Joseph Blanco (1775-1841) was born in Seville. A Catholic priest, he came to England in 1810 following Napoleon's conquest of Spain and took on the surname White.

Studying at Oxford, he became an Anglican cleric and wrote various ecclesiastical  poetry.
To Night was described by Samuel Taylor Coleridge as 'the finest sonnet in the English language'.

Blanco White's last 6 years were spent in Liverpool where he was a member of the city's Unitarian Church. He was buried in the Renshaw Street chapels cemetery, which is now the site of the Roscoe Memorial Gardens in Mount Pleasant. 
JOSEPH BLANCO WHITE'S LIVERPOOL
Glazed tiles commemorating Joseph Blanco White in the Roscoe Memorial Gardens
HOME
The Roscoe Memorial Gardens, Blanco White's burial place.
A city if Liverpool  plaque dedicated to White, situated below the above