibition of Art Manufactures in 1847. In 1848 and 1849 Cole put together even bigger shows.
Cole went to the 11th Five-Year Exhibition in Paris in 1849 and saw that there was no international exhibition. He saw that the RSA’s planned exhibitions for 1850 and 1851 could be turned into a larger international show. In 1850, with the help of Queen Victoria, he set up the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 to direct the new show, with Prince Albert as chairman.
The Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations was held at the Crystal Palace in London’s Hyde Park from May 1 to October 15, 1851. It was a huge hit with the public and made a lot of money, thanks in part to the way Well, Henry Cole did it.
Cole was ridiculed in Vanity Fair on August 19, 1871 as “King Cole.”
The V&A has a tiled mural
Cole was one of the commissioners and he helped decide that the £186,000 left over from the Great Exhibition would be used to improve science and art education in the UK. Land was purchased in the South Kensington borough and transformed into ‘Albertopolis’, the center of a number of educational and cultural institutions. Henry Cole was put in charge of the Department of Practical Art, which had been set up by the government to improve the quality of art and design education in Britain with a view to how it could be used in industry. In this role, he helped make the Victoria and Albert Museum what it is today. Before that it was called the Museum of Ornamental Art and was located in Marlborough House. Cole oversaw the museum’s move to its current location and was the first director of what was then known as the South Kensington Museum from 1857 to 1873. Part of the museum formerly known as the Huxley Building was turned into the Henry Cole Building in 1974. It is now part of the Henry Cole Wing of the V&A.
Awards and Legacies
Cole helped build the National Art Training School, which was renamed the Royal College of Art in 1896. He also helped build many other institutions in South Kensington, such as the Royal College of Music and Imperial College London. In fact, Imperial College’s math department used to be in the Henry Cole Wing on Exhibition Road. When the building was given to the Victoria and Albert Museum, the department moved.
Cole was awarded the CB and was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1875 for his work on the Great Exhibition.
[7] Cole was called “Old King” by the press and it was said that the Queen and especially the Prince Consort were very close to him. When the Prince Consort needed help with one of his pet projects, he heard him say, “We’ve got to have steam, get Cole.”
Cole lived and worked at 33 Thurloe Square, South Kensington, London, right next to the Victoria and Albert Museum. This is marked by a blue English Heritage plaque.