In 1822, he married Eliza Drewe. This led to a friendship and literary collaboration with her brother-in-law,
Thomas Hood. Together the two wrote several comic and satirical pieces, the most popular being
Odes and Addresses to Great People in 1825. Tragedy struck in 1834 when his ten-year-old daughter Lucy died. One obituary asserts that unluckily for him, Reynolds became involved with Mr. Gully (
John Gully?) which led to him betting on events which did not always turn out as he expected. The consequences being so disastrous (bankruptcy) that he gave up his practice of law and sought the ‘quietude’ of the
Isle of Wight. In 1847 he was appointed Clerk for the district of
Newport, Isle of Wight in the County of Southampton. John died at Node Hill [Upper St James Street], Newport on 15 November 1852, and was buried in the St Thomas’ Church Burial Ground on 19 November. It was recorded in 1913 that visitors looking for his grave had difficulty finding it due to the illegibility of the inscription on the headstone and the neglected state of the grave. At that time the headstone was renovated, the inscription made readable and the further inscription “THE FRIEND OF KEATS” added to the headstone. In the 1950s the Burial Ground was cleared of most memorials and was laid out as a public park known as Church Litten, the headstone for John H. Reynolds was retained and today (2025) although the headstone does not mark the position of John's grave, it is preserved and is positioned against the wall on the west side of the park, adjacent to the Mountbatten Library. ==See also==