The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Aristocracy of London: Part I:Kensington, by AnonymousThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and withalmost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away orre-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License includedwith this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.orgTitle: The Aristocracy of London: Part I: Kensington Titled, Untitled, Professional, & CommercialAuthor: AnonymousRelease Date: March 21, 2013 [eBook #42385]Language: EnglishCharacter set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ARISTOCRACY OF LONDON: PART I:KENSINGTON***
Transcribed from the 1863 O’Byrne Brothers & Co.edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org. Many thanksto Kensington Library for assistance in making thistranscription.
As this Volume will be revised, corrected, and reissuedannually, parties whose names may have been accidentally omitted,are requested to apply at once to the
PART I.
KENSINGTON.
O’BYRNE BROTHERS & CO.
9, ADELPHI TERRACE, STRAND,W.C.
1863.
PRINTED BY JAMES SEARS, BOLT COURT, FLEETSTREET.
The object of the present work isto record the family particulars, military and civil services,distinctions, public employments, professional and commercialpursuits, and general personal information in regard to thatlarge section of the community who dwell at the “WestEnd,” and in kindred localities.
Hitherto books of the same character have been restricted tothe titled and territorial classes; excluding as a rule thosewhom education and intelligence—tested by theirprofessional and commercial pursuits—have rendered equallydeserving of honourable and gratifying mention, forming as theydo the bulk of what is termed good society.
To supply this deficiency is the intent of the presentpublication, which aims, as already suggested, at being ahandbook to the nobility and gentry of London—the termgentry being understood to include logically those to whom thetitle of gentleman has been accorded by commonconsent—those as a rule whose vocation in lifep. vidoes notdebar them from admission to our West End Clubs.
To the work, as a whole, we have given the title of“Aristocracy of London,”as a compliment in the first place to that titular and hereditaryelement to which alone the word “Aristocracy” hasbeen hitherto assumed to belong, and next as a tribute to thatother intellectual and commercial element to which, in a widersense, it may be equally allowed to apply; as a homage, in short,to that eminence of rank and that eminence of intelligence which,combined, impart their tone to our educated classes, andnecessarily to the reflex of these, the present publication.
On the special interest which a work such as the “
For the sake of convenience the “
p.vii1.—The Aristocracy ofKensington.
2.—The Aristocracy of Notting Hilland Bayswater.
3.—The Aristocracy of Paddington andSt. John’s Wood.
4.—The Aristocracy of Portman,Cavendish, and Russell Squares, &c.
5.—The Aristocracy of Hyde Park andMay Fair.
6.—The Aristocracy of St. James andBelgravia.
7.—The Aristocracy of Brompton andChelsea, &c.
8.—Miscellaneous andSupplementary.
The first of these parts, the “
It only remains for us to announce that the “
9,Adelphi Terrace,
1863.
| |
Abingdon Villas | |
Addison Crescent | |
Addison Gardens | |
Addison Road | |
Addison Terrace | |
Albert Gate | |
Albert Place | |
Albert Terrace | |
Allen Terrace | |
Argyll Road | |
| |
Bath Place | |
Bedford Place | |
Belmont Villas | |
Berkeley Gardens | |
Brunswick Gardens | |
Brunswick Terrace | |
| |
Cambridge Place | |
Cambridge Terrace | |
Campden Grove | |
Campden Hill | |
Campden Hill Road | |
Campden Hill Terrace | |
Campden Hill Villas | |
Campden House Road | |
Clarendon Road | |
Clarendon Terrace | |
Courtland Place | |
Courtland Terrace | |
Courtland Villas | |
Cromwell Place | |
Cromwell Road | |
| |
Douro Place | |
Durham Villas | |
| |
Earl’s Court Terrace | |
Earl’s Terrace | |
Edwarde’s Place | |
Eldon Road | |
Ennismore Place | |
Essex Villas | |
| |
Gloucester Terrace | |
Gordon Place | |
| |
Holland Villas Road | |
Hornton Villas | |
Hyde Park Gate | |
Hyde Park Gate, South | |
Hyde Park Terrace | |
| |
Inkerman Terrace | |
Inverness Gardens | |
| |
Kensington | |
Kensington gate | |
Kensington Gore | |
Kensington Palace | |
Kensington Square | |
| |
Lansdowne Terrace | |
Leonard Place | |
Lower Phillimore Place | |
| |
Madeley Villas | |
Mall | |
Marlborough Terrace | |
| |
Palace Gardens Terrace | |
Palace Gardens Villas | |
Palace Green | |
Pembroke Cottages, North | |
Pembroke Cottages, South | |
Pembroke Road | |
Pembroke Square[0] | |
Percy Villas | |
Petersham Terrace | |
Phillimore Gardens | |
Phillimore Terrace | |
Prince’s Gardens | |
Prince’s Gate | |
Prince’s Terrace | |
| |
Queen’s Gate | |
Queen’s Gate Gardens | |
Queen’s Gate Terrace | |
| |
Rutland Gate | |
| |
St. Alban’s Road | |
St. George’s Terrace | |
St. Mary Abbot’s Terrace | |
Scarsdale Terrace | |
Scarsdale Villas | |
Shaftesbury Villas | |
Sheffield Gardens | |
Sheffield Terrace | |
South Place | |
South Villas | |
Sussex Place | |
| |
Tor Villas | |
| |
Upper Bedford Place | |
Upper Hornton Villas | |
Upper Kensington Gore | |
Upper Phillimore Gardens | |
Upper Phillimore Place | |
| |
Vicarage Gardens | |
Vicarage Place | |
Victoria Road | |
| |
Warwick Gardens, East | |
Warwick Gardens, West | |
Warwick Square | |
Wilton Terrace | |
Wright’s Lane | |
| |
York Villas | |
Young Street | |
A.B. | Bachelor of Arts. |
A.M. | Master of Arts. |
App. | Appointed. |
A.R.A. | Associate of the Royal Academy. |
B. | Born. |
Bart. | Baronet. |
Br. | Brother. |
C. | Called. |
C.E. | Civil Engineer. |
Ch. Ch. | Christ Church. |
Coll. | College. |
Comm. | Commissioner. |
C.B. | Companion of the Order of the Bath. |
C.M.G. | Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George. |
Creat. | Creation. |
D. | Died. |
Dau. | Daughter. |
D.C.L. | Doctor of Civil Law. |
D.D. | Doctor of Divinity. |
Dep. Lieut. | Deputy Lieutenant. |
Ent. | Entered. |
E.I.C.S. | East India Company’s Service. |
Eng. | England. |
Eq. Drftsmn. | Equity Draftsman. |
F.G.S. | Fellow of the Geological Society. |
F.L.S. | Fellow of the Linnæan Society |
F.R.A.S. | Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society. |
F.R.C.P. | Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians. |
F.R.C.S. | Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons. |
F.R.G.S. | Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. |
F.R.H.S. | Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society. |
F.R.S. | Fellow of the Royal Society. |
F.S.A. | Fellow of the Society of Antiquarians. |
F.S.S. | Fellow of the Statistical Society. |
F.Z.S. | Fellow of the Zoological Society. |
G.C.B. | Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath. |
G.C.H. | Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Guelphs ofHanover. |
G.C.M.G. | Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St.George. |
Gt. Brit. | Great Britain. |
H.M.S. | Her Majesty’s Ship. |
Hon. | Honourable. |
His or Her Royal Highness. | |
Irel. | Ireland. |
J.P. | Justice of the Peace. |
K.C.B. | Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath. |
K.C.H. | Knight Commander of the Order of the Guelphs ofHanover. |
K.C.M.G. | Knight Commander of the Order of St. Michael and St.George. |
K.G. | Knight of the Order of the Garter. |
K.H. | Knight of the Order of the Guelphs of Hanover. |
K.P. | Knight of the Order of St. Patrick. |
K.S.I. | Knight of the Star of India. |
K.T. | Knight of the Order of the Thistle. |
K.T.S. | Knight of the Tower and Sword. |
Lieut. | Lieutenant. |
L.L.D. | Doctor of Laws. |
L.R.C.P. | Licentiate Royal College of Physicians. |
L.R.C.S. | Licentiate Royal College of Surgeons. |
L.S.A. | Licentiate Society of Apothecaries. |
M. | Married. |
Marq. | Marquis. |
M.B. | Bachelor of Medicine. |
M.D. | Doctor of Medicine. |
M.R.C.S. | Member of the Royal College of Surgeons. |
M.P. | Member of Parliament. |
Q.C. | Queen’s Counsel. |
R.A. | Royal Academician. |
,, | Royal Artillery. |
R.E. | Royal Engineers. |
R.N. | Royal Navy. |
S. | Son. |
Sch. | School or Scholar. |
Scot. | Scotland. |
Suc. | Succeeded. |
Surg. | Surgeon. |
Trin. | Trinity. |
Utd. Kgdm. | United Kingdom. |
V.C. | Victoria Cross. |
Visct. | Viscount. |
Assistant keeper of her Majesty’s records (PublicRecord Office,Rolls House, W.C.)
In the accountant general’s department of the War Office(Pall Mall, S.W.)
B. at Oxford, Feb. 1828. In Office of EmigrationCommissioners (8,Park-street,Westminster,S.W.)
A landscape painter.
A professor of German, French, and Mathematics.
A wine merchant of the firm of Hamilton, Aplin, & Co. (26,Bucklersbury, E.C.)
Of a very respectable family, seated for centuries inLancashire, now represented by Col. Rawstorne of Penwortham inthat county. Second s. of the late Capt. Rawstorne whofought in the American and Peninsular wars; cousin of Sir Wm.Pilkington, Bart. of Chevet Hall, co. York;p. 2m. dau. ofCapt. Atkins, R.N. Ent. the navy 1806; witnessed, in 1807,the flight of the royal house of Portugal to the Brazils;contributed, in 1811, to the capture of the Medes Islands; in1814 captured several vessels off the North American coast;obtained his present rank in 1855.
An artist.
B. in Yorkshire; a sculptor; member of the Society of Arts andRoyal Institution (13,Bruton-st.)
In the office of the Committee of Council on Education(Downing-street, S.W.)
B. in Edinburgh; member of the Royal College of Surgeons,Edinburgh, 1816, England, 1820; a Fellow of the latter since1843; retired from the profession 1844; was formerly demonstratorof anatomy, and conservator of the Anatomical Museum Universityof Edinburgh.
S. of the late George Thomson, Esq. of Freswick; b. inEdinburgh; m. Barbara Madeline Gordon Sinclair, eld. dau. of thelate William Sinclair, Esq. of Freswick. A deputycommissary-general on half-pay. Is a J.P. and dep.-lieut.for Caithness. Served, while on full pay, on expedition toStralsund, in Canada, Portugal, Bermuda, West Indies,&c. Lately in charge of the commissariat in Nova Scotiaand Canada (Dunbrath Castle,Caithness).
The family of Woodyear is of Kentish origin, the earliestmention of the name being that of William Woodier, of Chatham,co. Kent, who lived in 1454.
A wine merchant (2,Brabant Court,Philpot Lane,E.C.)
Member of the Royal College of Surgeons; formerly Surgeon tothe Merchant Seamen’s hospital, Lisbon; late assistantsurgeon 1st regiment, Derbyshire militia; now lieut. 4th RoyalSouth Middlesex militia. A member of the Royal East IndiaInstitution, Whitehall.
A surveyor; of the firm of Welch and Atkinson (10,Lancaster-place,Strand, W.C.)
A merchant (32,Fenchurch street, E.C.)
A merchant and seed crasher (14,Walbrook, E.C.)
Nat. s. of late Lord Holland; b. 1801; m. 1824, Lady MaryFitzClarence, nat. dau. of Wm. IV (she was raised to the rank ofa marquis’ dau. 1831, and app. house-keeper at WindsorCastle, 1835). Ent. the army 1815; prom. to his presentrank 1854; formerly M.P. for Horsham, Calne, Tavistock, Stroud,and Tower Hamlets; has been surveyor-gen. to the Ordnance(Reform Club).
Dau. of the 16th and sister of the present Earl of Erroll; b.1835; is niece of Lady Mary Fox.
S. of the late W. Ryan, Esq.; b. 1793; m. 1814, Charlotte,dau. of Wm. Whitmore, Esq. of Dudmaston, Shropsh. Educ.Trin. Col. Cam.; obtained his M.A. 1817; c. to the bar(Lincoln’s Inn),
In the Treasury (Union Club;Downing-street,S.W.)
B. 1795, in Northumberland; a widower. In HerMajesty’s Commission (The Grove,Hayes,Middlesex).
A merchant of the firm of Janvrin, Grassié, and DeLisle (14aAustin Friars, E.C.)
A justice of the peace for the co. of Lancaster (Flan.How,Ulverston).
A solicitor of the firm of Clowes, Hickley, and Keary (10,King’s Bench Walk,Temple, E.C.)
A stock and sharebroker of the firm of Lind and Rickard;member of the Stock Exchange (3,Bank Chambers,Lothbury, E.C.)
Eld. s. of the late Sir George Barrow, who was for more than40 years sec. of the Admiralty, and who was created a bart. forhis public services; b. in London 1806; m. 1832, Rosamond, dau.of Wm. Pennell, Esq. late H.M. consul gen. in Brazil. Educated at Charter House; Entrd. Colonial Office 1825; promotedto senior clerk 1843; in charge of Mediterranean Department(Athenæum Club).
Attached to the seamen’s wages branch of the Admiralty(Somerset House, W.C.).
Educ. at St. John’s College, Cambridge, of which he is aFellow; ord. 1839; principal of Huddersfield College School1840–43; headmaster of Kensington School, 1843–53;incumbent of St. Barnabas Parish since 1853 (Untied UniversityClub;St. John’s College,Cambridge).
A solicitor (Ironmonger-lane, E.C.)
M.A. Worcester College, Oxford (Oxford and CambridgeClub).
A member of the Royal College of Surgeons since 1852, and ofApothecaries Hall since 1855; obtained his M.B. at Cambridge1857; was formerly Mecklenburgh student in chemistry at CaiusCollege, and lecturer on forensic medicine at Steever’sHospital, Dublin.
Has been a licentiate of Apothecaries Hall since 1844; amember of the Royal College of Surgeons, England, since 1852; andassistant surgeon 3rd W. York Militia since 1852; formerlyresident medical officer of the Cork-street (Dublin) FeverHospital. Has devoted much attention to cholera.
Stock and sharebroker; member of the Stock Exchange (21,Tokenhouse Yard, E.C.)
Chief clerk in the Master of the Rolls’ Office (13,Chancery-lane, W.C.)
Obtained his Edinburgh degree of M.D. in 1823; became aninspector-general of hospitals and Fleets in 1841; served as suchin China, and at Haslar and Greenwich Hospitals; is hon.physician to the Queen; author of various professional works; aFellow of the Royal and Geological Societies.
A Fellow of the Society of Arts.
A civil engineer (5,Victoria-street,Westminster, S.W.)
A merchant of the firm of Burton & Garraway(Green-street,Bethnal Green, N.E.)
A merchant of the firm of Openshaw, Unna, and Co. (3,Coleman Buildings, E.C.; 12,Oxford-street,Manchester).
Medical galvanist.
An architect; surveyor to the Kensington Vestry.
A private gentleman.
Ambassador.—Comte de Flahaut.
1st Secretary.—Marquis de Chateaurenard.
2nd ditto.—Comte de Jaucourt.
3rd ditto.—Amédée Bartholdi.
Attachés.—Paul Dutreil, and Baron deBilling.
Naval Attaché.—Captain Pigeard.
Military Attaché.—Marquisd’Andigne.
Chancellor.—Mons. H. Roux.
2nd s. of Algernon Greville, Esq. of North Lodge, Herts, byCaroline, 2nd dau. of late Sir Bellingham Graham, Bart. Related to Earl of Warwick; b. 1821; m. 1840, Lady Rosa Nugent,only child of the present Marquis of Westmeath. Is a J.P.and dep.-lieut. for Herts; vice lieut. for Westmeath; dep.-lieut.for Westmeath; and J.P. for Westmeath, Cavan, Longford, andRoscommon. M.P. (liberal) for co. Longford, since 1852;formerly in 1st Life Guards; colonel Westmeath Militia since 1850(Traveller’s Chub;Mymm’s-place,near Hatfield,Herts;Clonyn,Castletowndelvin,county Westmeath;Clonhugh,Mullingar;Clonteen Lodge,Drumsna).
Manager of the London and County Bank, Western Branch.
Late Captain 2nd Dragoon Guards; m. 1833, Elizabeth, dau. ofRobert Norman, Esq. of Slaugham Park and Duncombe, co.Sussex.
Joined the 2nd Life Guards in 1858; has since retired. (Union,and Junior United Service Clubs;Corindavon Lodge,Ballater,N. B.;Haggerstone Castle,Northumberland).
A conveyancer (50,Lincolns’ Fields, W.C.)
A senior examiner of the first-class in the Audit Office(Somerset House, W.C.)
Formerly an officer of the 3rd Drag. Guards, and the 4th Foot;present at Waterloo;p.8promoted to rank of Major, 1837; has retired from theservice (Junior United Service Club).
Joined the Royal Artillery in 1817; promoted to the rank ofcol., 1854; has retired from the service on full pay (Army andNavy Club).
Descended from the elder branch of the once illustrious, nowextinct family of “Godounoff,” illustrated in the16th century by the CzarBoris Godounoff, king of Russia,who established the serfdom, and bySalomonia Sabouoff,Czarine of Russia, in the 15th century. Mr. Sabouroff isfirst secretary to the Russian embassy (St. James’sClub;Chesham House).
Obtained hit Dublin L.M. in 1834, and his Glasgow M.D. in1837; became F.S.A. in 1840; and L.R.C.S. Edinburgh,1841. Has devoted much attention to cases of deliriumtremens and typhoid fever. Published in 1856 a work on theWaters of Vichy and Carlsbad (12,Michael’s-place,Brompton).
A member of Lincoln’s-inn; c. to the bar, 1858. Aconveyancer (Chapel Staircase,Lincoln’s-inn,W.C.)
Athenæum Club.
A special commissioner in the Special Commissioners’Income Tax department of the Inland Revenue Office (SomersetHouse, W.C.)
A merchant and ship-broker (150,Leadenhall-st.,E.C.)
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, England,and a licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries, since1840. Medical officer of the Kensington Workhouse andsurgeon to the Kensington Dispensary.
Professor of Italian.
Solicitor; a commissioner for taking the examinations ofmarried ladies on disposing of their separate estates, forMiddlesex, London, and Westminster. Lately, and for someyears, engaged in the Law department of the Lord Mayor and commoncouncil of the City, who, on two occasions, have expressed theirapprobation of his services, having presented him on the latterwith a testimonial of one thousand guineas (5,Nicholas-lane,Lombard-street, E.C.)
A Surveyor.
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, England,and an M.D., St. Andrew’s, since 1855. Medicalregistrar of St. George’s Hospital. Has contributedlargely to the medical journals of the day (24,George-street,Hanover square).
Surgeon-Dentist (65,Brook-street,Hanover-square, W.)
Solicitor (member of the Incorporated Law Society) of the firmof Hardisty and Goodrich; a director of the Westminster Life andFire Insurance Company (43,Great Marlborough-st., W.)
Solicitor.
An Officer in the Mercantile Marine.
Wine merchant, of the firm of Holdsworth and Douce, lateCutler and Co. (12,Hungerford-street,Strand,W.C.)
Colonial and chemical broker, and commission merchant of thefirm of Josling and Co. (7,Mincing-lane, E.C.)
Member of Society of Painters in Water Colours.
Landscape painter in water colours.
Stock and share broker; Fellow of Geological Society, Societyof Antiquaries, and Statistical Society (Angel-court,Bank, E.C.)
Only s. and heir of 16th Baron Teynham; b. 1822. Examiner in Audit Office (Somerset House, W.C.)
Civil engineer; professor in University College, London;lecturer to Royal Engineer establishment at Chatham; member ofgovernment special committee on use of iron for war purposes;author of many scientific works and papers (Reform Club,3,Storey’s Gate, W.C.)
Entered army 1827; lieut. 1832, capt. 1847; served in 15thHussars; retired 1848.
Deputy accountant-general of the Navy (Admiralty,Somerset House).
Member of Inner Temple; c.
Artist.
A surgeon-dentist (82,Wimpole-st.,Cavendish-square, W.)
A surgeon.
Has been a member of the Rl. Coll. of Surg., Eng., and alicentiate of the So. of Apoth. since 1854. Latehouse-surgeon to the Lying Inn Hospital, Birmingham. Formerly house-surgeon to the Western Gen. Dispensary,London.
A member of the Middle Temple; c. to the bar, 1842; an equitydraftsman and conveyancer (16,Old-sq.,Lincoln’s-inn, W.C.)
An architect of the firm of Snook and Stock (6,Duke-street,London-bridge, S.E.)
An artist (East Burnham Beeches,nearWindsor).
An officer of the German Legion; present at Waterloo.
Examiner of printers’ accounts in the Stationery office(Storey’s-gate, S.W.)
An inspector for arts, in the Art Department of thep. 12Committee ofCouncil on Education (South Kensington Museum, W.)
A junior examiner in the Office of Works (12,Whitehall-place, S.W.)
A surgeon.
In the Science and Art Department of the Committee of Councilon Education (South Kensington Museum, W.)
Attached to the 67th Foot. Ent. the army in 1834;obtained his present rank, 1860; served throughout the campaignof 1860 in China, in the principal events of which heparticipated with distinction.
An artist.
B. at Ipswich, 1799; m. 1838, Margaret, dau. of AlexanderDingwall, Esq., of Ranniston, Aberdeenshire. Has two sonsand one dau. Served with 2nd Foot in the campaign ofAffghanistan and Beloochistan; commanded his regiment at theassault and capture of Ghuznee (medal); the assault and captureof Khelat; commanded the forces as a brigadier in the SouthernConean and Sawant Warree country during the campaign of1844–5. A companion of the Bath; a knight of theDooranee Empire. Retired from the army, 1851 (JuniorUnited Service Club, W.C.)
In charge of the Surveyors’ Department of the GeneralPost Office (St. Martin’s-le-Grand, E.C.)
A merchant (4,Langbourn-chambers,Fenchurch-street, E.C.)
Second s. of George Gill Mounsey, Esq., of Rockliff,Castletown, co. Cumberland; b. April 3, 1831. A member ofLincoln’s-inn; c. to the bar, 1857 (19,Old-square,Lincoln’s-inn, W.C.)
A director of the Northern Insurance Company.
Joined the Royal Engineers, 1843; promoted to his presentrank, 1854; has been 19 years on full pay.
Actuary to the Legal and General Life Insurance Company (10,Fleet-street, E.C.)
A surgeon.
A Colonel, retired full pay, Royal Engineers. Ent. thearmy, 1808; promoted to his present rank, 1855. Present atthe sieges of Badajoz, 1811–12 (severely wounded), passageof the Nive, battles before Bayonne, Orthes (wounded), andToulouse, also New Orleans, and Fort Bowyer. Has receivedthe silver war medal, with four clasps.
Eldest dau. of John Kingston, Esq. a commissioner at SomersetHouse; granddau. of the hon. Mr. Justice Rooke, a judge of theCourt of Common Pleas, and great granddaughter of ValentineKnightley, Esq. of Fawsley Park, Northamptonshire; m. 1838, theRev. Cuthbert Orlebar, second s. of Richard Orlebar, Esq. ofHinwick House, sometime vicar of Podington, in the same co.; awidow, 1861; has issue, with daus., two sons, C. Knightley, acivil engineer, and Vere Bernard, a cadet, R.N. on board H.M.S.“Cadmus.”
In the Store Department of the War Office; m. 1849, AnnetteEliza, only dau. of the late John Backe, Esq. of H.M. Ordnance(Pall Mall, S.W.)
The representative of the Cookes of Bentley, a family whichcame into England with the Conqueror, and has been for centuriesseated with high respectability in the co. of Worcester. The senior line obtained a baronetcy. B. 25th Oct.1804. M.P. for Worcestershire, 1833–7. Formerlyhigh sheriff for the county. A capt. WorcestershireYeomanry (Bentley,Worcestershire).
In the Accountant General’s Department of the War Office(Pall Mall, S.W.)
In the Warehouse-Keeper’s Department of the InlandRevenue Office (Somerset House, W.C.)
Widow of the Late Capt. Wm. Bourchier, R.N.
A member of Lincoln’s Inn; called to the bar in 1861(Reform Club).
A member of the Middle Temple. C. to the Bar 1859. A journalist, and man of letters.
An auctioneer.
Widow of the late solicitor of the War Office.
Son of the late solicitor of the War Office (11,John-street,Adelphi, W.C.)
A solicitor of the firm of Lucas and Royle (20,GreatMarlborough-street, W.)
A wine and Brandy Merchant (24,Little Knightrider-st.E.C.)
In the Estates Department of the Trinity House(Trinity-square,Tower-hill, E.C.)
This gentleman is a son, we believe, of major-generalCharretie, by Margaret Anne, dau. of John Henry Burges, Esq., ofWood Park.
Secretary to the London and Blackwall, and the London,Tilbury, and Southend Railways (Fenchurch-street,E.C.)
Chairman of the West London Railway (16,Tokenhouse-yard, E.C.)
A scion of the Campbells of Skipness, anciently descended fromthe ducal house of Argyll; allied, by intermarriage, with thenoble families of Glencairn, Kerr, Uxbridge, Charleville,Russell, Lennox, Wemyss, Ruthven, and Belhaven; Chief of theCampbell’s of Islay; b. 1822; educ. at Eton and EdinburghUniversity. C. to the Bar (Inner Temple) 1851; privatesecretary to the Lord Privy Seal, 1853; assist. secretary GeneralBoard of Health, 1854; secretary Lighthouse Commission, 1859; agroom of the Privy Chamber to Her Majesty (Brookes’ andTravellers’ Clubs;Stable-yard,St.James’s;Chale,Isle of Wight).
Second s. of the late colonel Leslie, of Glasslough. M.P. for Monaghan; and a direct descendant of the celebrateddivine John Leslie, bishop of Orkney, Raphoe, and Clogher; m. 26Aug. 1856, Constance Wilhelmina Frances, youngest dau. of thelate right hon. George Dawson Damer. M.P. P.C. Has issue, a son (John, b. 1857), and two daus. (Mary, b. 1858;and Constance, b. 1861). Educ. at Harrow and Christ Church,Oxford. Formerly in the 1st Life Guards; an amateurpainter; and an Exhibitor at the Royal Academy, and in the FineArts Department of the International Exhibition(White’s,Travellers,&c.)
Descended from the Vincents of Bernake Manor, Northampton;established there temp. Henry III.; great grands., through hismother, of John, Earl of Bristol; heir presumptive to thebaronetcy of Vincent, of Debden Hall, Essex; b. 1796; m. 1830,Elizabethp.17Anne, dau. of Col. Callander, of Craigforth. Educ.at Eton. In the Treasury, 1813–23; Queen’sRemembrancer of the Exchequer, 1823–58; c. to the Bar(Gray’s Inn) 1850. A magistrate for Middlesex; adep.-lieut., for Berks (Travellers’ Club;LilyHill,Bracknell,Berks).
A representative Scotch Peer, 28th in descent from the 1stThane of Angus; b. 1826; succeeded his father 1849; m. 1851,Henrietta, dau. of 2nd Lord Stanley of Alderley; has issue, twosons and two daus.; educ. at Eton, and Christ Church, Oxford;B.A. 1847; dep.-lieut. for Forfar; Capt. Forfar Yeomanry; aliberal conservative; a director of the Alyth Railway Company(Cortachy Castle,Kerriemuir,Forfarshire).
Hereditary Master of the Queen’s Household; keeper ofthe Great Seal of Scotland; admiral of the Western Isles; keeperof Dunoon Castle, and of Dunstaffnage, and Carrick; one of HerMajesty’s state counsellors for Scotland; hereditarysheriff of the co. of Argyll; b. 1823; suc. his father 1847; m.1844, Lady Elizabeth Georgiana, sister of the present Duke ofSutherland; has issue, five sons and three daus. Chancellorof the University of St. Andrew’s since 1851; Lord PrivySeal, 1853–55; rector of the University of Glasgow,1854–55; postmaster-general, 1855–58; reapp. LordPrivy Seal, 1859; a liberal; a writer of considerable ability onScotch ecclesiastical questions, and a distinguished lecturer(Athenæum;Inverary Castle,Argyllshire;Roseneath Castle,Dumbartonshire).
Eld. s. of the hero of Ghuznee; b. 1815; suc. his father,1844; m. 1847, Louisa,
A director of the Church of England Insurance Company (5,Lothbury, E.C.)
Eld. s. of the late P. A. Taylor, Esq. of London, byCatharine, dau. of the late S. Courtauld, Esq.; b. 1819; m. 1842,Clementia, dau. of John Doughty, Esq. of Brockdish, Norfolk; apartner in the firm of Courtauld and Co., crape manufacturers;returned for Leicester, 1862; a liberal (19,Aldermanbury,E.C.)
A civil Engineer; member of the Institute; a Fellow of theGeological Society. Construct. of New WestminsterBridge. Has received a concession from the Turkishgovernment for the construction of an extensive system ofrailways for that country, connecting, in one unbroken line,Constantinople with Ostend and Calais (2,Middle ScotlandYard, S.W.)
An historical and Portrait painter (Westminster Club;21b,Savile-row,Burlington-gardens).
S. of the late Major-General Robert Hampton. Late ofH.M. Bengal Civil Service,
An artist.
A writer and journalist of eminence. Author of“The History of the Opera,” “The Russians atHome,” &c.
In the Examiner’s office of the Custom House (LowerThames-street, E.C.)
A solicitor of the firm of Fairfoot, Webb, and D‘Aeth(13,Clement’s-inn,Strand, W.C.)
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, England,and a licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries, since1830. A Fellow of the Medical Society of London.
Joined the army in 1814; promoted to his present rank in1854. Has been on half-pay since 1841.
S. of the late Robert Barlow, Esq., Bengal CivilService. B. in India, 11 Jan. 1823; ent. the RoyalEngineers (from which he has retired) in 1840; promoted to hispresent rank, 1851 (Army and Navy Club).
A portrait painter of good family; b. in Scotland; Fellow ofthe Society of Antiquaries, Scotland (11,Carlton-street,Edinburgh).
In the office of the Charity Commission for England and Wales(8,York-street,St. James’sS.W.)
In the Army Medical department of the War Office(Whitehall-yard, S.W.)
In the Western Branch of the Bank of England(Burlington-gardens, W.)
In the Audit office (Somerset-house, W.C.)
A member of the Middle Temple. C. to the bar,1847. A conveyancer (4,King’s Bench-walk,Temple, E.C.)
An artist.
An engraver (Studio, 4,Palsgrave-place,Temple, E.C.)
Merchant (5,Gresham-st. E.C.)
An artist.
Dau. of the late Harrison Gordon Codd, Esq., police magistrateand dep. lieut. for Middlesex, and equerry to the late Duke ofSussex. B. in Kensington.
A physician.
A retired public officer. B. at Teddington. Hasfour children.
A surveyor of the firm of Ilford and Hughes (33,Manchester-street, W.)
A paymaster in the R.N.; prom. to that rank in 1852. Hon. Secretary Royal Patriotic Fund (19,New-street,Spring-gardens).
An architect.
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1848; a specialpleader; attends the Western circuit; a director of the West ofEngland Insurance Company. The Kingdons are an old andrespectable Cornish and Devon family (4,Paper-buildings,Temple, E.C.)
S. of G. P. Bidder, Esq. of Mitcham Hall, Mitcham; civilengineer, member of the Institute, chairman of the Epping andNorfolk railway companies, director of the Electric andInternational Telegraph Company, engineer to the London, Tilbury,and Southend, Wells and Fakenham, Norwegian Trunk and RoyalDanish railways.
A solicitor of the firm of Howard and Dollman (141,Fenchurch-street, E.C.)
Senior examiner in the office of the Committee of Council onEducation (Downing-street, S.W.)
A ship and insurance broker, of the firm of Haviside and Co.(69,Cornhill, E.C.)
A member of the Inner Temple. C. to the bar, 1849. A conveyancer. The family of Lomax is represented by JamesLomax, Esq., of Clayton Hall, co. Lancaster (1,New-square,Lincoln’s-inn, W.C.)
Ent. the navy in 1806; obtained his present rank, 1854;assisted at the reduction of Martinique, the Isle of France andJava. Was for many years employed in the Coast Guard.
An artist.
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, England,and a licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries since, 1852; amember of the Paris Med. Soc. Formerly Assist. Surg. 3rdRl. Surrey Militia, and Surg. to the Kingston Dispen., and H.M.transport ship, “Golden Fleece,” during the Crimeanwar.
An army agent. Agent for the 5th Lancers (50,Leicester-square, W.C.)
In the Chief Clerks’ Department of the War office(Pall Mall, S.W.)
A general merchant of the firm of Beerbohm, Magnus, and Co.(34,Mark-lane, E.C.)
A professor of singing.
Fifth s. of the 2nd marquis of Bath. B. 1807; m. 1st,1830, eld. dau. of William Mellish, Esq., of Woodford, Essex; and2nd, 1853, the only dau. of the late Charles Arthur Gore,Esq. Educated at the Charterhouse, and Oriel Coll.Oxford. M.P. for Weobley, 1831–32, and for Fromesince 1849. A conservative. Lieut. Wilts. YeomanryCavalry (White’s and Carlton Clubs;Longleat,Warminster).
Second Bart. Eld. s. of Lieut. Col. James Lindsay, bydau. of Sir Coutts Trotter, Bart. B. 1824; suc. hisgrandfather, 1837. Formerly of the Grenadier Guards; wasMajor-Com. of the 1st Reg. of British Ital. Legion, 1855. Magistrate and dep.-lieut. for Fife co.; author of a drama and atragedy (11,Grosvenor-square, W.)
Descended from an old Jersey family, represented by John W.Millais, Esq., of Kingston-on-Thames. Born at Southampton,8 June, 1829; m., 1855, Euphemia, dau. of George Gray, Esq., ofBowerswell. Admitted an associate of the Royal Academy in1853; gained his first medal at the Society of Arts, when onlynine years of age. An originator of the Pre-RaphaeliteSchool. Greatly admired by Ruskin (Garrick andCosmopolitan Clubs).
Third Bart. Eld. s. of the 2nd Bart; b. 1818; m. 1854,only dau. of the 1st Lord Churston. Has issue, H. Y.Buller, b. 1859, and 3 daus. Educated at Winchester, andOriel Coll., Oxford. A magistrate and dep.-lieut. for Devonand Wilts; high sheriff of Devon, 1857. Formerly Capt.South Devon Militia. M.P. for Westbury since 1857. Aliberal conservative. Patron of two livings(Conservative,Carlton,and National Clubs;Maristow,Plymouth;Manor House,Westbury).
Brother of the preceding; b. 1827; m. 1854, eld. dau. ofErving Clark, Esq., of Efford Manor, co. Devon; has a dau. and ason. A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar,1852. Western circuit and Devon, Exeter, Plymouth, andDevonport sessions. An equity draftsman andconveyancer. A J.P. for the co. of Wilts. (ConservativeClub;Goldsmith’s-buildings,Temple,E.C.)
A solicitor of the firm of Parke and Pollock, solicitors tothe Universal Life Assurance Office, and agents for Pollock,Faithfull and Kier, of Bombay. A member of the IncorporatedLaw Soc. (63,Lincoln’s-inn-fields, W.C.)
Late private secretary to the Chief Secretary for Ireland.
Ent. the army as a cornet, in 1815; app. Col. of the 3rdDragoon Guards, 1859; promoted to his present rank, 1860. Was present with the French army, under Marshal Gerard, at thesiege of Antwerp, in Dec. 1832; and, by permission of theMarshal, accompanied the troops upon every occasion during thesiege. In Oct. 1838, was appointed to the command of thecavalry of the Bombay division of the army of the Indus, asBrigadier; served in that rank during the campaigns of1838–39, in Scinde and Affghanistan, and was present at theattack and capture of Ghuznee. During the latter part of1839, commanded a detached column, consisting of the whole of theartillery (excepting 4 guns), the cavalry, and one battalion ofinfantry. This column was destined to secure thesubjugation of Upper Scinde, and to co-operate with the maincolumn under Sir Thos. Wiltshire, directed against Khelat. In the action at Maharajpore on the 29th Dec., 1843, commanded abrigade of cavalry, as also at the battle of Sobraon (UnitedService Club).
Brother of the present Earl of Shrewsbury and Talbot; b. 1817;m. 1860, Lady Emmap.25Charlotte Stanley, only dau. of present Earl ofDerby. Formerly a captain 7th Foot. Has been A. D. C.to the Lord-lieut. of Ireland; comtropoller of HerMajesty’s household, 1845; private secretary to the Earl ofDerby, 1852; Lieut.-Col. Stffrdsh. Militia since 1853; Britishresident at Cephalonia, 1855; sergeant-at-arms (H. of L.) since1858.
Has retired from the army; was formerly attached to the St.Helena regiment. Promoted to his present rank, 1838. Hon. Sec. Church Missionary Society (14,Salisbury-square,E.C.)
Second s. of the late Lieut.-Col. Drinkwater, of Salford, co.Lancaster; b. 1802. Assumed present surname 1837, on hismother inheriting the estates of her brother, G. Bethune,Esq. M. 1846, Frances, only dau. of Henry Stables, Esq., ofPark-hill, Clapham. Ent. the navy, 1815; took a prominentpart in the China war of 1840; rewarded in consequence with theC.B. Attached to the Earl of Durham’s embassy, 1835,for the purpose of reporting on the naval establishments inRussia; has been assistant hydrographer at the Admiralty;promoted to his present rank, 1855 (United Service Club;Balfour,Fifeshire).
B. 1823; suc. his father, 1861; m. 1851, Caroline, only dau.of Robert Harvey, Esq., of Langley-park, Bucks. Has issue,3 daus. Educ. at Ch. Ch., Oxford; a lord of the treasury in1852; keeper of the Privy Seal to the Prince of Wales, 1852;special deputy warden of the Stannaries, 1852; chairman of theNorth Western Railway, 1853; Capt. Bucks Yeomanry, 1845–58;Dep.-lieut. of Bucks and Northampton, 1846; M.P. for Buckingham,1846–57; chairman of the Aylesbury and Bucks Railway(Carlton;Wotton House,Aylesbury).
B. 1815; suc. his father, 1857. Educ. at Eton andTrinity Coll., Camb. Lord-lieut. of Lincolnsh.1852–57. Lord-lieut. of Leicestersh. since1857. Hon. Col. Leicestersh. Militia; lord of thebedchamber to the late Prince Consort, 1843–46; M.P. forStamford, 1837–52; and for North Leicestersh.1852–57; a conservative (Carlton,BelvoirCastle,Grantham;Cheveley Park,Newmarket).
An architect.
Manager of the Temple Bar Branch of the London and WestminsterBank (217 and 218,Strand, W.C.)
Entered the Navy in 1808. While on the Spanish coast(1810–14) was frequently entrusted with the hazardous dutyof landing arms for the use of the guerillas. He figuredalso as a volunteer in two cutting out expeditions; and, besidesotherwise coming into contact with the enemy, assisted at thebombardment and capture of Bermeo and Castro. During thetime of his servitude in the Coast Guard, was five times engagedwith smugglers; in one of them his arm was broken, and in some ofthe others, had the misfortune to receive permanent injury.
A solicitor; a member of the Incorporated Law Society (7,Gray’s Inn Square, W.C.)
An architect and surveyor (12,John-street,Adelphi, W.C.)
In the Secretary’s Department
Formerly attached to the 2nd Dragoons; fought at Waterloo;retired from the army in 1837.
A member of the Middle Temple; c. to the Bar, 1855; a specialpleader; attends the Western Circuit (2,PlowdenBuildings,Temple, E.C.)
In the Chief Examiner’s Department of the Inland RevenueOffice (Somerset House, W.C.)
A sculptor.
S. of Samuel Bell, Esq., of Hopton, Suffolk; b. 19 Aug. 1811,at Great Yarmouth; m. 1846, the only dau. of Robert Sullivan,Esq., a gentleman of fortune; has issue, a dau.; has been anexhibitor at the Academy since 1832; has devoted himself tosculpture, ornamental art, and literature. Principal publicworks:—the City Wellington Memorial in Guildhall; CrimeanArtillery Memorial, Woolwich; Guards Memorial, Waterloo-place;Falkland and Walpole, in the Houses of Parliament. Principal private works:—Dorothea, Eagle Slayer, Cromwell,Shakespeare, Armed Science, Australia, Babes in the Wood,&c. Various ornamental designs in metal and granite,marble, &c. Author of the drama of Ivan; handbooks ofindustrial art; lectures on various art subjects, on color,statues, the entasis applied to the obelisk, &c.
1st cousin of the late Sir Robert Peel; b. 1799; educ. at St.John’s College, Cambridge; a member of Lincoln’s Inn;c. to the Bar, 1824; went the Northern Circuit; M.P. forCockermouth, 1827–30; advocate general in Bengal,1840–2; chief justice at Calcutta (when knighted)1842–55; vice president of the Madras Legislative Council,1854–55; a director of the East India Company, 1857; abencher of Lincoln’s Inn; a governor of Guy’sHospital (Athenæum and Windham Clubs;Bonchurch,Ventnor,Isle of Wight).
A draughtsman in the Copyhold Inclosure and Tithe CommissionOffice (3,St. James’s-square, S.W.)
A civil engineer.
A solicitor of the firm of Tippetts and Son (2,Sise-lane,Bucklersbury, E.C.)
Educated at St. John’s College, Cambridge; obtained hisB.A. 1815; ordained, 1816; was formerly vicar of Finchingfield,Essex. Is author of a volume of sermons, published in1841.
Ent. the army as a cornet in 1825; obtained his present rank,1854; commanded until lately the 6th Dragoon Guards, with whichhe served throughout the Crimean campaign, and the Indianp.29mutinies. His distinguished services during thelatter war won for him his C.B. (Junior United ServiceClub).
An assistant secretary in the Military Department of the IndiaOffice (Victoria-street,Westminster, S.W.)
A director of the Victoria Insurance Company (18,KingWilliam-st., E.C.;Champneys,Tring,Herts).
Actuary to the British Prudential Insurance Company (35,Ludgate-hill, E.C.)
Only surviving child of the late Hammond Crosse, Esq.; amagistrate for Middlesex, and niece of the late Rev. John Crosse,Vicar of Bradford; born 1793. Of this lady’s family,two baronets, Thomas and John, lie interred, one in St.Margaret’s, Westminster, and the other, in St.James’s, Clerkenwell.
Attached to the Chief Clerk’s Department of the WarOffice (Pall Mall, S.W.)
An artist.
An artist.
Dau. of major Pattoun, Royal Marines; b. 1823; m. capt. Tombs,eldest s. of General Tombs; has issue, a son. Henry WilliamTombs.
In the Store Branch of the Admiralty Victualling Department(Somerset House, W.C.)
In the Office of the Inspector General of Imports and Exports,Customs (Custom-House, E.C.)
In the Receiver General’s Office of the Customs(Custom House, E.C.)
Associate of the College of Preceptors; Fellow of the RoyalAstronomical Society; student of the University of London; suc.to the late J. Paxton Hall, F.C.P., Oxford House School,King’s-road, Chelsea. Prepares for army and civilservice examinations.
A merchant (166,Fenchurch street, E.C.)
An Oporto wine merchant, of the firm of Quarles Harris and Co.(3,Savage-gardens, E.C.)
Eldest s. of Sir Francis Dugdale Astley, 2nd baronet, ofEverley, co. Wilts; b. 1828; m, 1858, only dau. of ThomasCorbett, Esq., of Elsham Hall, Lincolnshire. App. lieut.and capt. Scots Fusilier Guards, 1851; severely wounded at theAlma; prom. to present rank, 1857. Has retired from theservice.
B. 1803; suc. his grandm. 1831; m. 1826, Charlotte, sister ofLord Boston; hasp.31a numerous issue. Elected a representative peer ofScotland, 1833; a conservative; formerly a cornet 9th Lancers;capt. Bucks Yeomanry Cavalry; dep.-lieut. for Berks (Carltonand Junior United Service Clubs;Glen App.,co.Ayr).
A magistrate and dep.-lieut. for Middlesex and Kent;stockbroker of the firm of Johnson, Longden, and Co. (22,Tokenhouse-yard, E.C.)
A stockbroker of the firm of Johnson, Longden, and Co. (22,Tokenhouse-yard, E.C.;Cheam,Surrey).
A factor, of the firm of Kynaston and Sons (4,Gresham-street, E.C.;and Mumford-court, E.C.)
An artist.
Formerly of the Madras Infantry; obtained his pre-rank,1861.
Ent. the army in 1826; obtained his present rank in 1857; ison retired full-pay, 84th Foot.
A patent solicitor (31,Charing-cross, S.W.)
An artist.
Of the ancient Scottish family of Monypenny, of Pitmilly; eld.dau. of Robert Monypenny, of Merrington-place, Rolvenden, Esq.;m. 1818, Gybbon Monypenny, Esq., of Hole House, Rolvendenp. 32(who died,1854); has issue, the present Gybbon Monypenny, Esq. of MaythamHall, co. Kent.
B. 1801, at Great Staughton, Hants; educ. at Queen’sCollege, Oxford, where he obtained his M.A.; suc. his grandf. theRev. Thomas Martyn, professor of botany in the University ofCambridge, in the family living of Pertenhall, Beds, which heheld for 16 years. Now retired, and without churchpreferment.
Educ. at Balliol College, Oxford; obtained his B.A. 1858; ord.in the same year; and app. curate of Sonning, near Reading.
A member of the Middle Temple. C. to the Bar, 1826;recorder of Chester; attends the Welch and Chester Crescent (3,Middle Temple-lane, E.C.)
Late of the Bengal Artillery; obtained his present rank,1859.
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, Eng.,since 1815; was formerly attached to the Medical Staff of theArmy of occupation in France; and app. surgeon extr. to the lateDukes of Sussex and Gloucester;
B. 17 Feb. 1807, at Shoreham in Sussex; m. 1835, the eld. dau.of the late Thomas Sharp, Esq., of Coventry and Leamington,Warwickshire (she died 1851); has issue four dau., and ones. Formerly of the firm of Edwardes and Hunter, Sydney, NewSouth Wales; retired from business 1840. A director of theNational Bank, the London Chartered Bank of Australia, and CapeTown Railway; a member of the Society of Arts (Garrick andCity Clubs;Parkcres,Worthing,Sussex).
A justice of the peace for the county of Devon; journalist andproprietor of the Shipping and Mercantile Gazette dairynewspaper; an F.R.G.S. (Gresham Club;PenquitLodge,Ivybridge,Devonshire).
A wine and spirit broker. Fellow of the RoyalHorticultural Society, and of the Society of Arts; member of theRoyal Institution (City of London Club, and 11GreatTower Street, E.C.)
Youngest dau. of the late Rev. H. Randolph, rector of LetcombeBassett; m. 1849, Col. Sir Belford Hinton Wilson, K.C.B., whodied in 1858.
A director of the Scottish Widow’s Fund.
A proctor, notary, solicitor, and deputy registrar of theArchdeaconry Court of Surrey, of the firm of Barlow, Longden, andBarlow. Ap.34director of the Westminster Fire and Life Insurance Co.(1,Bennett’s Hill,Doctors’ Commons,E.C.)
Brother of the present Earl of Orkney; b. 1805; m. 1837, dau.of Henry Harford, Esq., of Down-place, Berks, (she died1859). Educ. at Oriel College, Oxford; M.P. for Bucks,1842–7; formerly a captain 1st Life Guards; app. captainDenbigh Yeomanry Cavalry, 1857. A magistrate anddep.-lieut. for Bucks (Guards’ Club;PorthucaTower,Conway,North Wales).
S. of the Rev. J. R. Senior; b. 6 Sept. 1790, at Uffington,Berks. Educ. at Eton, and Magdalen Coll., Oxford. Formerly a master in chancery; late professor of politicaleconomy at the University of Oxford. A member of theInstitute of France; chairman of the Equity and Law InsuranceCompany; and dep. chairman of the Law Reversionary(Athenæum and Political Economy Clubs).
B. in French Guiana; m. to Monsieur Favard, an officer of theLegion of Honor, and governor of Cayenne (interior) (Vovezzanoand Longlarna Palacio,Florence;Carolina;Jamaica;and French Guiana).
Architect to the Committee of Council on Education (PrivyCouncil Office,Downing-street, S.W.)
Representative of an old Yorkshire family, settled in thatcounty from remote times; b. 1829; m. 1852, Louisa Elizabeth,eldest dau. of N. C. Barnardiston, Esq. of the Ryes, Suffolk; hasissue a son (b. 1854) and a dau.
Dau. of Vice Admiral W. H. Smyth, K.S.F., V.P.R.S., D.C.L.,&c., of St. John’s lodge, Aylesbury; b. 1824; m. 1846,the Rev. Baden Powell, Savilian professor of geometry at Oxford;(he d. 1860); has seven children living.
A member of the Middle Temple. C. to the bar,1853. Attends the northern circuit (1,Elm Court,Temple, E.C.)
A parliamentary agent of the firm of Dorington, Ellicombe,Ellicombe, Thomas, and Smith (6,Parliament-street,S.W.)
An auctioneer of the firm of Chinnock and Galsworthy (11,Waterloo-place,Pall Mall, S.W.)
B. in London. A landscape and marine painter; anassociate of the Royal Academy; a fellow of the Linnæan andGeological Societies (Athenæum,RoyalAcademy,and Alpine Clubs).
A water colour painter of eminence. Exhibited in 1843 inWestminster Hall, a colossal cartoon, which gained a £100prize. Principal works, “Fair Rosamond;”“The Plague of London;” “William of Eyneshamrecitingp.36valiant deeds before a Chivalrous Court;”&c.
An architect and civil engineer; a Fellow of the Royal,Geological, and Antiquarian Societies (AthenæumClub; 21,Whitehall-place, S.W.)
Late of the Madras Infantry. Obtained his present rank1854.
Keeper of the Criminal Registers at the Home Office(Whitehall, S.W.;Bowlhead-green,Thursley,Godalming,Surrey).
A painter; the s. of a manufacturer; b. in Pimlico 1804;admitted a student of the Royal Academy 1826; elected anAssociate, 1840, and R.A. 1851. Referee and examiner forart, and inspector general of Art Schools in the Science and ArtDepartment of the Committee of Council on Education; HerMajesty’s surveyor general of pictures and works of art(Athenæum Club,Grove Dale,Abinger,near Dorking).
A painter; the s. of a drawing master of Leeds; b. 1815. First exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1831; obtained a cartoonprize of £300, at the Westminster Hall Exhibition, 1843;elected an associate 1844; elected an R.A. 1848; has executedfrescos for the New House of Lords.
(Conserv. Club;Cundale Manor,Boroughbridge,Yorksh.)
A magistrate for Yarmouth.
A member of the Inner Temple. C. to the bar 1860 (9,King’s Bench Walk, E.C.)
2nd s. of J. Poulett Thomson, Esq. of Roehampton, Surrey, andAustin Friars; b. 1797; m. 1821, Emma, dau. and heiress of Wm.Scrope, Esq., of Castle Combe, Wilts, and assumed name and armsof Scrope. A magistrate and dep.-lieut. for Wilts; patronof 1 living; M.P. for Stroud, since 1833; a liberal; a F.R.G.S.,F.G.S., &c. A political and scientific writer(Athenæum and Reform Clubs;Castle Combe,Chippenham).
Educated at Christ Church, Oxford; obtained the degree of M.A.in 1815; ordained 1813; has held the perpetual curacy of AllSaints, Knightsbridge, since 1849.
A solicitor, and a Scotch and parliamentary agent. Amember of the Incorporated Law Society (2,Lancaster-place,Strand, W.C.)
6th Bart. descended from Sir Henry Cotton, Knight, lord of themanor of Cotton Hall, Cambridge, living in the 13th century; b.1801; suc. his father, who was an admiral of distinction,1812. Formerly in the 10th hussars. A magistrate, anddep.-lieut. for Cambridgeshire (Manor House,Madingley,Cambridge).
B. at Rochester, Kent. Ordained and licensed to thecuracy of Neath, Glamorgan, by Bishop of Llandaff, 1835. Now chaplain of Westminster Workhouse at Kensington. Authorof “The Week of Prayer, London, 1862.”
A member of the Stock Exchange (31,Throgmorton-street,E.C.)
Educated at Christ Church, Cambridge; obtained his B.A. 1834;ordained 1835. Formerly perpetual curate of St. Marks,Marylebone, 1845–58.
Descended from the Worthams, of Royston, Co. Herts. Entered the army (Royal Engineers) 1812; obtained his presentrank 1858. On retired full pay. Served the campaignsof 1813–14 in Spain and France, including the siege of St.Sebastian, and the battles of Orthes and Toulouse; fought inAmerica in 1814 at New Orleans, and capture of Fort Bowyer. War medal and 3 clasps.
Dau. of the late Philip L. Story, Esq.; m. 10 Feb., 1842, theHon. Constantine Dillon (d. 1853), br. of the present Visc.Dillon. Has issue 3 s. and 2 daus.
Passed at Royal College of Surgeons, London, and atApothecaries’ Hall, 1838; obtained degree of M.D. at St.Andrew’s, 1848; and at the London College of Physicians,1850. Fellow of Royal Medical Chirurgical Society; and latemedical officer at Bethlem Hospital. Has written in“Psychological Journal,” and in “Lancet;”and is author of a work entitled, “Remarks on the Plea ofInsanity, and on the Management of Criminal Lunatics, withStatistics of Probable Duration of Life in the Insane” (54,Upper Harley-street, W.)
Obtained degree of M.A. at Cambridge, 1836. Is Fellow ofRoyal College of Physicians, London. Formerly physician toSt. Luke’s Hospital.
Only dau. of 8th Earl of Coventry by his 2nd wife, Mary, onlydau. of 6th Duke of St. Albans; aunt of present Earl. B.1812; m. 1833, the 4th and last Lord Holland, for some timeminister at Court of Tuscany, who died 1859 (St.Ann’s-hill,Chertsey).
Fourth s. of late Alderman John Prinsep, of London, M.P. forQueensborough. B. 1792; m. Sarah, dau. of James Prattle,Esq. Bengal Civil Service. Educated atHaileybury. Ent. Bengal Civil Service, 1809; member ofCouncil in India, 1840; director E. I. Co., 1849; member ofCouncil for India, 1858. Is a D.L. for London(Athenæum and Carlton Clubs, S.W.)
An artist.
Member of Lincoln’s-inn; c. to the bar, 1857. Anequity draftsman and conveyancer (9,Old-square,Lincoln’s-inn, W.C.)
A solicitor (18,St. Martin’s-Court, W.C.)
Fifteen years in Her Majesty’s State Paper Office, nowamalgamated with the Public Record Office. Editor of“Original Papers relative to Rubens,” “ColonialCalendar of State Papers,” &c. Member of theMassachusetts, New York, South Carolina, and other HistoricalSocieties (Record Office,Chancery-lane, W.C.)
Member of the Middle Temple; c. to the bar, 1845. Aspecial pleader and conveyancer (5,Brick-court,Temple, E.C.)
S. of the late Sir Richard Westmacott; b. in London,1799. Elected an associate of the Royal Academy, 1838;first exhibited at the Academy in 1827. His religiouscompositions considered very fine. Has executed numerousmonumental works and busts. A director of the GlobeInsurance Company.
Of a family of Anglo-German origin; b. at Staten Island,United States. Originally an architect; now a landscapepainter. Received a diploma from the Mechanics and AmericanInstitute, New York, for the best specimens of architecturalmodelling, at the age of 13; also a diploma from the AmericanInstitute for the best specimen of architectural drawing, at theage of 17. A member of the Society of Arts; of the NationalAcademy of Science, New York; of the Pensylvania Academy; of theMiscousin Historical Society, &c.
S. of the 3rd, and brother of the present Bart., Sir LawrencePalk, M.P. for South Devon. B. 1824. In the ElectionDepartment of the House of Commons (House of Commons,S.W.)
App. to a clerkship in the Foreign Office, 1852; attached tothe Senior clerks’ department, Superintends the Turkey,Persia, Barbary States, and Egypt portion of our Foreign Officebusiness (Downing-street, S.W.)
Ent. the army in 1824, and obtained his present rank in 1854;app. Lieut.-Col. 99th Foot, 1858; served throughout the campaignof 1860 in the north of China; wounded severely at the taking ofTangku; commanded the 4th Brigade at the capture of Pekin;honourably mentioned in despatches. C.B. Medal andclasps; distinguished service pension.
An East India Merchant.
Second dau. of Sir Alexander Campbell, Bart.,commander-in-chief at Madras. M. 1807, Major-Gen. Sir JohnMalcolm, G.C.B., Gov. of Bombay, who died 1833.
B. at Parma. A naturalised British subject since1846. Late Professor of Italian at University College,London (Athenæum Club;the Falls,Llandogo,Monmouthshire).
Has been a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians since1833; consulting physician of Westminster hospital; formerly ofSt. George’s. Has contributed many papers to themedical journals of the day, chiefly in connexion with heart andpulmonary complaints.
2nd s. of the late C. Magnay, Esq., Lord Major of London in1821. B. 1797; m. 1854, 2nd dau. of T. Clarke, Esq., of St.John’s Wood; has issue, a son, b. 1855. A papermanufacturer; elected alderman, Vintry ward, 1837, Sheriff, 1837;Lord Mayor, 1843–4; created a Bart. on the opening of theRoyal Exchange 1844; Major Hon. Artillery Company, 1845; acommissioner of Lieutenancy for London (Postford House,Surrey).
B. it Somerset. Educ. at St. John’s College,Cambridge,p.42where he obtained his M.A., ultimately becoming a memberof the Senate. A J.P. for Middlesex and Westminster;deputy-lieut. for Middlesex since 1829; a Fellow of the RoyalSociety. The family of Halswell, described as of Halswelland Wellscirc. 1492, took part in the Monmouth rebellion,fought at Sedgmoor, suffered under Judge Jefferies, and after aperiod of expatriation returned home with the Prince of Orange,1688 (Oxford and Cambridge Club,AthenæumClub).
Dau. of Major-Gen. Bruce, E.I.C.S.; m. 1813, late Sir JohnDavid Norton, Knight, judge at Madras; was left a widow,1843.
Secretary of Army and Navy Club, Pall Mall.
Merchant and Shipowner (19,London-street, E.C.;Reform Club;Richmond,Surrey).
Only s. of Clement Tudway Swanston, Esq., Q.C., J.P.; b. 1831;m. 1861, Anne, eld. dau. of Right Hon. Sir John Romilly, masterof the rolls. M.A. Trinity College, Cambridge; c. tothe bar (Lincoln’s-Inn) 1856. Equity draftsman(Athenæum Club; 19,Old-square,Lincoln’s-Inn, W.C.;Holly-house,Twickenham).
Eld. s. of 1st Earl of Mulgrave, by Martha Sophia, dau. of C.T. Maling, Esq.; b. 1797; m. 1818, eld. dau. of 1st, and sisterof present Lord Ravensworth. Educated at Harrow, and atTrinity College, Cambridge; M.A. 1818; M.P. for Scarborough,p.431818–20; Higham Ferrers, 1822–6; and Malton,1826–30. Suc. his father as 2nd Earl of Mulgrave,1831; governor of Jamaica, 1832–4; keeper of privy seal,1834; Lord-lieutenant of Ireland, 1835–9; created Marquisof Normanby, 1838; secretary of state for colonies, 1839; homesec., 1839–41; ambassador at Paris, 1846–52; and atFlorence, 1854–8. Author of numerous works. J.P. and dep.-lieut. for North Riding of Yorkshire(Athenæum and Reform Clubs;Mulgrave-Castle,Whitby).
A dau. of the 2nd Earl of Arran; b. 1788; m. 1st, 1815, Sir G.Buggin, knt., 2ndly, H.R.H. the late Duke of Sussex; assumed hermaternal surname (Underwood) by sign manual, 1831; raised to thepeerage, 1840.
S. of the 9th Marq. of Huntly; b. 1799; m. 1836, Lady Augusta,sister of the 1st Earl of Munster, and relict of the Hon. JohnKennedy Erskine. Ent. the navy, 1813; present inPellew’s action with the Toulon fleet, 1814; became a rearadmiral, 1857; M.P. for Forfar 1841–52(Hallyburton-house,Pitcur,Coupar,Angus,Forfarshire, N.B.)
Dau. of the 15th Earl of Erroll; b. 1800; m. 1820,Major-General Wemyss (died 1852); bedchamber-woman to the lateQueen Dowager.
Eld. dau. of William Pennell, Esq., formerly consul-genl. atRio-de-Janeiro; m. 1806, the right hon. John Wilson Croker, P.C.,L.L.D. F.A.S. late secretary of the Admiralty, and an eminentpolitical writer.
3rd dau. of Charles, 2nd Earl Grey; m. 1827, Captain the hon.George Barrington, R.N., who died, 1835; has issue, a s. anddau.
Dau. of the late Col. Disbrowe, First Chamberlain to QueenCharlotte, and sister of the present Col. Disbrowe, ofEccleston-place.
Widow of the Rev. Joseph Jackson, late chaplain at KensingtonPalace.
Chaplain to the Household, at Kensington Pal. (5,Berkeley-street,Berkeley square, W.)
M. to the only dau. of Lady C. Barrington (WembleyOrchard,Sudbury, N.W.)
A member of the Middle Temple. C. to the bar, 1852; goesthe midland circuit, and attends the Leicester and NorthamptonSessions (Eldon Chambers,Devereux Court,Temple, E.C.)
A solicitor; member of the Law Association for the Benefit ofWidows; a commissioner for oaths in Chancery (14,Serjeant’s-Inn, E.C.)
Educ. at Pembroke College, Cambridge. Jun. opt. 1stclass, Trip., and B.A. 1846; obt. his M.A. 1849; ord. 1853.
Chaplain to the Kensington Workhouse.
Of the family of Samuel Richardson, the novelist; b. inLondon, 1809; an architect;
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1829.
A member of Lincoln’s-Inn; c. to the bar, 1817; anequity draftsman and conveyancer (2,Stone-buildings,W.C.)
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, Eng.,since 1848. Surgeon to the Royal Humane Society.
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, Eng. since1823, and a licentiate of Apothecaries’-Hall since1822. Apothecary extraordinary to the Queen. Wasformerly general med. attend. on the late Duchess of Kent (ThePriory Marlboro’,Wilts).
Has been a licentiate of the King and Queen’s College ofPhysicians in Ireland, since 1857. Physician toFriend-in-Need Assurance Society.
Obtained degree of M.D. at Glasgow, 1835. Is alicentiate of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow;and medical officer of the Scottish Provincial Institution. A prolific author on subjects of professional interest.
Minister (Baptist) of Hornton-street Chapel, Kensington.
Retired commander in the royal navy.
Secretary to the Hon. Irish
A solicitor (14,Warwick-court,Gray’sInn, W.C.)
A director of the Westminster Life Insurance Company; formerlyin the 22nd Foot; obtained his present rank in 1838; has retiredfrom the service. Served in India under Lord Lake, duringthe campaigns of 1803–4–5; present at the siege ofDeig, battle of Futtyghur, siege of Bhurtpore, battle ofAfgalghur; served at the capture of Bourbon, and Isle of France,1810.
2nd s. of John Williams, Esq. of Beverley; m. 1st, Jane, onlydau. of the late John King, Esq. of Spring Bank, Ayrshire (shedied, 1851); 2ndly, Mary Anne, dau. of George Greig, Esq. of CapeTown, Cape of Good Hope; b. at Beverley, 1825. An M.D.Edinb. and L.R.C.S. Edinb. 1847. Has had considerableexperience in obsterical medicine, and diseases ofchildren. In practice from 1847 to 1857, at Beverley, wherehe held the office of physician to the Dispensary, and MaternityCharity. A member of the Edinb. Botanical Society, and theSociety of Arts.
Ent. the navy in 1800; accompanied Lord Nelson to the WestIndies, in pursuit of the combined fleets of France and Spain,1805; in the famous action with the “Marengo,” and“Belle-Poule,” 1806; took part in the attempt torecover Buenos Ayres, 1807; contributed to the reduction of St.Paul’s, 1809; wounded at the capture of Bourbon, 1810;severely wounded in the throat, breast, legs, and arms, during aseries of unhappy though heroic operations, terminating in theself-destruction of the “Magicienne”p. 47and the“Sirius” frigates; was also with Sir Philip Durham atthe capture of Guadeloupe, 1815.
Passed Royal College of Surgeons, London, andApothecaries’ Hall, 1850; obtained degree of M.D. at St.Andrews, 1855; was four years house-surgeon to the SuffolkGeneral Hospital. Member of the British MedicalAssociation.
An artist.
A surgeon.
Passed Royal College of Surgeons’ andApothecaries’ Hall, 1841; Fellow of the former, 1856. Hon. member of the Western Medical and Surgical Society.
Acting partner in the firm of Hatchard and Co. (187,Piccadilly;Barnard’s-green,Malvern).
An artist.
An artist.
Dau. of R. Baker, Esq., M.D.; m. 1st. R. Auchmuty, Esq.; 2nd,1824, Sir C. R. Blunt, Bart. of Heathfield Park, who died 29Feb., 1840.
Representative of the Ashworths of Ashworth, Elland, and HallCarr, one of the oldest families in England, tracing back to A.D.1244; m. 1827, Mary, eld. dau. of Thomas Vavasour, Esq., ofRochdale, of the ancient house of Vavasour, of Haslewood. Educ. at University College, Oxford; obtained his M.A. 1825;ordained 1822. A magistrate for Hants; author of “TheSaxon in Ireland.”
Youngest dau. of the late Rev. Alex. Brodie, D.D., Vicar ofEast Bourne, Sussex (a member of the old Scottish family ofBrodie), by Anna, sister of the late John Walter, Esq., M.P. ofBearwood, Berks; b. at the Gore, East Bourne, Sussex; m. the lateRichard Chambers, Esq., M.D.
Only s. of the late Richard Chambers, Esq., M.D., by thelast-mentioned lady; b. at Upton-on-Severn, Worcestershire. Educ. at King’s College, London; an F.R.G.S., and M.R.I.,London; author of a “Handbook of Astronomy,”“The Sussex Tracts for Churchmen,” and many papers onpolitical and scientific subjects.
A merchant of the firm of Howell and Mitcalfe (11,and12,Philpot-lane, E.C.)
A solicitor; member of the Incorporated Law Society (9,Davies-street,Berkeley-square, W.)
Entered the army in 1817; promoted to his present rank in1854; placed onp.49half-pay in 1853. Was formerly major of the 87thFusiliers (United Service Club).
An Exchange and East India broker, of the firm of Lutyens andRipley (22,Austin-friars, E.C.)
Educated at Caius College, Cambridge; obtained his M.A. 1841,in which year he was ordained. Perpetual curate of St.John’s, Wembley, Middlesex, 1853–57.
Professor of natural philosophy at King’s Coll.,London. A member of the Royal Society (GlenlairHouse,Dalbeattie).
A solicitor (64,Chancery-lane, W.C.)
A hop merchant, of the firm of W. and R. A. Cosier (15,Three Crown Square,Boro. S.W.)
3rd and only surviving dau. of Major Gen. R. Aytoun, ofInchdairnie, Fifeshire.
Secretary to the Globe Insurance Company, founded 1803;honorary secretary to the Statistical Society. A Fellow ofthe Royal Society (Cornhill, E.C.;The Mall,Notting-hill, W.)
Entd. the army in 1813; promoted to his present rank 1854;placed on half-pay 1841. Formerly major of the 56thFoot. He served the campaign of 1814 in Holland, includingthe attack upon the village of Merxem, 13th Jan.; also the secondattack and capture, 2nd Feb., when his regiment captured twoguns; bombardment of the French fleet in the Scheldt,p. 50from 3rd to6th Feb. Actively engaged at Fort Frederick on the Scheldt,22nd March, in impeding the passage of French line of battleships to Fort Lillo, for the purpose of throwing provisions andassistance into the garrison. Again employed on the sameduty 25th March following.
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar 1859; goes themidland circuit; attends the Birmingham, Northampton, and WarwickSessions (3,King’s-bench-walk,Temple,E.C.)
Originally of Irish extraction. S. of the late W. H.Goore, Esq., bar.-at-law; b. in Worcestershire 1833; m. LouisaEugenie, dau. of the late Capt. Hyde, of Hyde End, Berks. Acontributor to, and promoter of “The Imperial Dictionary ofUniversal Biography of Deceased and Living Personages ofEminence.” A member of the Society of Arts; and anF.R.H.S. (Bayswater Athenæum).
A merchant (wine) (14,Southampton-street,Strand, W.C.)
A merchant (iron ore) (17,Gracechurch-street,E.C.)
Acting constructor in the Department of the Controller of theNavy (Somerset House, W.C.)
M. a dau. of the late General Sir John Hunter Littler, G.C.B.,dep.-gov. of Bengal, and president of the Supreme Council ofIndia. Actuary to the Globe Insurance Company, and to theEquitable Reversionary Society; fellow and member of Council ofthe Statistical Society (Cornhill, E.C.)
Senior examiner of the first-class, and book-keeper in theAudit office (Somerset House, W.C.)
A solicitor (61,Moorgate-st., E.C.)
A solicitor (22,Leadenhall-street, E.C.)
A solicitor.
A stock and share broker; member of the Stock Exchange (13,Royal Exchange, E.C.)
A merchant of the firm of Mahler, Bros., and Co. (8,Billiter-square, E.C.)
A stock and share broker (1,Royal Exchange-buildings,E.C.)
An inspector of schools (Privy Council Office,S.W.)
Educ. at St. John’s College, Cambridge; obtained hisM.A., 1849; ordained 1846. Chaplain to the workhouse of St.George’s, Hanover-square. Formerly curate of St.George’s.
In the office of Her Majesty’s commissioners of worksand public buildings (Whitehall-place, S.W.)
The eminent novelist. Descended from a Saxon familyp. 52ofYorksh. S. of — Thackeray, Esq., of the East IndiaCompany’s Civil Service; b. in Calcutta, 1811; educ. atCharter House and Cambridge. Originally studied for anartist. A member of the Middle Temple; c. to the bar,1848. Commenced his literary career in Fraser’sMagazine. His fame as a humourist has been establishedthrough the columns of Punch, as a novelist and satirist by hisVanity Fair (published 1846–48), and as a lecturer by hisstrictures on the Men and Times of the Four Georges. Heunsuccessfully contested a seat in Parliament at the Oxfordelection in 1857 (Athenæum Club).
In the Receiver-General’s Department of the InlandRevenue Office (Somerset House, W.C.)
A merchant (8,Moorgate-st., E.C.)
A merchant (8,Moorgate-st., E.C.)
Formerly of Mill Hill, Hendon, Middlesex.
A merchant (8,Moorgate-st., E.C.)
In the Bill Department of the Bank of England(Threadneedle-street, E.C.)
Chief accountant of Stamps in the Inland Revenue Department(Somrst. House, W.C.)
A solicitor; member of the Incorporated Law Society; member ofthe Law Association for the Protection of Widows &c. ofProfessional Men; a commissioner of the Queen’s Bench,Common Pleas, and Exchequer; a commissioner for affidavits; clerkto the Fletcher’s Company; joint solicitor to the LondonMutual Life and Guarantee Society (24,Moorgate-street,E.C.)
Has been an M.D., Geissen, since 1851, and a member of theRoyal College of Surgeons, England, since 1854. Wasformerly lecturer on chemistry at the Grosvenor Place School ofMedicine, and physician to the St. Pancras Royal GeneralDispensary. Is a Fellow of the Medical Society of London;and a contributor to the Medical Journals of the day (65,South Audley-street, W.)
A solicitor (35,Lincoln’s-inn Fields W.C.)
B. at Norwich, 1790. A professor of astronomy; author of“The Celestial Atlas,” “Astronomy,”“The Use of the Globes,” &c.
Son of Wm. Claxton, Esq., merchant, of South Hill Grove,Toxteth Park, Liverpool; b. in Liverpool, 1828; m. Elizabeth,eld. dau. of Thomas Johnson, Esq., of Lichfield, architect, bywhom he has issue 3 children. Educ. at Trin. Coll.Cambridge; obtained his M.A. 1853; ordained 1852. Wasformerly curate of Butterton, Staffordsh., and of St. Barnabas,Kensington. Is incumbent of St. Philip’s, EarlsCourt.
A merchant (oil and lead) (23, and 24,LittleEarl-street, E C.)
Eld. dau of Lewis Majendie, Esq., of Castle Hedingham, Essex;m. 1807 the Hon. George Mark Arthur Way Winn, (who died 1827) s.of the 1st Baron Headley, by whom she had, with other issue, thepresent Baron Headley.
B. in the Mall, Kensington. A ship broker, and insuranceagent; subscriber to Lloyds, and the Jerusalem (116,Bishopsgate-st.-within, E.C.)
Secretary to the Great Britain Mutual Life Assurance Society(14,Waterloo-place, S.W.)
A solicitor of the firm of Tilleard, Son, Godden, and Holme(34,Old Jewry, E.C.)
Late of the Bengal Infantry. Promoted to his presentrank in 1861.
A merchant (wine importer) of the firm of Feltoe and Sons; aliveryman of the Worshipful Company of Merchant Taylors (26,Conduit-street, W.)
Eld. s. of H. Mallett, Esq., of Ash, Co. Devon (a family whichsince the conquest has enjoyed the highest social influence), byeld. dau. of the late Hon. John Coventry, of Burgate House,Hants. B. 1827; m. 1853, Georgians, youngest dau. of thelate Ven. Henry Bathurst, Archdeacon ofp. 55Norwich, andhas issue. App. a cornet 4th Light Dragoons 1846; capt. 9thLancers 1851; sold out 1851; lieut. North Devon Yeomanry Cavalry1859; gentleman at large of the Vice Regal Household,1855–58; app. superintendent of passports in the ForeignOffice, 1858 (Downing-st., S.W.)
A solicitor (17,Devereux-court,Temple,E.C.)
A Fellow of the Statistical Society, London (The ArundelClub).
A capt. of the South Down Militia, since 1855.
Surveyor of Taxes.
Deputy commissary general since 1845.
A merchant (wine) (3,Union-court,OldBroad-street, E.C.)
Bachelor of arts, and military tutor.
An auctioneer of the firm of Leslie and Son (45,Margaret-street,Cavendish-sq., W.)
Actuary and secretary to the General Reversionary andInvestment Company (5,Whitehall, S.W.)
Curate of St. Mary Abbotts. Formerly curate of St.Matthew’s, Marylebone.
2nd s. of 1st Earl of Munster, a major-gen. in the army,aide-de-camp to the Queen, lieut. of the Tower, and governor ofWindsor Castle, by Mary Wyndham, dau. of George Earl of Egremont;b. 1826; m. 1856, Adelaide Augusta Wilhelmina, eld. dau. ofPhilip Charles Lord De L’Isle and Dudley; app. capt. 10thDragoons, 1850; retired 1857. Formerly aide-de-camp to thegovernor of Bombay, his uncle, Lord Fred. FitzClarence.
2nd and 3rd daughters of 1st Lord De L’Isle and Dudley,by eld. dau. of 1st Earl of Munster.
Member of the firm of W. H. Allen and Co. publishers, &c.,of 7, Leadenhall-street; sheriff for London, 1857; alderman ofCheap Ward, 1858.
5th and youngest s. of Sir Edward Winnington, Bart., by dau.of Thomas, 1st Lord Foley; brother of late and uncle of presentSir Thomas Edward Winnington, Bart.; b. 1794; app. capt. 39thFoot, 1813; placed on half-pay, 1814; J.P. for Worcestershire;M.P. for West Worcestershire, 1833–41.
Of the firm of Wm. Holms and Brothers, manufacturers ofGlasgow, London, and Manchester.
S. of the late Sir Thomas Potter, knt.; brother of late SirJohn Potter, knt., M.P. for Manchester; b. at Manchester, 1817;m. 1846, Mary, dau. of late Samuel Ashton, Esq., of Gee Cross,Cheshire. Educ. at Rugby and London University. J.P.and dep.-lieut. for co. Palatine of Lancaster, and for City ofManchester. Merchant (Reform Club;BuileHill,Manchester).
Surgeon. Formerly student at St. George’sHospital. M.R.C.S. England, 1856.
Surgeon. Formerly student of King’s College,London; M.R.C.S. England, 1851. Lately med.superintendent, Hospital, San Fernando, Trinidad. Surgeon,Kensington Dispensary; member Pathological Society.
A civil-engineer; member of the Institute; engineer to theCalcutta and South Eastern Railway Company (18,Abingdon-street, S.W.)
A solicitor (10,Symond’s Inn,Chancery-lane, W.C.)
A builder; member of the Society of Arts; obtained the 1stclass prize of £50 for his plan of subways to 2nd classstreets, offered by the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1857.
Late of the Bengal Infantry.
A merchant (iron) of the firm of Toms and Co. (The GreshamClub; 7a,Laurence
A merchant (commission) (9a,New Broad-street,E.C.)
Solicitor to the War Office (Pall Mall, S.W.)
M. 1845, the honorable Hilare Byng, sister of the presentViscount Torrington; has issue, one dau. Ent. the navy,1811; prom. to his present rank, 1844; commanded the first ironsteamer (the “Nemesis”) that doubled the Cape;distinguished himself greatly in the China war of 1841–2,and in the Baltic during the late Russian war; has endeared hisname to every sailor by his devotion to the cause of theirhomes. A director of the Peninsula and Oriental Company, ofthe Marine life Insurance Company, and of the Telegraph to IndiaCompany; a Fellow of the Royal and the Royal GeographicalSocieties, &c. (United Service Club).
S. of Thomas Pain, Esq., Registrar of the Cinque Ports; b. 2Nov. 1820, at Dover; m. 1858, Emma, dau. of William Pain Beecham,Esq. of Hawkhurst, Kent; has issue, two children (Alfred andHelen); a member of Lincoln’s Inn; c. to the bar, 1844; aconveyancer (Chapel Stairs,Lincoln’s Inn,W.C.)
See page69.
S. of 8th Earl of Cork and Orrery; b. 1812; m. in 1845,p. 59dau. of Alex.Gordon, Esq., of Ellon. B.A., Chr. Coll., Oxf. 1833; M.A.,1834; deacon, 1835; priest, 1836; rector of Marston, 1836;chaplain in ordinary to the Queen, 1847 (Marston Rectory,Frome,Somerset).
S. of late Col. William Gore Langton, of Newton-park, M.P. forEast Somerset, by his 2nd wife, dau. of John Browne, Esq., ofSalperton. B. in London in 1812; m. 1824, dau. of JohnLewis, Esq. Educ. at Harrow and at Magdalen Coll.,Oxford. J.P. and dep.-lieut. for Somerset; Mayor forBristol in 1852; director of Bristol and South Wales UnionRailway; M.P. (liberal) for Bristol since 1852 (ReformClub;Clifton-court,Bristol).
Son of 8th Viscount, Capt. Royal Navy. B. 1803; suc. hisfather, 1809; m. 1st, 1830, sister of 1st Earl of Minister; 2nd,1859, Dowager Duchess of St. Albans. Lord of thebed-chamber, 1830; representative peer for Scotland, 1831; G.C.H.1831; P. C. 1837; Captain of Yeoman of the guard, 1846–8;governor of Bombay, 1848–53. J.P. and dep.-lieut.Yorksh. N. R.; liberal (Boodle’s;Scutterskelfe,Yarme,Yorkshire).
Dau. of Gen. Joseph Gubbins, of Stoneham, Hants, and Kilrush,co. Limerick. M. 1st, 1839, 9th Duke of St. Albans, by whomshe became mother of the present duke; and 2nd, Viscount Falkland(see preceding).
S. of E. B. Portman, Esq., of Bryanston and OrchardPortman. B. 1799; m. 1827, 3rd dau. of 2nd and aunt ofpresent Earl of Harewood. B.A., Ch. Coll., Oxf., 1821; M.A.1826; M.P. for Dorset,
Ent. army, 1837; Lieut., 1842; Captain, 1850. Since thenon half-pay. Served with 3rd Light Dragoons in Sutlejcampaign of 1845–6. Present at the battles ofMoodkee, Ferozeshah, and Sobraon. Medal with two clasps(Army and Navy Club).
Eld. s. of Hon. F. Howard, Major of Hussars, who was killed atWaterloo; grandson of 5th, nephew of 6th, and 1st cousin ofpresent Earl of Carlisle. B. 1814; m. 1837, sister ofpresent Duke of Devonshire, and has 5 sons and 3 daus. Attaché to H.M. embassy at Paris, 1831–9. M.P.for Youghal, 1837–41. Private secretary to Earl ofCarlisle when chief commissioner of woods and forests,1847–50; and when Lord-lieut. of Ireland, 1855–58(Brooke’s and Travellers’ Clubs).
Dau. of late Jas. Joseph Hope Vere, Esq., and niece of 8thMarquis of Tweeddale. M. 1844, 3rd Marquis of Ely, who died1857. Mother of present Marquis (Ely Lodge,Fermanagh;Loftus Hall,Wexford).
Ent. army, 1821; Lieut., 1822; Captain, 1826; Lieut.-Col.,1837; Colonel, 1851; Major-Gen., 1856. Has commanded abrigade at Shorncliffe. App. Inspect.-Gen. of Footp. 61Guards, 1861(Travellers’ and United Service Clubs;SunningHill,Chertsey).
Eld. dau. of 2nd, and sister of present Marquis ofNorthampton. M. 1841, John Hume Egerton, Viscount Alford,M.P., (who died in 1851) by whom she had a son, the present Earlof Brownlow (Belton House,near Grantham,Lincolnsh.;Ashbridge,nearBerkhampstead).
Eld. s. of late Baron Nathan Meyer De Rothschild, by dau. ofLevi Barent Cohen, Esq., merchant, of London; b. 1808, in London;brother of Sir Anthony Rothschild, Bart.; and of Baron Meyer DeRothschild, M.P. for Hythe. M. 1836, his cousin Charlotte,dau. of Baron Charles de Rothschild, of Naples. Baron ofAustrian empire; head of firm of N. M. Rothschild and Sons, ofSt. Swithin’s-lane, the great loan-contractors andmoney-brokers. M.P. (liberal) for London since 1847, butonly took his seat in House of Commons in 1858. J.P. forMiddlesex; Dep.-Lieut. for London. Direct. of Northern ofFrance Railway; Alliance Life and Fire Assurance Company; andAlliance Marine Insurance Company (Brooke’s and ReformClubs;Gunnersbury-park,Acton,Middlesex).
Merchant of the firm of Geo. Peabody, and Co. (22,OldBroad-street).
2nd s. of the late Major Schenley, R.A.; b. 1799; m. 1st,1833, youngest dau. of late Sir W. T. Pole, Bart., D.C.L. ofShute House, Devon; 2nd, Mary Elizabeth Croghen, of Pitsburgh,Pensylvania. Educ.
(Conservative Club).
Silk broker (33,Old Broad-street, E.C.)
Director of Colonial Bank, and of the Royal Exchange Assur.Corporation (Union Club;Hare Hill,Alderley,Cheshire).
Eld. dau. of late Sigismund Trafford, Esq., of Norwich, and ofWroxham Hall, co. Norfolk, by Margaret, eld. dau., and co-heir ofJames Crowe, Esq., of Norwich. Assumed additional surnameof Southwell in 1849, in compliance with the testamentaryinjunction of her aunt, Mrs. Jane Baker, of Portland-place, andof Orsett Hall, Essex.
M.A. Christ Church, Oxford, 1826; c. to the bar, MiddleTemple, 1830. Western Circuit (Oxford and CambridgeClub;Inner Temple Hall Staircase;Inholmes,Hungerford).
4th son of Francis Easterby, Esq., of Blackheath, who assumedthe name of Cresswell, instead of his patronymic, having marriedFrances Dorothea, co-heir of John Cresswell, Esq., of Cresswell,co. Northumberland. B. 1794; B.A. Emmanuel Coll. Cambridge,1814; M.A. 1818; c. to the bar, Middle Temple, 1819; King’sCouncil 1834; M.P. (Conservative) for Liverpool, 1837–42;led northern circuit for many years; app. a judge of Court ofCommon Pleas, and knighted, 1842; privy councillor, and firstJudge of New Court of Probate and Divorce, 1858(Athenæum and United University Clubs;Doctors’-commons).
3rd and 4th daus. of first Lord Ashburton, for some timepresident of Board of Trade, and Master of the Mint, by AnnieLouisa, eld. dau. of the Hon. William Bingham, senator of UnitedStates. Sisters of present Lord Ashburton, and of DowagerMarchioness of Bath (West Hill,near Tichfield,Hants).
Eld. s. of late John Hubbard, Esq. of Stratford Grove, Essex,by Marianna, dau. of John Morgan, Esq.; b. 1805; m. 1837, Hon.Maria Margaret Napier, sister of the present Lord Napier, H.M.minister at the Hague. Head of the eminent firm of JohnHubbard and Co. Russia merchants, of Birchin-lane; a director(formerly governor) of Bank of England; director of GuardianAssurance Company; M.P. (conservative) for Buckingham, since1859; chairman of “Public Works,” and“Exchequer Loan” committees; J.P. forBuckinghamshire; dep.-lieut. for London. Author of numerousable pamphlets on finance and commerce (AthenæumClub; 19,Birchin-lane,
2nd s. of late Samuel Gurney, Esq. of Upton, Essex, byElisabeth, dau. of James Sheppard, Esq.; b. 1816; first cousin ofJohn Henry Gurney, Esq., M.P. for Lynn Regis; m. 1837, Ellen,dau. of Wm. Reynolds, Esq. of Carshalton, Surrey. Partnerin firm of Overend, Gurney, and Co., bankers andmoney-dealers. M.P. (liberal) for Penryn and Falmouth since1857. J.P. for Surrey; director of Atlantic, MediterraneanExtension, and Submarine Telegraph Companies (Reform andCity Clubs;Lombard-street;Carshalton,Surrey).
S. of late Sir Henry Philip Hoghton, Bart., by Susannah, onlydau. and heir of Peter Brooke, Esq., of Astley Hall, and widow ofT. T. Parker, Esq. B. 1799. Suc. his father as 8thbart. 1835; m. 1st, 1820, Dorothea, dau. and heiress of latePeter Patten Bold, Esq., of Bold, Lancashire; 2ndly, 1847,Harriet Sarah, dau. of J. Smith, Esq. of Norwich. J.P. anddep.-lieut. for Lancashire; high sheriff, 1829. Formerlylieut.-col. of Lancashire Militia; which post he resigned in 1842(Carlton and Conservative Clubs;Hoghton Tower,near Blackburn,Lancashire).
Eld. s. of present Marquis of Westminster, K.G., by youngestdau. of 1st Duke of Sutherland, K.G. B. 1825, at EatonHall, Chester; m. 1852, his cousin, Lady Constance Gertrude, 5thdau. of 2nd and sister of present Duke of Sutherland, and hasthree sons and two daus.; Capt. Cheshire Yeomanry Cavalry, 1847;Lieut.-Col. Queen’s Westminster Rifles, 1860;lieut.-col.-commandant of same corps, 1801. M.P. (liberal)for Chester since 1847. J.P. for Cheshire and Chesterp.65(Brooke’s,White’s,andTravellers’ Clubs;Calveley Hall,Cheshire).
(Reform Club;Brockwell,Dulwich,Surrey).
Eld. s. of 2nd Earl, by Elizabeth, eld. dau. of 2nd LordSherborne. B. 1827; m. 1849, Julia, dau. of James HaughtonLangston, Esq., M.P., of Sarsden House, co. Oxford; M.P.(liberal) for Stroud, 1852–3; then called to Upper House bydeath of his father. Dep.-lieut. of Gloucestershire, 1851;Lord-lieut. and custos-robulorum of same county, 1857; capt. ofthe Yeomen of the Guard, 1859; (Brooke’s andTravellers’ Clubs,Totworth-court,Wootton-under-edge,and Spring Park,countyGlo’ster).
Eld. s. of late Daniel Bevan, Esq. of Belmont, Herts, andFosbury House, Berks, by Favell Bourke, dau. of Robert CooperLee, Esq. of Bedford-square. B. at Walthamstow, Essex,1809; m. 1st, 1836, Lady Agneta Elizabeth Yorke, sister ofpresent Earl of Hardwicke; and 2ndly, 1849, Emma Frances, eld.dau. of Right Rev. Dr. Shuttleworth, late Bishop ofChichester. Has six children by 1st, and three by 2ndmarriage. Educ. at Harrow, and Trinity College,Oxford. Banker, of firm of Barclay, Bevan, Tritton, and Co.(Union and National Clubs; 54,Lombard-street,E.C.;Trent Park,East Barnet;FosburyHouse,Hungerford,Berkshire).
Eld, s. of 2nd Earl (who died 1852), by youngest dau. of 3dEarl of Hardwicke, K.G. B. 1819; m. 1850, Virginia, dau. oflate James Pattle, Esq. Bengal Civil Service. B.A. ChristChurch, Oxford, 1840; M.P. (Conservative) for Reigate,1841–7; Lordp.66in Waiting to the Queen, 1853–7; J.P. anddep.-lieut. for Herefordshire and Surrey; Capt. 3rd HerefordshireVolunteers, 1860 (Carlton and Travellers’ Clubs;Eastnor Castle,Ledbury,Herefordshire;Priory,Reigate).
S. of late John Rawson, Esq. B. 1804; m. 1828, AnneElizabeth Emily, dau. of John Whaley, Esq., of Whaley Abbey, co.Wicklow, widow of the 2nd, and mother of the present LordCremorne. Educ. at Eton; entered the army, 1822; lieut.1823; capt. 1826; lieut. col. 1833; col. 1846; major-general,1854; lieut.-gen. 1861. Served in Coldstream Guards. M.P. (liberal) for Armagh city, 1840–52. J.P.Devonshire and Monaghan (Athenæum Club;Lynmouth,North Devon;Dartrey,Rockcorry, co.Monaghan).
Elder dau. and co-heir of Robert Ashworth, Esq.; m. in 1834,Sydney, 3rd son of Thomas Cosby, Esq., of Stradbally Hall,Governor of Queen’s co. in Ireland. Left a widow,with one son and two daus. 1840.
Eld. s. of late Abel Ram, Esq. (who died in 1832), by EleanorSarah, dau. of Jerome Knapp, Esq. B. 1818; m. 1839, MaryChristian, dau. of James A. Casamayor, Esq. Educ. at Etonand Christ Church, Oxford. J.P. and dep.-lieut. co. Wexford(high sheriff 1840); Fellow of Archæological Society. Has a son, Stephen James, an ensign and lieut. Scots FusilierGuards (Carlton Club;Ramsfort,Gorey,co. Wexford;Portswood Lodge,Southampton).
S. of late Lieut.-Gen. Wardlaw, col. of H.M. 55 foot, by Anne,youngest dau. of 1st Viscount Lake, G.C.B. B. 1826; m.1854, Lady Horatia Elizabeth, 2nd dau.
2nd s. of late Right Hon. David Boyle, of Shewalton, co. Ayr,for many years Lord Justice Clerk, and Lord President of theCourt of Session in Scotland, by Elizabeth Montgomery, niece of12th Earl of Eglinton. B. 1810; m. 1844, Agnes, dau. ofJames Walker, Esq. of Great George-street, Westminster, theeminent engineer. Entered R.N. College in 1823; prom. tolieutenant, 1830; commander, 1842; and Captain, 1857. Commanded “Thunderbolt” at Cape of Good Hope,1845–7. Director of the Furness Railway (UnitedService Club).
2nd dau. of 1st Lord Ashburton, for some time President ofBoard of Trade, and Master of the Mint (See No. 23,Prince’s Gate). Sister of present peer; m. in 1830,3rd Marquis of Bath, who died 1837. Mother of presentMarquis (Muntham Court,Worthing,Sussex).
(Athenæum Club).
2nd surviving s. of Admiral Lord de Saumarez, G.C.B.; brotherand heir presumptive of present peer; b. 1806, at Guernsey; m.1st., Caroline Esther, eld. dau. of W. Rhodes, Esq. of Kirskilland Bramhope, in Yorkshire;
Solicitor of firm of Tompson, Pickering, and Styan (4,Stone Buildings,Lincoln’s Inn, W.C.)
Stock and share broker, of firm of Surgey and Pickering (12,Old Broad-street, E.C.)
A Director of Mercantile Fire Insurance Company.
Eld. surviving s. of present Sir Adam Hay, Bart., of Haystown,co. Peebles, by Henrietta Callender, eldest dau. of late W.Grant, Esq., of Congalton, co. Haddington. B. in Edinburgh,1825; m. Miss Duncan, and has 3 sons. Capt. of PeebleshireVolunteers (Carlton Club;Hay Lodge,Peebles).
J.P. and Dep. Lieut. co. Hereford (Croft Castle,Leominster).
3rd dau. of the late General Sir W. Hutchinson, K.C.H.,Governor of Carrickfergus Castle, and Col. of the 75th regiment;m. Thomas, 2nd surviving s. of the late Lieut. Gen. Gordon, ofPitburg Dyce, Aberdeenshire. Has one child (Alice IsabelLucas).
A magistrate for the co. of Berks (Sunning Hill,Chertsey).
A member of Lincoln’s-inn; c. to the bar, 1824. Secretary to the Board of Trade (Athenæum Club,and Whitehall, S.W.)
Eld. s. of the late John Byles, Esq., of Stowmarket, Suffolk,by Mary, only dau. of W. Barnard, Esq., of Holts, Essex. B.at Stowmarket, 1801; m. 1st, 1828, the 2nd dau. of J. Foster,Esq., of Biggleswade, Bedford (she died 1829); 2nd, 1836, Emma,2nd dau. of J. Wedd, Esq., of Royston, Herts; has issue by secondmarriage, two sons (Walter Barnard, b. 1840, and Maurice Barnard,b. 1841). C. to the bar (Inner Temple), 1831; attended theNorfolk Circuit. Recorder of Buckingham, 1840;sergeant-at-law, 1843; patent of precedence, 1846; Queen’ssergeant, 1857; a judge of Her Majesty’s Court of CommonPleas (knighted), 1858; has written on Bills of Exchange &c.(Union Club,Harefield,near Uxbridge).
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1840;Queen’s counsel, 1858 (2,Stone-buildings,Lincoln’s-inn, W.C.)
Irish Peer. B. 1817; m. 1845, dau. of the late Admiralthe Hon. Charles Fleeming. Suc. his father, 1856. Hasissue, 1 son and 6 daus. Captain 2nd Life Guards, 1849;retired 1853. Lieut.-Col. of the North Tipperary Militia(Carlton Club,Dundrum,Tipperary).
Brother of the present duke of Grafton. B. 1791; m.p. 701825, dau. ofthe 1st Earl of Burlington. Formerly in the army; served atCorunna, the Walcheren Expedition, Badajoz, Vittoria, Pyrenees,Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, Toulouse, Waterloo; has war medal, with 8clasps. Retired from the army with rank of Lieut.-Col.1819. M.P. (liberal) for Thetford, 1818–31, Bury St.Edmunds, 1832–47; a privy councillor, 1835;vice-chamberlain to the Household, 1835–39 (UnitedService Club).
2nd Bart. S. of Lieut.-Gen. the Right Hon. Sir GeorgeArthur, 1st Bart. B. in the West Indies, Dec. 1816. Suc. his father, 1854; m. 1856, Lady Elizabeth, d. of 10th Earlof Kinnoul. Ent. the army, 1833; promoted to present rank,1857. Served formerly with the 4th Foot, and as militarysecretary to his father, when Governor of Bombay,1842–6. Has been on half-pay since 1850 (Carltonand United Service Clubs).
Brother of the present Lord de Mauley, and grandson maternallyof the 5th Earl of Shaftesbury. B. in St. James’sSquare, 1831; m. 1857, 2nd dau. of Lord Henry Gordon; has one s.,b. 1859. Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge;joined the Grenadier Guards, 1850; lieut. and capt. 1854; servedin the Crimea; M.P. for Cirencester 1852–57; re-elected1859. A liberal; a magistrate and dep.-lieut. forGloucestershire (Brooke’s,Travellers’,and Army and Navy Clubs;Hatherod Castle,Fairford,Gloucestersh.)
2nd s. of John Blackburn, Esq. of Killearn,Stirlingshire. B. 1813; an M.A. of Cambridge. C. tothe bar (Inner Temple) 1838; northern circuit. A judge ofthe Court of Queen’s Bench, 1859, when knighted(Doonholm,Ayr, N.B.)
Eldest s. of J. Blackburn, Esq., of Killearn. Of an oldGlasgow family, seated there since the 16th century. B.1811; suc. his father 1840; m. 1838, the 2nd dau. of the ScotchSolicitor General Wedderburn. Formerly in the army (2ndLife Guards) 1830–37; M.P. for Stirlingshire since 1855; aconservative; a magistrate, and dep.-lieut. for Stirlingshire; alord of the Treasury in 1859; a director of the Caledonian andDumbarton Railway; chairman of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway(Carlton,Killearn,near Glasgow).
3rd s. of the late Lieut.-Gen. Sir H. S. Keating, K.C.B. col.33rd Foot. B. 1804; m. 1843, 3rd dau. of the late Maj. Gen.Evans, R.A. C. to the bar (Inner Templ) 1832; OxfordCircuit; Queen’s Counsel, 1849, when elected a Bencher ofhis Inn; M.P. for Reading, 1852–59; solicitor general,1857–58 (when knighted) and again 1859; judge of the Courtof Common Pleas since 1859; an L.L.D. (Brooke’s andAthenæum Clubs).
3rd s. of the late Rev. Christopher Erle, of Gillingham,Dorset. B. 1793; m. 1834, eldest dau. of the Rev. DavidWilliams, D.C.L. Educated at Winchester, and New College,Oxford; c. to the bar (Middle Temple) 1819; western circuit;Queen’s Counsel, 1834; M.P. for Oxford city, 1837–41;puisne judge Common Pleas, 1845 (when knighted); Queen’sBench 1846; Lord Chief Justice Common Pleas, and a privycouncillor, since 1859 (Bramshott Grange,Liphook,Hants).
Dau. of John Trotter, Esq., of Dyrham Park, co. Herts; m.1822, Major Gen. Sir
A merchant of the firm of Manning and Anderdon. A memberof the Commission of the Lieutenancy for London; a director ofthe Royal Exchange Insurance Company (3,Bank-buildings,E.C.)
M. 1834, the dau. of the 2nd Baron Wodehouse. A memberof the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1831; an equity draftsman andconveyancer; recorder of Salisbury (6,Old-square,Lincoln’s Inn, W.C.)
Only s. of the Rev. Eardley Childers, by Maria, dau. of SirCulling Smith, Bart. B. in London 1827; m. Emily dau. ofGeorge J. A. Walker, Esq. of Norton. Educ. at TrinityCollege, Cambridge. Formerly a member of the Government ofVictoria, 1851–57. M.P. for Pontefract, since1860. A liberal. A Justice of the Peace for the WestRiding of Yorkshire; an F.R.G.S. A director of the Londonand North Western, and the Gellevara (Swedish) Railways; chairmanof the Wivenhoe and Brightling-sea Railway (Brooke’sClub).
Eld. s. of Robert E. D. Shafto, Esq., many years M.P. forDurham City. B. 1806; m. 1838, the niece of LordAshburton. M.P. for North Durham, since 1847. Aliberal. A J.P. for Durham and Wilts. A dep. lieut.for Durham. A Director of the Salisbury and Dorset Railway(Brooke’s Club;Hampworth Lodge,Downton,Wilts;Whitworth Park,BishopsAuckland).
B. 1795; m. 1824, dau. of General Lord Charles Fitzroy; has 4daus., two married. Suc. his father in 1852. M.P. forCarmarthenshire, 1830–31, and 1832–52. A D.C.L.of Oxford, 1834. Colonel of the Carmarthen Militia since1831, and Militia Aide de Camp to the Queen, since 1852. Patron of 6 livings (Dynevor Castle,Llandillo;Barrington-park,Burford).
S. of Thomas Cooper, Esq., of Sydney, and formerly of Bolton,Lancashire. Born 1821; m. 1846, Elizabeth, daughter ofWilliam Hill, Esq. Elected to the Legislative Council ofNew South Wales, 1849; chosen 1st speaker of the legislativeassembly, 1856. Is a member of the Senate of the SydneyUniversity, and president of the Bank of New South Wales;knighted by patent, 1857.
A magistrate and dep.-lieut. for Berkshire.
B. 1813, at Winkfield Park, near Windsor. Ent. the navyin 1829; obtained his present rank, 1846; present at thebombardment of St. Jean d’Acre; has received the Syrianmedal.
Eld. s. of the late James Potter, Jun., Esq., manufacturer, ofManchester. B. 1802; m. 1829, dau. of A. Crompton, Esq., ofLune Villa, Lancaster; M.P. for Carlisle since 1861 (a liberal);a J.P. and dep.-lieut. for Derbyshire; an F.R.S.; an extensivecalico printer and manufacturer at Glossop and Manchester(Reform Club;Dinting Vale,Glossop,Derbyshire).
A member of Lincoln’s Inn; c. to the bar, 1857; anp. 74equitydraftsman and conveyancer. Lancaster Chancery Court (8,New-square,Lincoln’s Inn, W.C.;Dinting-lodge,Derbyshire).
Desc. from the family of De Lysle, or De Insula, of Mirfieldand Kirkheaton, co. York. S. of William Lysley, Esq. ofWarmfield, co. York. B. 12 Dec. 1791; m. 1828, Caroline,dau. of John Marshall, Esq., of Ardwick House, co.Lancaster. Has issue, William Gerard, b. 1831; WarineBayley Marshall, who m. in 1859, the dau. of Col. Du Vernet;Sarah Maria, who m. in 1861, Henry Gillett, Esq.; and CarolineGertrude. C. to the bar (Inner Temple) 1826; went thenorthern circuit, but has ceased to practise. A magistrateand dep.-lieut. for Herts; high sheriff in 1851; M.P. forChippenham since 1859 (a liberal); an F.A.S. (AthenæumClub;Mimwood,Herts;Pewsham,Chippenham).
Aunt of the present, and dau. of the 1st Marquis ofLondonderry; m. 1821, the late Viscount Hardinge,Commander-in-chief of the Forces.
S. of Edward Greenall, Esq., and brother of the late PeterGreenall, Esq., who was M.P. for Wigan, 1841–5; b. 1806; m.1836, Mary, dau. of David Cloughton, Esq. (she died 1861). J.P. for Cheshire, and J.P. and dep.-lieut. for Lancashire;chairman of the St. Helen’s railway; M.P. for Warrington,since 1847; a conservative (Carlton and National Clubs;Walton Hall,Warrington).
7th Bart. B. 1822. Suc. his father, 1830; m. 1843,Lady Louisa Hay, eld. dau. of the Earl of Kinnoull; has issue 2sons and 8 daus.;p.75formerly in the Grenadier Guards. App.Lieut.-col. Perthshire Militia, 1846; Col. 1855(Moncrieffe House,Bridge of Earne,Perthshire).
Uncle of the Earl of Minto. B. 1784; m. 1810, ElizaCecilia, youngest dau. of James Ness, Esq., of Osgodvie, co.York. Has had issue 5 sons and 5 daus.; ent. the Navy,1794; promoted to his present rank, 1853; general of the Mint inScotland; naval aide-decamp to William IV., 1830; created a C.B.,1831; first Secretary to Admiralty, 1830–34; a lord of theAdmiralty, 1835–37; has received a medal and clasps for hisservices at the battles of St. Vincent, the Nile, Copenhagen, andJava; has been Commander-in-chief at the Cape of Good Hope, onthe West coast of Africa, in China, and at the Nore; hasintroduced many useful inventions into naval gunnery, as well asinto the navy generally (United Service Club).
3rd s. of the late Right Hon. Henry Goulburn. M. 1859,the Hon. Jemima Townshend, dau. of Baron Sondes. Acommissioner and deputy chairman of Customs (Thames St.,E.C.)
Dau. of the late Rev. Frederick Ekins, Rector of Morpeth,Northumberland; and widow of the late Lieut. Henry Raper, R.N.,s. of the late Admiral Raper, and a Fellow of the Astronomicaland Geographical Societies.
Daughter of the late Sir John Lambton Loraine, Bart. andCaroline his wife, sister of Mrs. Raper.
Eld. s. of John Mo rant, Esq., of Brokenhurst Park. B.1825; m., 1855, the Lady Henrietta Louisa, sister ofp. 76the Duke ofBeaufort. Educated at Christ Ch. Oxford.
M. 1854, dau. of Rev. S. L. Cooper, of Gt. Yarmouth, andrelict of Frederick Tyrrell, Esq. Ent. the College of Arms,1813; York-herald, 1820; Register of the College, 1822; GarterKing of Arms, 1842, when knighted (College of Arms,London, E.C.)
2nd s. of the late L. W. Dillwyn, Esq., who formerlyrepresented the co. of Glamorgan. B. at Swansea, 1814; m.1838, Elizabeth, only dau. and heiress of the late Sir H. T. dela Beche, C.B. Has 1 s. (Henry, b. 1843), and 3 daus. M.P. for the boro’ of Swansea since 1855; a liberal;magistrate and dep.-lieut. for Glamorganshire; Major-Commandant 3Glamorgan Rifle Volunteers; a director of the S. Wales Railway; aFellow of the Linnæan, Geological, and Zoological Societies(Athenæum Club;Henderefoilan Swansea).
Late Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford. M. 1834,Lydia, dau. of the Rev. Joseph Rose, Vicar of Rothley. Adirector of the Metropolitan Counties Insurance Company.
A member of the Middle Temple; c. to the bar, 1836. Acommissioner in lunacy (19,Whitehall-place, S.W.)
A banker of the firm of Heywood, Kennards, and Co. (4,Lombard-street, E.C.)
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1847; goes theNorthern Circuit; and attends the West Riding and Leeds BoroughSessions (2,Paper-buildings,Temple, E.C.)
A merchant of the firm of Burmester, Bros. Director ofthe London and County Bank (10,St. Helen’s-place,E.C.)
A count of the Holy Roman Empire, and claimant of the baronyof Fitzwarine. M. 1828, Lady Cecil Jane, aunt of the Earlof Limerick. Educ. at Winchester and Oriel Coll., Oxford;formerly attached to the Bavarian embassy at Rome. A knightof the order of Jerusalem.
Educ. at Cambridge, where he obtained his M.A. A memberof Lincoln’s-inn; c. to the bar, 1846; appointed aQueen’s Counsel, 1861. A special pleader; attends theNorthern Circuit (Athenæum Club; 1,King’sBench-walk,Temple, E.C.)
Athenæum Club;Iwood,Somersetshire.
A Fellow of the Royal Society; a director of the VictoriaStation and Pimlico Railway (31,Parliament-street,S.W.)
2nd s. of the 1st and uncle of present Lord Abinger. B.1799; m. 1835, 2nd dau. and co-heir of the late ColonelHargreaves. A magistrate for Lancashire. Ent. thearmy, 1818; promoted to his present rank, 1854; app. Lieut.-Col.3rd Drag. Guards, 1840; to the chief command of the Cavalrydivision in the Crimea, 1855; app. to the Cavalry Brigade atAldershott, 1856; to the South Western District, 1857; to theColonelcy of the 5th Dragoon Guards, 1860. IsAdjutant-General to the Forces; was M.P. for Guildford,1837–41.
The representative of the ancient family of Morgan, ofTredegar, settled for centuries at Hurst, co. Gloucester, whichassumed the surname of Clifford in 1760. B. 1806; m. 1834,Catherine Harriet, great granddau. of Lord Chancellor Hardwicke,by whom he has issue a son (b. 1836) and a dau. Educated atEton and Christ Church, Oxford; M.P. for Herefordshire since1847; a liberal. Formerly chairman of the HerefordshireQuarter Sessions. A magistrate and dep.-lieut. ofHertfordshire, and Monmouthshire; hon. colonel of the Monmouthsh.Militia; a commissioner in Lunacy (Brooke’s,andOxford and Cambridge Clubs;Llantellio,Monmouthshire;Perristone,Hereford).
2nd s. of the late William White, Esq., of Tulse Hill,Surrey. B. 1809; m. 1833, Mary, eld. dau. of A. A. Lind,Esq., of Jamaica; M.P. for Plymouth, 1857–59, and forBrighton, since 1860; a liberal. Formerly an alderman ofthe City of London, where he has traded for many years as a ChinaMerchant (Reform Club; 14,Chichester-ter.,Brighton).
A magistrate for Lancashire (Enam,Blackburn,Lancashire).
2nd s. of Dugald Stuart, Esq., of Balachelish, Appin,Argyleshire, a branch of the Stuarts, of Appin, descended fromthe last Stuart, Lord Lorn, who have held their lands in Appinsince the year 1469. B. at Fort Augustus, Inverness-shire,24th Jan., 1793; m. 1813, Jessie, dau. of Duncan Stewart, Esq.,of Fort William, by whom he has two sons, Dugald and John, andone surviving dau. A member of Lincoln’s Inn; c. tothe bar, 1819; app. Queen’s Counsel, 1839, and a Bencher ofhis Inn; M.P. for Newark, 1846 and 1847, and Bury St. Edmunds,1852; app. a vice-chancellor of England, 1852; knighted,1853. A Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. Thefamily of Stuart have been uniformly distinguished for theirloyalty and services to the Crown, from the contest at Flodden,to the present time (Athenæum and Carlton Clubs;Lock Carron,Ross-shire).
Eld. s. of the vice-chancellor. B. 1817. Member ofLincoln’s Inn; c. to the bar, 1845. Secretary to hisfather (Athenæum Club).
Younger s. of the vice-chancellor. A member ofLincoln’s Inn; c. to the bar, 1847 (21,Old-square,Lincoln’s Inn, W.C.).
A solicitor (Marlboro’ Chambers, 49,PallMall, S.W.)
Grands. of Admiral Troubridge, who so gallantly acquittedhimself at the battle of the Nile: and grand nephew of the 8thEarl Dundonald; b. 1806; suc. his father Rear Admiral Sir Thomas,1852; m. 1852, Louisa Jane Gurney, granddau. of the 15th Earl ofErroll; has issue, (a son, b. 1860) and 3 daus.; entered the army1834; Lieut. Col. 7th foot 1855; severely wounded at Inkermanp. 80(both legsamputated); app. aide-de-camp to the Queen 1855; a Knight of theLegion of Honour 1857; Deputy Adjutant General for army clothing(Horse Guards, S.W.)
3rd s. of the late James Pedder, Esq. of Ashton Park, Preston,dep.-lieut., and J.P. B. 13 Sep. 1823; m. 1862, StephanieHenrietta, dau. of the late John H. Tarleton, Esq. and relict ofHenry Steele, Esq. A magistrate for the co. of Lancasterand the borough of Preston; late captain 3rd Royal Lancashiremilitia; major 11th Lancashire Rifle Volunteers. AFreemason. The family of Pedder have been resident inPreston from a remote date (Junior United ServiceClub).
A banker of the firm of Roger Cunliffe, Son, & Co. (24,Bucklersbury, E.C.;Fetcham Lodge,Leatherhead,Surrey).
A Scotch peer, the eld. s. of the hero of Basque Roads. B. 1814; m. 1847, Louisa Harriet, dau. of W. A. Mackinnon, Esq.of Newtown Park, Hants; suc. his father 1860; has issue, two sonsand four daus.; entered the army 1833; served with the 18th footin the expedition to China, 1840; obtained his captaincy 1841;removed to 2nd foot; retired (Dundonald Castle,Ayrshire).
2nd s. of the 7th, and brother of the present Bart., SirMichael Robert Shaw-Stewart, of Greenock and Blackall, co.Renfrew; b. (Cavendish Sq.) 15th Sept, 1829; m. 1857, Angela,only dau. of Boyd Alexander, Esq. of Ballock Myle and South Barr,N.B.; has issue, Helenor, Archibald, and Constance. Formerly in the Grenadier Guards; a J.P. for Stirlingshire;Director of the Highland and
Representative of a family which has for a long succession ofyears held possessions in Essex, Sussex, Surrey, andLincolnshire. Eld. s. of the late N. Garland, Esq. by thesister and heiress of Arthur Cope, Esq. of Drummilly, co.Armagh. B. 26 Dec. 1814; m. 1844, Amelia, 2nd dau. of R.Robertson, Esq. of Auchlecks, co. Perth, and Membland, co. Devon(Michaelstowe Hall,Essex;Woodcote Grove,Surrey).
M. 1858, the Lady Isabella Emma Elizabeth, dau. of the presentEarl of Orkney; a merchant of the firm of Schuster, Son, and Co.;a magistrate for Surrey; a Director of the Union Bank, of theRoyal Exchange Insurance Company, and of the West LondonExtension Railway; chairman of the London and Brighton Railway;deputy chairman of the Victoria and Pimlico Railway (18,Cannon-street, E.C.;Roehampton).
S. of Wm. Fairbairn, Esq. F.R.S. B. 1823; m. 1848,Allison, dau. of Thomas Callaway, Esq. of Chiselhurst,Kent. Has issue, a s. (b. 1852). A magistrate for theco. of Lancaster; chairman to the Manchester Exhibition of 1857(Reform Club;Northwood,Manchester).
A Director of the Economic Insurance Company.
S. of Samuel Chas. Whitbread, Esq., of Cardington, Bedfordsh.,and grandson of the great Whitbread. B. 1830; m. 1855, 3rddau. of the Earl of Chichester. Educated at Rugby, andTrinity College, Cambridge. M.P. for Bedford since 1852 (aliberal); a magistrate and dep.-lieut. for Bedford; a Lord of theAdmiralty (Brooke’s Club;Admiralty,Whitehall, S.W.;Cardington,nearBedford).
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1845; an equitydraftsman and conveyancer; parliamentary counsel to the HomeOffice (22,Duke-street,Westminster, S.W.)
A magistrate for Kent; director of the Kent Insurance Company(Littlebourne,Canterbury).
B. 1824; suc. his father, 1842; m. 1855, dau. of the late Hon.John Kennedy Erskine; has issue, three sons. Educ. atHarrow. Formerly capt. 1st Life Guards. A magistrateand dep.-lieut. for Middlesex (Upper Lodge,BushyPark).
Eld. s. of the late B. Outram, Esq., of Butterly Hall, co.Derby. B. 1803; m. 1835, his cousin, Margaret, dau. ofJames Anderson, Esq. of Bridgend, Brechin, Forfar; has issue, as., Francis, now in the Bengal Civil Service. Gen. Outramwas educ. at Aberdeen; proceeded to India, as a cadet, in 1819;was sometime lieut. and adjutant 23rd Bombay Native Infantry; wassometime in command of the Bheel Corps; afterwards becamepolitical agent in Guzerat; British Resident at Hyderabad,Sattara, and Baroda; and suc. the late Sir William Sleeman, ascommis. at Lucknow; promoted to be lieut.-col. 1843; sent toPersia with diplomatic
B. 1787; suc. his father, 1804; m. 1816, Lady Susan, dau. ofthe 5th and aunt of the present Duke of Manchester; has issue,six sons and six daus. Lord-lieut. of Haddingtonshire;hereditary chamberlain of Dumfermline. Ent. the army, 1804;promoted to rank of general, 1854; app. colonel 30th Foot, 1846;governor and commander-in-chief at Madras, 1842–48; servedin the Peninsula as an assist. Q.-M.-Gen.; received thegold medal for the battle of Vittoria, in which action waswounded; as also at the Busaco; served in the American war, andwas again wounded (United Service Club;Yester,Haddington, N.B.)
Formerly in the Bengal Civil Service.
(Childown,Chertsey;Tescombe Cottage,Stockbridge).
Late Scotch Fusilier Guards, and late Lieut. Col. commanding6th Royal Lancash. Militia; Lieut. 1825; Capt. 1830; Lieut.Colonel 1842; Colonel 1854 (Army and Navy Club).
M.A. Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. C. to the bar,Inner Temple, 1849. Practised as conveyancer, at 6King’s Bench Walk. Agent for the London and NorwichUnion Societies. (6,Crescent,New BridgeSt.,Blackfriars;Oxford and CambridgeClubs).
(4,Elm-court,Temple).
Architect, (13a,Great George Street,Westminster).
2nd s. of late Lord Glamis; grands. of 11th and brother ofpresent Earl of Strathmore. B. 1824; m. 1853, Frances Dora,dau. of Oswald Smith, Esq. of Blendon. Formerly Lieut. 2ndLife Guards.
(Union Club).
S. of Major Langley, of Brittas Castle, co. Tipperary. B. 1820, at Portarlington; m. Harriet Maria, only child of JamesBradshaw, Esq. M.P. for Canterbury. Late an officer 2ndLife Guards. At present a captain in the 2nd or SouthMiddlesex Rifle Volunteers; and Fellow of Royal HorticulturalSociety (White’s and Travellers’ Clubs).
2nd s. of late Charles Buller, Esq. M.P. for West Looe, andfor some time in the Bengal Civil Service, by Barbara Isabella,dau. of Gen. Kirkpatrick. B. at Calcutta, 1808; m. 1842,Maria, dau. of Francis Templer, Esq. Treasurer of Ceylon. B.A. Trinity College, Cambridge 1830; M.A. 1834; c. to the bar,Lincoln’s Inn, 1834. Western Circuit, Queen’sAdvocate, Ceylon. 1840–8. Knighted 1848; from whichperiod until 1858, was a judge of the
B. 1826, at the Moat, Eltham, Kent; m. 1855, dau. of HenryBowden, Esq. of Coopers, Chislehurst, Kent. Educ. atCharter House and Brasenose College, Oxford. M.A. 1850;Solicitor of the firm of Ward and Mills, late Eyston, Ward, andMills (1,Gray’s Inn Square,Union Club).
Eld. s. of late James Murray, Esq., of Philiphaugh, by MaryDale, dau. of Henry Hughes, Esq., of Worcester. Is chief ofthe numerous and powerful clan of the Murrays of the south ofScotland. His family held landed possessions in thatcountry prior to the twelfth century, from which time these havedescended in unbroken succession to himself. Among hisancestors we find many men of great note, including the famous“outlaw Murray,” of the time of James IV. (see SirWalter Scott’s “BorderMinstrelsy”). B. 1817; m. 1840, Rosemary, onlydau. and heir of William Andrew Nesbitt, Esq., (assumingthereupon the name of Nesbitt); and has two sons and onedau. J.P. and dep.-lieut. for Selkirk; member of the RoyalCompany of Scottish Archers and Queen’s Body Guard forScotland. (Reform Club;Philiphaugh,andHareheadwood,Selkirk).
In the Legacy and Succession Duty Department of Inland RevenueOffice (Somerset House;Conservative Club).
Eldest dau. of Sir Thomas Metcalfe, Bart., and sister of lateLord Metcalfe, G.C.B., Governor General of Canada. B. 1790:m.p. 861812(as second wife), 4th Visc. Ashbrook, by whom she was mother ofthe late Duchess of Marlborough.
Youngest s. of late Robert Cary Elwes, Esq., of Great Billing,co. Northampton, by his 2nd wife, Jane Marianne, only dau. ofRev. Richard Sykes, of Westella, near Hull. B. 1828. B.A. Magdalen College, Cambridge (Oxford and CambridgeClub).
Eld. s. of present (the 13th) Lord Saye and Sele, D.C.L., byHon. Emily Wingfield, dau. of 4th Viscount Powerscourt. B.1830, at Walton-on-Thames; m. 1856, Lady Augusta Hay, youngestdau. of 9th Earl of Kintoull, and has one s. and threedaus. J.P. Oxfordsh. and Warwickshire; dep.-lieut.Oxfordshire; Capt. Queen’s Own Oxfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry(Brooke’s Club;Broughton Castle,Banbury).
M., 1837, Martha Maria, only dau. of late Admiral Sir AndrewMitchell, K.B.; and has two sons (the elder a Lieut. of H.M. 23rdFoot,—the younger a Lieutenant of H.M. ship Emerald) andone dau. Ent. navy, 1811; Lieut., 1820; Comm., 1841;Captain (retired), 1858; served at the siege of Danzig; againstenemy’s privateers; and at capture of French 40-gun frigateCêres (United Service Club).
Member of Incorporated Law Society of United Kingdom; and ofLaw Association for benefit of widows and families ofprofessional men in metropolis and its vicinity. Solicitor,of firm of Marten, Thomas, and Hollams, (31, 33, 35, and 50,Commercial Sale Rooms,Mincing Lane,City,E.C.)
Dau. of Thomas Hawkes, Esq.,
Ent. army 1831; Lieut. 1832; Capt. 1837; Major 1850;Lieut.-Col. 1854; Col. 1857. Placed on half-pay, May1861. Served with 9th Lancers, in Suttlej campaign, 1846;brigadier in command of cavalry at relief of Lucknow, forservices on which occasion he received thanks of theCommander-in-chief and Gov. General of India in Council, and wasnominated C.B.; commanded cavalry and 3 troops of HorseArtillery, at battle of Cawnpore, &c.; and 1st brigade ofcavalry at siege of Lucknow, until severely wounded by musketball through left elbow (United Service Club).
A member of the Reform Club.
S. of the late Rev. Matthew Marsh, Canon of Salisbury, andChancellor of the Diocese. B. 1810; m. 1844 Eliza, dau. ofSergt. Merewether. Educ. at Westminster, and at ChristChurch, Oxford. Member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar,1836; a dep.-lieut. and magistrate for Wilts. Formerlymember of the Legislative Council of New South Wales. Acommissioner for the Exhibition from Queensland; M.P. forSalisbury, since 1857; a liberal (Athenæum,Oxford and Cambridge,and Reform Clubs;Rambridge,Andover).
Brother of Baron Saye and Sele. B. 1809; raised to therank of a Baron’s son, 1848; m. 1852, Ellen, dau. of thelate Hon. Edmund Dwight, of the United States. Educ. atBalliol College, Oxford; a Member of the Inner Temple; c. to thebar,p.881835. Formerly chief commissioner of Poor Laws inIreland. App. commissioner of the University of Oxford,1855; unsuccessfully contested Cambridge, 1859 (AthenæumClub).
S. of the late Earl of Egremont, and brother of the lateCountess of Munster. B. at St. Luke’s, Chelsea. Educated at St. John’s College, Cambridge, where heobtained his M.A. (University and Union Clubs).
Youngest s. of Wilbraham Egerton, Esq., of Tatton Park, co.Chester, by 2nd dau. of Sir Christopher Sykes, Bart., ofSledmere. Entered the navy, 1831; obtained his presentrank, 1846; acquired great credit during the China war,1840–41; engaged in the unfortunate expedition up the RiverNiger, 1841–42 (Army and Navy Club;Talladh aBheiter,Pittochrie,Perthshire).
Eld. s. of late Andrew Colvile, Esq., of Ochiltree, co. Fife,by dau. of 1st Lord Auckland. B. 1810; suc. his father,1856; m. 1857, Frances, dau. of John Peter Grant, Esq. Member of the Supreme Council of Calcutta; has issue. Educ.at Eton and Trinity Coll., Cambridge. A member of the InnerTemple. C. to the bar, 1835; advocate general at Calcutta,1845; puisne judge, 1848; chief justice, 1855–59. Aprivy councillor, since 1859 (Travellers’ Club;Craigflower,near Dumfermline).
Eld. surviving s. of the late George Lyall, Esq., M.P. forLondon. B. 1819; m. 1st, Eleanor, (died 1853) dau. of Rev.J. Manley—2nd, 1855, Frances, dau. of D. Cave Esq., ofCleve-hill,p.89co. Gloucester; has issue. Educ. atWinchester. A magistrate for Surrey; a commissioner oflieutenancy for Middlesex; M.P. for Whitehaven, since 1857; aconservative (Union and Carlton Clubs;Nutwood,Galton,Reigate;Headley Park,nearEpsom).
A solicitor, of the firm of Pemberton, Meynell, andPemberton. A member of the Incorporated Law Soc. (20,Whitehall-place, S.W.)
A dep.-lieut. for Lancashire, and Major of the 4th LancashireMilitia. Late 48th Foot (Junior United ServiceClub).
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1859. Goesthe Home Circuit (3,Dr. Johnson’s-buildings,Temple, E.C.)
Brother of the Duke of Marlborough; b. 1824; m. 1857, Harriet,dau. of Lord Calthorpe. Formerly in the 4th Light Dragoons,and 83rd Regiment. Lieut.-Col. of the Oxford (Q.O.)Yeomanry; M.P. for Woodstock, 1845–7, and since 1857; aliberal conservative (Athenæum and Travellers’Clubs).
Joined the Royal Artillery, 1828; promoted to his presentrank, 1857; served the Eastern campaign of 1855; commanded siegetrain at the fall of Sebastopol. Rewarded with the Crimeanmedal and clasps, Legion of Honour, 4th class of the Medjidie,Turkish medal, &c, &c.
Member of Lincoln’s-inn; c. to the bar, 1848. Equity draftsman and conveyancer (4,New-square, W.C.)
Uncle of the Duke of Norfolk, and cousin of the Duke ofSutherland. B. 1818; m. 1851, Augusta, only dau. andheiress of Hon. George Talbot, and niece of the 16th Earl ofShrewsbury (she died 1862). A privy councillor since 1846;vice-chamberlain of the Queen’s household,1846–52. M.P. for Horsham, 1848–52; and forArundel, since 1852; a liberal; a magistrate for Sussex;dep.-lieut. for Derby (Brooke’s and Travellers’Clubs;the Hall,Glossop).
A magistrate of New South Wales, 1838–59; elected memberof Council, 1848; formed the 1st ministry there responsible toParliament, 1856; was member and vice-president of the executivecouncil, 1st minister, and colonial secretary; subsequentlycolonial treasurer, and commissioner of railways, 1857; knighted,1860.
B. 1785; suc. 1804; m. 1824, Louisa, dau. of the late AdmiralSir Charles Rowley, Bart.; has issue, 3 sons and 4 daus. Educated at Westminster; is Lord Lyon King-of-arms; Lord-lieut.of Perthshire; formerly Colonel Perth Militia; a conservative(United Service Club;Dupplin Castle,Perth,N.B.)
Eld. s. and heir of Sir Henry Holland, Bart., by EmmaMargaret, dau. of J. Caldwell, Esq., of Linleywood,Staffordshire. M. 1st, Elizabeth Margaret, dau. of N.Hibbert, Esq., of Munden, Herts (issue a dau. and 2 sons); 2nd,Magaret Jean, dau. of Sir Chas. E. Trevelyan, K.C.B., and nieceof Lord Macaulay (issue 1 s. and 1 dau.). Educated atp. 91TrinityCollege, Cambridge. A member of the Inner Temple; c. to thebar, 1849; a special pleader; goes the Northern Circuit(Oxford and Cambridge Club; 2,Harcourt-buildings,Temple, E.C.)
Dau. of General William Neville Cameron; granddau. of SirWilliam Gordon, Bart.; widow of Thomas Deane Shute, Esq., ofBramshaw and Barton Lodge, Hampsh. Has issue, ColonelCameron Shute, 4th Dragoon Guards, Colonel Neville Shute, 64thFoot, and other sons and daughters.
Sister of Lord Bloomfield. B. 1806; m. 1833, ThomasHenry Kingscote, Esq., late 2nd Life Guards, Colonel NorthGloucester Militia.
Solicitor and parliamentary agent, of the firm of John andCharles Cole. A member of the Incorporated Law Society (36,Essex-street,Strand, W.C.)
A member of the Conservative Club.
A coal owner; ship and insurance broker, of the firm ofCharles Richard Fenwick and Co. (1a,Abchurch-yard,E.C.;Hunstanton Lodge,near Lynn).
3rd s. of Major John Ross, of Balkail, co. Galloway. B.1779; m. 1816, Elizabeth, dau. of Richard Graham, Esq., ofStonehouse, Cumberland. Joined the Royal Artillery, 1795;promoted to his present rank, 1854; Lieut.-gen. of the Ordnance,1854; Adjutant-gen. Royal Artillery, 1855. Served in thePeninsula and France from June, 1809, to Feb.p. 921814,including the action of the Coa, battle of Busaco, actions ofPombal, Redinha (wounded in the shoulder), Casal Novo, Fozd’Arouce (wounded in the leg), and Sabugal; battle ofFuentos d’Onor, action of Aldea de Ponte, sieges of CiudadRodrigo and Badajoz (dangerously wounded in the head); action atCastrajon, capture of forts at and battle of Salamanca, captureof Madrid and the Retiro, affairs of Son Munoz and San Milan,battles of Vittoria, and the Pyrenees from 26th to 30th July,passage of the Bidassoa, Nivelle, and Nive; battle near Bayonne,13 Dec. 1813. Served also the campaign of 1815, and waspresent at the battle of Waterloo. Sir Hew has received thegold Cross and two clasps for Buasco, Badajoz, Salamanca,Vittoria, Nivelle, and Nive; and the silver War Medal with threeclasps for Fuentes d’Onor, Ciudad Rodrigo, andPyrenees. Created a G.C.B., 1855 (United ServiceClub;Stone House,Cumberland).
2nd s. of Sir F. D. Astley, Bart., of Everley, co.Wilts. M. 1853, Augusta, dau. of the late James Cockburn,Esq., s. of the Dean of York.
A solicitor of the firm of Robinson and Barlow. Memberof the Incorporated Law Society. Commissioner of oaths inChancery (26,Essex-st.,Strand, W.C.;Hollycombe,Liphook,Hants).
Eld. dau. of the late John Cunningham, Esq. of Craigends,N.B. B. 1801; m. 1831, as 3rd wife, the father of thepresent duke.
Eld. s. of William Dent Farrer, Esq., of Brockley Park,Queen’s County, Ireland. B. in Dublin, 1820; m. 1852,Augusta Louisa, daughter of
S. of Samuel Tertius Galton, Esq., of Duddeston, nearBirmingham. B. 1822; m. 1853, Louisa Jane, eld. dau. of theRev. George Butler, D.D., dean of Peterborough, and formerlyheadmaster of Harrow. An M.A. of Cambridge. Receivedthe gold medal of the Royal Geographical Society for hisexplorations of South Western Africa in 1850–51; and is nowone of the honorary secretaries of that society. A memberalso of the Royal and other scientific societies(Athenæum Club).
A banker, of the firm of Smith, Payne, and Smiths (1,Lombard Street, E.C.)
B. 1799; suc. his brother 1851; m. 1831, Susan, dau. of thelate Sir Coutts Trotter, Bt.; has issue a s. and 2 daus. Educ. at Westminster. Ent. the Army 1815; obtained hispresent rank (Major-Gen.) 1858; formerly a groom in waiting tothe Queen; private Secretary to Lord John Russell, 1846; M.P. forEast Norfolk, 1832–35, and for Lymington, 1847–50; adep.-lieut. for Norfolk; patron of 4 livings; a liberal; servedthe Waterloo Campaign with the 14 foot (Athenæum andBrooke’s Clubs;Quidenham Hall,Attleboro’,Norfolk).
Eld. s. of Earl of Albemarle; b. 1832; m. 1855, Sophia, 2nddau. of Sir A. N. M’Nab, Bart., of Dundurn Castle, UpperCanada; formerly in the Scots Fusilier Guards; private Secretaryto Lord John Russell, 1850–51; afterwards aide-de-camp top. 94Lord F.Fitz Clarence, in India; Civil Secretary and Superintendent ofIndian affairs for the province of Canada, 1854–56; M.P.for Norwich, 1857–59; created a P.C. 1859. M.P. forWick since 1860; a Liberal; treasurer of H.M. household;lieut.-col. 21st Middlesex (civil service) Rifle Volunteers(Brooke’s and Guards’ Clubs;QuidenhamHall,Attleborough).
3rd s. of the Earl of Crawford; b. 1816; m. 1851, the eld.dau. of the Hon. and Rev. Henry M. Browne, Dean of Lismore. Late of the Scots’ Fusilier Guards; obtained his presentrank, 1854; retired from the army, 1855; extra aide-de-camp tothe Lord Lieut. of Ireland, 1844; Master of the Horse, 1845;chamberlain, 1858; served with the Scots’ Fusilier Guardsin the Eastern campaign of 1854–55, including Alma,Balaklava, Inkerman, and Sebastopol; rewarded with the Crimeanmedal and four clasps, the Victoria cross, knight of the Legionof Honour, 5th class of the Medjidie and Turkish medal (HaighHall,Wigan).
Sister of the Marquis of Westmeath; b. 1810; m. 1837,Lieut.-Col, the Hon. James Hope Wallace, brother of Earl ofHopetoun, who died 1854, when her ladyship dropped the name ofWallace, which her husband had assumed.
A magistrate for the county of Middlesex; a Fellow of theRoyal Society.
Nephew of the celebrated admiral; b. 1790; suc. his father,1792; m. 1819; Lady Frances (she died 1855), dau. of 1st Earl ofLimerick; has issue, a s. and dau. (Muirtowne).
2nd s. of the late Sir Henry Webster, Bart.; m. 1856, Louisa,dau. of Sir Henry Calder, Bart.
2nd. s. of Samuel Ellis Bristowe, Esq., of Beesthorpe Hall,co. Nottingham; b. 1824; a member of the Middle Temple; c. to thebar, 1847. A conveyancer and equity draftsman (22,OldSquare, W.C.)
Sister of the Earl of Kilmorey; m. 1836, Samuel EllisBristowe, Esq., of Beesthorpe, Notts.
A solicitor. Com. Oaths in Chancery; com. Queen’sBench, Common Pleas, and Exchequer; member of the IncorporatedLaw Society (7,Whitehall-place, S.W.;Udney House,Teddington).
Eld. s. of the late Colonel William Mure, of Caldwell; b.1830; m. 1859, Constance, dau. of Lord Leconfield, late of theScots’ Fusilier Guards; obtained his present rank, 1859;has retired from the service. Served with the 60th Riflesin the Kaffir war, 1851–53 (medal), and with the 79th atAlma, Balaklava, and Sebastopol (medal and clasps, and Turkishmedal).
Sister of the Earl of Albemarle; b. 1804; m. 1826, HenryFrederick Stephenson, Esq.
A member of Lincoln’s Inn; c. to the bar, 1852. Goes the Norfolk Circuit; attends the Aylesbury, Bedford, Bury,and Ipswich Sessions (5,Paper-buildings, E.C.)
In the Scots’ Fusilier Guards;p. 96obtained hispresent rank 1859.
Of the family of Whitmore, of Slaughter, co. Gloucester, fornearly 300 years lords of that manor. S. of Gen. Sir GeorgeWhitmore, K.C.H., Col.-Com. Royal Engineers; m. 1845,Elizabeth, sister of Sir Robert Brownrigg, Bart.; has threesons. M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge; a barrister; abencher of the Inner Temple; app. a Q.C. 1855; recorder ofGloucester; judge of the Southwark County Court (Oxford andCambridge,and Travellers’ Clubs; 12,King’s-bench-walk,Temple, E.C.)
B. at Paris, 1817; suc. his father, the Field Marshal, 1855;m. 1856, Lady Georgiana, sister of Earl Beauchamp; has issue, twochildren. Educ. at Westminster; formerly in Ceylon CivilService; sec. to King of Hanover, 1849–55; cornetGloucester Yeomanry Cavalry, 1856; Lord in Waiting to the Queen,1858–59. A conservative (Cefntilla-house,Usk,Monmouth).
A solicitor of the firm of Baxter, Rose, and Norton; member ofthe Incorporated Law Society; com. of Oaths in Chancery (6,Victoria-street,Westminster, S.W.;Rayner’s,High Wycombe,Bucks.)
Eld. s. of the Marquis Conyngham; b. 1825; m. 1854, Lady JaneStanhope, niece of present Earl of Harrington and of Duke ofBedford. App. capt. 1st Life Guards, 1854; lieut.-col.Donegal Militia, 1849; formerly state steward to the Lord-Lieut.of Ireland (Mount Charles,Donegal;Friary,Old Windsor,Berks).
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1839; app. aQueen’s Counsel, 1857; standing counsel to the Secretary ofState in Council for India (3,Paper-buildings, E.C.)
Registrar of the Privy Council (Downing-street,S.W.)
S. of the late Sir R. Chester, master of the ceremonies to thethree last and present sovereigns; b. 1806; m. 1st dau. of R.Isherwood, Esq., and 2ndly, dau. of George Goff, Esq.; hasissue. Edu. at the Charter-House, Westminster, and TrinityCollege, Cambridge; app. clerk Privy Council Office, 1826;attached to the legation at Lisbon, 1833; formerly assistant sec.to the Committee of Council on Education. A magistrate forMiddlesex; vice-president of the Society of Arts(Athenæum Club).
M. 1856, the Hon. Mary Frances, dau. of ViscountBarrington.
Of the Baillies of Dockfour; b. 1777; m. 1st, dau. of the Rev.H. Reynett; 2ndly, dau. of Thomas Smith, Esq. of Castleton Hall;has issue. Lord-lieut. and sheriff principal of Ross-shire;M.P. for Rye, 1830–31, and for Honiton, 1835–47(Tarradale and Redcastle,Rossshire).
S. of late John Richard Elmore, Esq., M.D. of 27,Harley-street, Cavendish-square. B. at Clonakilty, co.Cork, 1816. A painter of eminence, whose productions haverepeatedly attracted the choice of the leading prize-owners inthep. 98ArtUnion. First exhibited in 1834, at the Royal Academy, ofwhich he was elected an associate in 1845. Elected a royalacademician in 1857 (Athenæum Club).
Secretary to Ottoman Bank (26,Old Broad-street,E.C.)
Paymaster of H.M. Household (Stable-yard,St.James’ Palace, S.W.)
2nd lieut., 1848; 1st lieut., 1854; captain, 1857; major,1858; served in the Crimea in 1854–5, the latter part ofthe time as dep.-assistant quarter-master general. Isdecorated with Crimean, Sardinian, and Turkish medals, and orderof Medjidie of 5th class (Junior United Service Club).
An artist.
In the iron trade. Of the firm of Burt and Potts, (38,and 65,York-street,Westminster, S.W.)
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, England,since 1846. Medical officer to the Star Life AssuranceCompany. Was formerly coroner for Dominica.
A member of Lincoln’s-inn; c. to the bar, 1849.
A surgeon.
An artist.
A private tutor.
B. at Ayr, N.B. Member of Royal College of Surgeons,Edinburgh, 1814; M.D., 1824; Fellow of Royal Coll. of Physicians,Edinburgh, 1841; corresponding member of Medico-ChirurgicalSociety of Edinburgh. Formerly in 11th regiment; and for 10years Physician of Montrose Infirmary, Lunatic Asylum, andDispensary. Author of a pamphlet on Scarlatina andDiptheria, demonstrating the curative effects of Ammonia in thosediseases.
An M.A., of Oxford.
B., at Zurich, in Switzerland; married. A member of theMasonic Society. Formerly a merchant of 1, Riches Court,Lime-street; and of King-street, Cheapside.
Land Surveyor and Auctioneer of the firm of Farebrother,Clark, and Lye, (6,Lancaster-place,Strand,W.C.)
Nominated a civil companion of the Bath, in 1848.
Photographic Miniature Painter, of the firm of Lock andWhitfield (178,Regent-street, W.)
Educated at Queen’s College, Cambridge; obtained hisM.A., 1842; assistant master, Kensington Grammar School.
In the Commissary General-in-Chief’s Department, WarOffice (Pall Mall, S.W.)
A merchant (woollen) (21,Basinghall-street, E.C.)
Captain and chief of Clanranald. B. 1788; m. 1812, LadyCaroline Anne Edgcumbe, 2nd dau. of 2nd Earl of Mount Edgcumbe;has issue.
Master R.N. Acquired his present rank, 1848; assisted atthe capture of Chusan and other places, during the first campaignon the coast of China, 1841, and was wounded (medal).
An artist.
In the Accountant-General’s Department, War Office(Pall Mall, S.W.)
A student of the Middle Temple.
Merchant (tea), of the firm of Jerram and Williamson (14,Fenchurch-buildings).
A solicitor; member of the Incorporated Law Society; Comm. ofOaths in Chancery (8,Staple-inn,Holborn,W.C.)
The family of Gale was of importance in the North and EastRidings of Yorkshire, early in the 16th century, the first namedin the pedigree, James Gale, being seated at Thirntoft, nearScruton, in 1523.
Eld. dau. of the late W. Rigby, Esq., of Oldfield Hall,Cheshire. M., 1826, Sir John Archibald Murray, Lord Murray,of the Court of Session, who died 1859.
A solicitor; member of the Incorporated Law Society, and ofthe Solicitors’ Benevolent Association (Bride-court,New Bridge-street, E.C.)
A merchant (manufacturers’ agent) of the firm of Young,Shiels, and Co. (17,Watling-street, E.C.)
A Publisher (28,Paternoster-row, E.C.)
5th dau. of the late Rev. Wm. Munton, Rector of Priston, andof Dunkerton, Somerset. B. at the Rectory, Priston. Widow of Major W. H. Jackson, who fell at the battle of“Meeanee;” has one son, W. H. M. Jackson, Lieut. 81stfoot.
A civil engineer (30,Great George-street,Westminster, S.W.)
Educ. at Trinity Coll., Dublin; obtained his B.A., 1852;ordained 1853; Associate Secretary of the Church Pastoral AidSociety, 1857.
A solicitor (14,Furnival’s-Inn, E.C.)
A solicitor, of the firm of Dangerfield and Fraser; a memberof the Incorporated Law Society (26,Craven-street,Strand, W.C.)
2nd dau. of the late Francis Evans, Esq., of Lenton grove,Notts., and his wife, Dorothy, dau. of the late Rev. SeptimusPlumptre, Vicar of Marsfield, Notts. B., 1792, atNottingham. A member of several societies for charitablepurposes.
Ordained, 1829. Formerly perpetual curate of Ironbridge,Shropshire.
S. of the late Lord Campbell, Lord High Chancellor of England,whom he succeeded as Lord Campbell, 1861, having succeeded hismother in the barony of Stratheden, in 1860. B. 1824; educ.at Eton, Balliol College, Oxford, and Trinity College,Cambridge. M.A. 1846; M.P. for Cambridge, 1847–52,and for Harwich, 1859–60 (Reform Club;Hartrigge,Jedburgh, N.B.)
S. of Admiral Sir Wm. Ogilvy, Bart., by Sarah (who died in1823), dau. of James Morley, Esq. B. 1803; m. 1st, 1831,Juliana Barbara, youngest dau. of late Lord Henry Howard; and2nd, 1836, Lady Jane Elizabeth Howard, sister of present Earl ofSuffolk. Educ. at
Only s. of 1st earl, by his 2nd wife, Frances, only dau. ofThomas Talbot, Esq., of Gonville, co. Norfolk. B. 1810;suc. his father, 1840; m. 1842, Harriet Sophia, only d. ofMontagu Edmund Parker, Esq., M.P., of Whiteway, Devon, and relictof Wm. Coryton, Esq., of Pentillie-castle, Cornwall. Educated at Christ Church, Oxford (B.A. 1830); Colonel of SouthDevon Militia, 1845. A lord-in-waiting to the Queen,1846–52. App. dep.-warden of the Stannaries,1852. J.P. and dep.-lieut. for Devonshire; liberal(Saltram House,near Plympton,Devon).
B. 1806. S. of Sir Thomas Frankland Lewis, Bart., whodied in 1855, by dau. of Sir George Cornewall, Bart. M.1844, Lady Maria Theresa, sister of the present Earl ofClarendon, K.G. relict of Thomas Henry Lister, Esq., and motherof T. V. Lister, Esq., of whom a notice follows. Educ. atEton, and Christ Church, Oxford (1st class in classics, and 2ndin mathematics, 1828; B.A. 1828; M.A. 1831) C. to the bar,Middle Temple, 1831; J.P., and dep.-lieut. for Herefordshire, andRadnorshire; recorder, and J.P. for Radnor borough; M.P.(liberal) for Herefordshire, 1847–52, and for Radnor, since1855; a poor-law commissioner, 1839–47; secretary to boardof control, 1847–8; under secretary of state for HomeDepartment, 1848–50; secretary of Treasury, 1850–2;Chancellor of Exchequer, 1855–8; secretary of state forHome Department,p.1041859; secretary of state for War, since 1861. Author of various works, learned and political. Was editorof “Edinburgh Review,” 1853–5. A privycouncillor, 1855. Is an hon. D.C.L. of Oxford(Athenæum and Travellers’ Clubs,HarptonCourt,near Kington,Radnorshire).
Only s. of late Thomas Henry Lister, Esq., of Armitage Prk.Staffordsh., Regis.-Gen. of births, deaths, and marriages, byLady Maria Theresa Villiers, sister of present Earl of Clarendon,and wife now of Sir G. C. Lewis (see preceding). B. 1832;M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge, 1853. In the ForeignOffice, of which he was appointed a clerk, 1853, having beenpreviously assistant private secretary to Lord Clarendon. Attach. to Lord John Russell’s special mission to Vienna,1855; Lord Clarendon’s special mission to Paris, 1856; EarlGranville’s special embassy to Russia, same year. Private secretary to Lord Clarendon, Dec., 1857 to Feb.,1858. Précis writer to Earl Russell, since1859. App. dep.-lieut. for Radnorshire, 1856(Brooke’s and St. James’s Clubs;ArmitagePark,Staffordshire).
S. of Capt. Edward Sterling. B. 1805; m. 1829, dau. oflate Major-Gen. Joseph Baird. Entered the army, 1826;lieut., 1829; capt., 1833; major, 1846; lieut.-col., 1854; col.,1857. Was brig. major and assist. adjut. general ofHighland division during Crimean campaign of 1854–5;present at Alma, Balaklava, Inkerman, and siege ofSebastopol. For these services was nominated a companion ofthe Bath, and an officer of the Legion of Honor, and decoratedwith Crimean and Turkish medals, and 4th class of order ofMedjidie; placed on half pay, Nov. 1855. Was militarysecretary top.105Lord Clyde, during the Indian Mutiny, for which hewears a medal; and was created a K.C.B., 1860.
A surveyor of the firm of Ifold and Hughes (38,Manchester-street, S.W.)
A royal academician and honorary member of the Royal ScottishAcademy (Athenæum and Garrick Clubs).
A solicitor; member of the Incorporated Law Society, andSolicitor’s Benevolent Institute. Perpetualcommissioner for Kent (7,Dane’s-inn,Strand;Chatham).
S. of the late Mr. South, druggist, of Southwark. M.Ann, (she died, 1851) niece and sole heiress of the late JosephEllis, Esq., of South Lambeth. A member of the College ofSurgeons. Formerly in practice in Blackman Street,Southwark; removed to Kensington, in 1823. Has devotedhimself to astronomy; compiled, in conjunction with Sir J.Herschel, a catalogue of 380 stars; a founder of the AstronomicalSociety, in 1820. Has filled the presidential chair;knighted in 1830; enjoys a pension of £300 a year on thecivil list, for his contributions to astronomy. Hisobservatory contains many fine equatorial instruments, and isknown among men of science throughout Europe. Author of“The Curiosities of Science.” A Fellow of theRoyal Society of London and Edinburgh; Fellow of theLinnæan Society: hon. member of the Royal Irish Academy(Athenæum Club).
A solicitor (37,New Bridge-street,Blackfriars,E.C.)
An artist. B. in Marylebone.
B. in Offenbach on the Main, 1829; m. Frances, dau. of thelate W. Andrew Bond, Esq. of Ashford Kent; Author of severalworks in German on the history of Literature.
Secretary to the General Ship-owners’ Society (12,St. Michael’s Alley,Cornhill, E.C.)
An artist.
A stock-broker of the firm of Faulconer and Downer; member ofthe Stock Exchange (12,Copthall Court, E.C.)
In the Accountant General’s Department of the War Office(Pall Mall, S.W.)
A member of the Middle Temple; c. to the bar, 1843 (1,Cloisters Temple, E.C.)
In the Engineer’s Department of the Bank of England(Threadneedle Street, E.C.)
Painter; b. in London 1827; an eminent pre-Raphaelite; firstexhibited in the Academy, 1846.
An artist.
A sculptor (12a,Henrietta Street,CavendishSquare, W.)
A dentist, of the firm of Featherstone and Saunders (42,Albemarle-street, W.)
A merchant, of the firm of Westenholz, Bros. (26,Mark-lane, E.C.)
Sister of Lord Auckland (Velletta,Broadstairs,Kent).
A magistrate, and dep.-lieut. for Oxfordshire; a visitingjustice of the County Prison, and of the County Lunatic Asylum,at Littlemore; a member of the County Police Committee;vice-chairman of the Quarter Sessions; has served the office ofhigh sheriff (Pyrton Manor,Tetsworth;Athenæum and Union Clubs).
B. 1794; suc. his father (many years a judge of the Court ofQueen’s Bench, and a baron of the Exchequer), 1841; m. 1st,1822, dau. of John Minet Fector, Esq. of Kearnsey Abbey, Dover(who died, 1854); 2ndly, 1855, Selina, dau. of Col. Marley; hasissue, two sons. Member of the Middle Temple; c. to thebar, 1835; clerk of Assizes for the Northern Circuit. TheBayleys are descended in the female line from the ancient familyof Bigland of Bigland, in Lancashire (Union Club;Updown House,Sandwich;Cowes Castle,Isle of Wight).
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, England,since 1847, a licentiate of Soc. of Apothecaries since 1848; andan M.D., St. Andrew’s, since 1850; a member of the BritishMedical Association. Formerly Surgeon to the Canal-streetHospital, and demonstrator of anatomy at the Manchester School ofMedicine; has devoted much of his attention to diphtheria,scarlatina, and the therapeutic use of oxygen.
In the Office of the Royal Commission Exhibition of 1851.
An artist.
An artist.
A solicitor of the firm of Robinson, Webster, and Robinson (6,Half-moon-street, W.)
Has been a licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries, since1826, a member of the Royal College of Surgeons since 1831, and aFellow of the latter since 1853.
An artist (17,Stratford-place,Oxford-street,W.)
An artist.
An artist.
A solicitor of the firm of
Uncle of the Duke of Richmond; b. 1799; formerly a Capt. inthe Royal Horse Guards; ex aide-de-camp to the late Duke ofWellington, and the late Sir Peregrine Maitland; holds an app. inthe Queen’s Royal Archer Guard of Scotland; served inParliament from 1832–36 as M.P. for King’s Lynn;author of “Compton Audley,” “The TuftHunter,” “Percy Hamilton,” “PhilipCourtenay,” “The Story of my Life,”“Wellington in Private Life,” “MerrieEngland,” “Pictures of Sporting Life andCharacter,” “ Recreations of a Sportsman,”“Memoir of the 5th Duke of Richmond;” a contributorto the Sporting Review since its commencement; edited the“Review” newspaper for a year; has contributed to“The Diadem,” “The Book of Beauty,”Bentley’s, Ainsworth’s, and Colborne’sMagazines, and “The Illustrated London News”.
An M.D.; licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians; memberof the Royal Coll. of Surgeons, England; surgeon to the Workhouseof the united parishes of St. Margaret and St. John theEvangelist (Westminster), at Kensington; medical officer andpublic vaccinator to the hamlet of Knightsbridge. Formerlyanatomical prosector to the Royal Coll. of Surgeons.
B., at Walsham, Suffolk, 1818; a member of the MetropolitanBoard of Works and of the Pharmaceutical Society.
Has been a member of the
B., 1803, in Davies-st., Berkeley-sq.; a retired merchant,(coal).
An architect and surveyor.
A Dentist (2,Suffolk-place,Pall Mall,East, S.W.)
A member of Lincoln’s; c. to the bar, 1825; attends theWestern Circuit (61,Chancery-lane, W.C.)
Engaged in the Geological Survey, as local director for GreatBritain; professor of Geology in the Government school of Mines;an examiner for science in the South Kensington Museum; a Fellowof the Royal and Geological Societies (AthenæumClub;Geological Survey Office,Jermyn-street,S.W.)
Has been an M.B. and A.B. London, since 1846; a member of theRoyal College of Surgeons since 1847; and a licentiate of theRoyal College of Physicians, London, since 1854. Wasformerly physician to the Surrey and Farringdon GeneralDispensary, and Resident Medical Superintendent of St.Luke’s Hospital. Is a Fellow of the West MedicalSociety; and an associate of King’s Coll. Has devotedmuch of his attention to cases of insanity and to cerebralpathology.
Eld. s. of Sir John T. Hansler, F.R.S., whose father was alandaman of Zurich. M., Marrianne, dau. of the late JosephCollis, Esq. senior Registrar High Court of Chancery. Amagistrate for Middlesex; served as Capt. in East Essex Militia,under the late Viscount Jocelyn, M.P. (Junior United ServiceClub).
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1856; an equitydraftsman and conveyancer; attends the Lancaster Chancery andPalatine Court (44,Chancery-lane, W.C.)
Sister of Lord Hardinge; b. 1824; m. 1845, Major-Gen. ArthurA. Thurlow Conynghame, C.B., commanding the Scinde Division,Bombay Presidency.
A solicitor and parliamentary agent of the firm of Hawkins,Bloxam, and Hawkins. Member of the Incorporated Law Society(2,New Boswell Court,Carey Street, W.C.)
A member of the Middle Temple; c. to the bar, 1849; is aspecial pleader; attends the Home Circuit (1,Elm-court,Temple, E.C.)
An artist.
A parliamentary agent, of the firm of Dyson, Hall, Parkes,Coates, and Shrabsole (24,Parliament-street, S.W.)
Brother of the present Sir George Sinclair, 2nd bart. and s.of the 1st bart., who was founder of the Board of Agriculture,and whose statistical account of Scotland is one of the mostvaluable works ever compiled. Born 20 Aug. 1797. Educ. at Pembroke College, Oxford; obtained his M.A. 1822;ordained 1821; vicar of Kensington, 1842; archdeacon ofMiddlesex, 1843. Has written on various important subjects,especially on church patronage, national education, the Gorhamcase, &c. His life of his father, in 2 vols. isparticularly deserving of notice.
A surveyor and valuer (7,Quality-court,Chancery-lane, W.C.)
Educ. at St. Bee’s Theological College; ordained 1854;late curate of Barrowforld, Lancashire.
Late of the Madras Cavalry; promoted to his present rank,1854.
B. 1817. An associate of the Royal Academy of Arts(Garrick Club).
An artist.
A parliamentary agent, of the firm of Dodds and Greig (18,Abingdon-street,Westminster, S.W.)
M. Mary Dorothea, dau. of
Has been a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, England,since 1831; and a licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries,since 1836. Formerly surgeon of the King’s Own LightInfantry Militia.
An artist. Member of the Society of Painters in WaterColours.
An auctioneer and surveyor (32,Surrey-street,Strand).
An artist.
An artist.
A civil engineer (20,Parliament-street, S.W.)
In the office for the Reduction of the National Debt (19,Old Jewry, E.C.)
Russian Commissioner to the International Exhibition.
Officially attached to the Poor Law Board (Whitehall,S.W.)
A solicitor (7,Vigo Street,Regent-street,S.W.)
An elder brother of the Trinity House (Trinity-square,Tower Hill, E.C.)
A solicitor (16,Warwick-st. W.)
An artist.
A member of the Inner Temple; c. to the bar, 1855; an equitydraftsman, conveyancer, and Scotch advocate. Attends theHome Circuit (9,Old-square,Lincoln’s-inn,W.C.)
Solicitor; deputy recorder of Newcastle upon Tyne;Parliamentary agent (Reform Club; 20,SouthamptonBuildings,Chancery Lane, W.C.;CollingwoodTower,Tynemouth).
A director of Calcutta and South Eastern Railway.
A directory of the Property Protection Insurance Company (23,Bridge-street,Blackfriars).
Senior clerk in the Accountant General’s Department ofthe office of the Secretary of State for India.
Solicitor and member of the Incorporated Law Society (50,Leicester-square, E.C.)
An examiner in the Office of the Examiners of Criminalp. 115LawAccounts (2,New-st.,Spring-gardens, S.W.)
Solicitor of the firm of Palmer, Nettleship, and Eland. A member of the Incorporated Law Society (4,Trafalgar-square,Charing Cross, W.C.)
C. to the bar, Gray’s Inn, 1855. Home Circuit (1,Pump-court,Temple, E.C.)
A solicitor (7,Copthall-court, E.C.)
A parliamentary agent, and solicitor to the North Western Bankof India; a member of the Incorporated Law Society (221,Gresham House,Old Broad-street, E.C.)
Civil engineer; a member of the Institute (17,Parliament-street,Westminster, S.W.)
Educ. at Christ College, Cambridge. Senior opt. M.A. 1812; ordained 1815; rector of Great Cressingham, Thetford,Norfolk. Formerly archdeacon of Sodor and Man, and rectorof Kirk Andrew’s; previously Foundation Fellow of ChristCollege, Cambridge; author of numerous sermons, essays, andlectures; has preached at All Soul’s, Langham-place(Lydney Vicarage,near Gloucester.)
Ent. the army in 1855; obtained his troop in the 5th Lancers,1859; served with the 59th at the siege and fell of Sebastopol,from 22p.116August, 1855; medal and clasp, and Turkish medal.
2nd s. of the Hon. Robert Curzon and Baroness de la Zouche; b.1812; m. 1834, dau. of James Daniell, Esq.; has issue. George, an officer of the 2nd Life Guards; W. Southwell, anofficer of the Royal Artillery; Mrs. Wentworth Gore, and threeother daus. Educ. at Harrow, and Christ Church, Oxford; amember of Lincoln’s-Inn; c. to the bar, 1840; an assist.registrar of designs; a magistrate for Middlesex (anddep.-lieut.) and Westminster; a director of the London ExchangeInsurance Company (1,Whitehall, S.W.;Travellers’,Oxford and Cambridge,andVolunteer Clubs).
An East India and China merchant (4,George-yard,Lombard-street, E.C.)
Unattached; entd. the army, 1814; obtained his present rank inthe same year. Has been on half-pay, since 1826.
A wood-engraver, of the firm of Vizetelly and Loudan (15, and16,Gough-square, E.C.)
A royal academician. B. in London, 1816. Firstexhibited at the Academy, 1838; elected associate 1848; selectedto arrange the Gallery of Modern Paintings, at the ManchesterExhibition, 1857. A painter of scenic and humouroussubjects (Athenæum and Garrick Clubs).
A member of the Linnæan Society.
Educated at Pembroke Coll., Cambridge; obtained his M.A.1807. Reader at the Chapel Royal, Whitehall. Has beenRector of Foston, in the diocese of Peterboro’, since1834.
A sculptor.
A landscape painter. A member of the Society of BritishArtists, Incorporated by Royal Charter.
Annual Subscription—OneGuinea.
The want has long been felt, by residents in the country, of ahouse in London to represent their interests in thoseever-recurring matters which connect them with themetropolis.
Whether for the effecting of purchases, large or small, thereceipt or transmission of parcels, the receipt of interest anddividends, the instituting of inquiries, or the general attentionto requirements as various as the occasions which producethem—the country portion of the public has hitherto beenunable to utilise the resources of the British capital, exceptthrough the often unpleasant alternative of troubling friends, orof an expensive, and sometimes fruitless journey to town.
This general want the firm of Messrs.
For the payment, therefore, of this sum, made annually inadvance, their subscribers are entitled:—
1. To have all their purchases effected, of a domesticor other character, in the London market, at a cheaper rate, andof a better quality, than can be done generally in thecountry.
2. To a constant address, where all letters and parcelsmay be sent.
3. To the supply of information on all subjects on whichinformation can be obtained.
4. To the receipt of interest and dividends.
5. To the effecting of sales and investments.
6. To the procuring of passages to all foreign andcolonial ports.
7. To the supplying of outfits, &c.
8. To the effecting of fire and life assurances, &c.&c.
Estimates provided.
O’BYRNE BROTHERS, &CO.
9, Adelphi Terrace, London, W.C.
Post-office orders to be made payable to Messrs.
THE HIGHESTHONOUR AWARDED.
By Her Majesty’s RoyalLetters Patent.
NEW.
“ROYAL PATENTTUBULAR”
PIANOFORTES,
(FOUR FEET HIGH ONLY),
INCOMPARABLYTHE BEST EXTANT,
With the following Novel and Unique Improvements.
1. Receding Front, entirely obviating theobstruction to the Voice in singing, usual with all other UprightPianofortes.
2. Improved Desk, of the entire Width of thePianoforte, for Duets and Trios, and with or without extendingends for Accompanyists.
3. New Shape, increasing the Strength andDurability, with extreme Lightness and Elegance ofappearance.
4. Patent Tubular Sounding Board, the tubescompensating for the length of strings, as in the HorizontalGrands, and producing a quality, volume, and duration of toneincomparable.
5. Superior Double Action, with perfection oftouch.
6. Improved Soft Pedal, without shifting theAction.
Price Lists,Drawings,Testimonials,&c.,onapplication to
RÜST & Co.,
PATENTEES & SOLEMANUFACTURERS,
34, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET,
REGENT STREET, LONDON.
WHITE HORSE YARD,
15, LOWER GROVE, BROMPTON, S.W.
Respectfully submits the following terms:—
For Carriage andPair Horses. | |||||
| Coachman. | ||||
Sociable Barouch, or Brougham | £ | s. | d. | s. | d. |
The Day | 1 | 5 | 0 | 5 | 0 |
For Two Hours | 0 | 10 | 0 | 2 | 6 |
Each Hour after | 0 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Theatre, or Dinner Job | 0 | 10 | 6 | 2 | 6 |
For Carriage andOne Horse. | |||||
Sociable Barouch, or Brougham | |||||
The Day | 0 | 16 | 0 | 4 | 0 |
For Two Hours | 0 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 6 |
Each Hour after | 0 | 2 | 6 | 0 | 6 |
Balls | 0 | 7 | 6 | 2 | 6 |
Theatre, or Dinner Job | 0 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
The half-hour charged if enteredupon.
THE ABOVE CHARGES ARE FOR TOWN USEONLY,
COUNTRY JOURNIES AT PER MILE OR DAY.
Jobs by the Month or Year, onmoderate terms.
FREE PROM SMELL,
BY
LATOUR, RATEAU, & CO.
PATENTEESFOR
CLEANING KID GLOVES,
DRESSES, SHAWLS, &c.
DYERS & FURNITURE CLEANERS,
118, NEW BOND STREET, W.
DAMASK FURNITURE,
Of every description,
CHANGED OR DYED, AND REMADE.
CHINTZ FURNITURE
CLEANED AND CALENDERED.
FEATHERS
CLEANED DYED & MOUNTED.
Established 1846.
Celebrated for his choice Dairies ofFresh Butter,which he receives by Rail daily from the Vale of Aylesbury, andother parts of Buckinghamshire.
YORK HAMS, WILTSHIRE BACON,
STILTON CHEESE, PICKLED & DRIED TONGUES,
BATH CHAPS, CREAM CHEESE, &c, &c.,
of the Best Quality.
Families waited upon for Orders by own Carts regularly,as under,
DAILY.
All parts of BELGRAVIA, SOUTHKENSINGTON, BROMPTON.
Twice and Three times Weekly to the undermentionedPlaces,viz:—
BAYSWATER. | NOTTING HILL. |
BARNES. | PUTNEY. |
BATTERSEA. | ROEHAMPTON. |
CHELSEA. | SHEPHERD’S BUSH. |
FULHAM. | TURNHAM GREEN. |
HAMMERSMITH. | WIMBLEDON. |
KENSINGTON. | WANDSWORTH. |
KILBURN. | WALHAM GREEN. |
&c. | &c. |
3, BROMPTON ROW, LONDON, S.W.
RICHARD NELSON respectfully invites the attention of LADIESrequiring MOURNING ATTIRE, to the above establishment. After many years’ experience in this exclusive department,he possesses peculiar advantages in the purchase of MourningGoods, and is careful in selecting sterling fabrics; his aimbeing to provide a Superior Class of Apparel at a strictlymoderate rate of charge. Experienced Assistants sent to anydistance with Samples or Stock.
MILLINERY, MANTLES, SHAWLS, & MADE-UP SKIRTS, in
Dressmakingunder the Superintendence of a Clever Artiste.
FAMILY TEA DEALER, GROCER,
AND
IMPORTER Of FOREIGN WINES,
193, SLOANE STREET, S.W.
J. CHAPPELL,
388, Strand, W.C., Bootmaker, and Professor of Fitting,
Begs to call the attention of such to his method of Measuring,by which he guarantees, at the first trial, to produce a fitunprecedented for comfort, yet combined with the most fashionableshape. Those gentlemen on whom bootmakers have practisedunsuccessfullyare particularly solicited by J. C., whowill undertake tofit them at once, howeverdifficult. Established 1825. Inventor of the“Pulvinar” or Cushion Boots. Ladies Show Rooms1st floor.
LATE J. & S. B. FULLER, &Co.
(Removed from RathbonePlace.)
GALLERY OF FINE ARTS,
PRINTSELLER, PUBLISHER,
DECORATIVE FRAME MAKER, ARTIST’S COLOURMAN,
GENERAL DEALER IN WORKS OF ART,
61,PALL MALL,OPPOSITE ST. JAMES’SPALACE.
Under the | Patronage |
ROWLANDS’ MACASSAR OIL.
This Elegant and Fragrant Oil possesses wonderfully nourishingpowers for promoting the growth, restoring and beautifying theHuman Hair. It prevents it from falling off or turninggrey—cleanses it from Scurf and Dandriff—and makes itbeautifully soft, pliable, and glossy. For children it isespecially recommended as forming the basis of a beautiful headof hair. Price 3s. 6d.; 7s.; 10s. 6d. (equal to foursmall); and 21s. per bottle.
ROWLANDS’ KALYDOR.
This Royally-patronized and Ladies-esteemed Specific realizesa healthy purity of Complexion, and renders the Skin soft, clear,and blooming. It also exerts the most soothing, cooling,and purifying action on the Skin, and eradicates Freckles, Tan,Pimples, Spots, Discolorations, and other CutaneousVisitations. Price 4s. 6d. and 8s. 6d. per bottle.
WHITE AND SOUND TEETH
Are indispensible to PERSONAL ATTRACTION, and to health andlongevity, by the proper mastication of food.
ROWLANDS’ ODONTO,
OR PEARL DENTIFRICE,
Compounded of Oriental Ingredients, is of inestimable value inpreserving and beautifying the Teeth, strengthening the Gums, andin giving a pleasing fragrance to the Breath. It eradicatesTartar from the Teeth, removes spots of incipient decay, andpolishes and preserves the enamel, to which it imparts aPEARL-LIKE Whiteness. Price 2s. 9d. per Box.
Sold at 20, Hatton Garden, and byChemists and Perfumers.
Ask for “ROWLANDS’” articles.
PERSONSABOUT TO DECORATE SHOULD INSPECT
SILAS TUCKER’S
SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF PAPER HANGINGS,
AT HIS WAREHOUSE;
234, HIGH HOLBORN,
Ten Doors East of Little Queen Street, London, W.C.
Estimates given for every kind ofdecoration, also for
general repairs in town or country.
297, OXFORD ST., LONDON,
SADDLERY & HARNESS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
MILITARY EQUIPMENTS ON THE SHORTESTNOTICE.
A large and well-seasoned stock for INDIA and the COLONIES,always on hand.
INVENTORS OF THE PATENT ELASTICSADDLE.
Estimates onapplication.
SAUNDERS, E., 1, Craven Place, Kensington.
THURSTON & Co., 15, Catherine Street, Strand.
THEOBALD, 40, High Street, Kensington.
PURVIS, H., 33, High Street, Kensington.
(Pure Welsh DigestiveBread.)
PHILLIPS, C., 1, Young Street, Kensington.
GREEN, E., 28, Queen’s Buildings, Brompton Road.
ROGERS, Joseph, 8, Newland Terrace, Kensington.
CLARK, F., 2, Brunswick Place, Brompton, S.W.
HAILSTONE, E., 25, High Street, Kensington.
BRASSINGTON, J., 25, High Street, Kensington.
WADE and SON, 13, High Street, Kensington.
POTBURY and PESTER, 9, Lower Phillimore Place, Kensington.
SWAINE and ADENY (to Her Majesty), 165, Piccadilly,PrizeMedal, 1851 and 1862.
Coughs, Whooping Cough, Asthma,Bronchitis, Fever, Ague, Diptheria,
Hysteria, Rheumatism, Diarrhœa, Spasms, Colic,
Renal, and Uterine Diseases are immediately relieved by a doseof
CHLORODYNE
(Trade Mark.)
DISCOVEREDAND NAMED BY
Dr. J. COLLIS BROWNE, M.R.C.S.L.,
EX-ARMY MEDICAL STAFF.
The question asked by invalids, families, and householdsis—What is the best medicine to give in the above diseases,and what to have always ready? Medical testimony, the replyof thousands of sufferers and invalids, is confirmatory of theinvaluable relief afforded by this remedy above all others.
Chlorodyne is a liquid taken indrops according to age. It invariably relieves pain ofwhatever kind; creates a calm refreshing sleep; allays irritationof the nervous system whenall other remedies fail;leaving no bad effects like opium or laudanum, and can be takenwhen none other can be tolerated. Its value in saving lifein infancy is not easily estimated; a few drops will subdue theirritation of Teething, prevent and arrest Convulsions, cureWhooping Cough, Spasms, and Flatus atonce.
Among Invalids it allays the pain of Neuralgia, Rheumatism,Gout, &c. It soothes the weary achings of Consumption,relives the Soreness of the Chest, Cough, and Expectoration; andcures all Chest affections, such as Asthma, Bronchitis,Palpitation, &c. It checks Diarrhœa, AlvineDischarges, or Spasms and Colics of the Intestines, &c.
The extensive demand for this remedy, known as
EXTRACTS OF MEDICAL OPINIONS.
FromW. Vesalius Pettigrew,M.D.—“I have no hesitation in stating that I havenever met with any medicine so efficacious as an anti-spasmodicand sedative. I have used it in Consumption, Asthma,Diarrhœa, and other diseases, and am most perfectlysatisfied with the results.”
FromDr. M‘Millman, of NewGalloway, Scotland.—“I consider it the most valuablemedicine known.”
G. Hayward, Esq., Surgeon,Stow-on-ye-Wold.—“I am now using
Dr. M‘Grigor Croft, late ArmyStaff, says: “It is a most valuable medicine.”
J. C. Baker, Esq., M.D., Bideford:“It is without doubt the most valuable and certain anodynewe have.”
Dr. Gibbon, Army Medical Staff,Calcutta: “Two doses completely cured me ofDiarrhœa.”
FromG. V. Ridout, Esq., Surgeon,Egham: “As an astringent in severe Diarrhœa, and ananti-spasmodic in Colic, with Cramps in the Abdomen, the reliefis instantaneous. As a sedative in Neuralgia andTic-Doloreux, its effects were very remarkable. In UterineAffections I have found it extremely valuable.”
CAUTION.—Beware of Spurious Compounds,or Imitations of “Chlorodyne.” Dr. Browne placed the Recipe for making“Chlorodyne”in the hands of Mr. DavenportONLY;consequently there can be no otherManufacturer. The genuine bears the words“Dr. J. Collis Browne’s Chlorodyne”on the Government Stamp of each Bottle.
Sold only in Bottles, at 2s. 9d., and 4s. 6d., by the SoleAgent and Manufacturer.
J. T. DAVENPORT,
33, GREAT RUSSELL STREET, BLOOMSBURYSQUARE, LONDON.
Qualification for insertion in this List, being a LondonExhibitor at the International Exhibition of 1862.
An * before a Trader’s name, denotes his having receiveda Prize Medal.
A † that a Trader has been honourably mentioned.
WALDEN, S. J. Whitefriars.
* MEDWIN, J., 86, Regent-street.
* LOW, R., SON, and Co., 330, Strand.
* KNIGHT, J., & SONS.
* WATSON, BONTOR, & Co., 36, Old Bond-street.
* SHANKS, R. H., & F.
* DOBSON & PEARCE.
* FRY, J. S., & SON, London and Bristol.
* C. ASPREY, 166, Bond-street, and 22, Albermarle-street.
* WINSOR & NEWTON (Fine Colours), 38, Rathbone-place.
* GOWLAND, & Co., 3, Crooked-lane.
* THRESHER & GLENNY, 152, Strand.
* JOHNSTONE & JEANES, 67, New Bond-street. Glass.
* MORTON, J. T., 106, Leadenhall-street, E.C.
* ELLWOOD, & SONS, Gt. Charlotte-st. Blackfriars-road.
* MORLEY, J. & R., Wood-street, E.C.
* SILVER, S. W., & Co., 66 and 67, Cornhill, E.C.
* BENHAM, & SONS, 19, Wigmore-street.
† FENTUM, M., 85, New Bond-street, & 8,Hemming’s-row.
† HANCOCK, C. F., 39, Bruton-crescent, Bond-street.
† FORTNUM, MASON, & Co.. 180, Piccadilly.
† DEWAR, D., & SONS, Wood-street, E.C.
† RUDALL, ROSE, & CARTE, 20, Charing-cross.
† OUTRAM & Co., 13, Watling-street.
† JACKSON & GRAHAM, Oxford-street.
† WEDGEWOOD, & SON, 9, Cornhill, E.C.
CLEAVER, F. S., Red Lion-street.
RÜST, & Co., 34, Great Marlborough-street.
* BATTY, & Co., Pavement, Finsbury.
PARTRIDGE, E.. 22, Leadenhall-street, E.C.
* OUTRAM, & Co., 13, Watling-street, E.C.
* SWAINE & ADENEY, 165, Piccadilly.
CAMPBELL, HARRISON, & LLOYD.
* MAPPIN, BROTHERS, 222, Regent-street.
HOWELL, JAMES, & Co., Regent-street.
KEIR, SCOTT, & KILNER, 58, Cannon-street, West, E.C.
* DALLMEYER, J. H., 19, Bloomsbury-street.
* WILLS, W. D., & H. O., Bristol.
CREMER, & SON, 27, New Bond-street. Bond-street.
* DAY, & SON, 353, Strand.
DELOLME, H. 48, Rathbone-place, Oxford-street.
* ARCHER, J. A.
OFFICES AND VAULTS AT THE
PANTECHNICON,BELGRAVIA,
AND OPPOSITE THE FRENCH EMBASSY,
ALBERT GATE,HYDE PARK.
ESTABLISHED BY JAMES PADGETT IN1789.
WINE MERCHANTS,
FRENCH BRANDY IMPORTERS,
LIQUEUR MERCHANTS,
BONDERS OF SCOTCH & IRISH WHISKIES,
BASS’S & ALLSOPP’S ALES.
CYDER AND IRISH STOUT BOTTLERS.
A FEW PRICE QUOTATIONS ONLY HEREGIVEN.
TERMSCASH.
Port (13,000 dozens inStock) | 28s. 32s. 36s. 42s. to 96s. |
Sherry (pale, golden, orbrown) | 24s. 28s. 32s. 36s. to 72s. |
Claret & Burgundy(Beaujolais) | 14s. 18s. 24s. 30s. to 120s. |
Hock & Moselle (still andsparkling) | 36s. 42s. 48s. 54s. to 72s. |
Champagne (& SparklingHermitage) | 36s. 42s. 48s. 54s. to 84s. |
Brandy (of rare quality andage) | 42s. 60s. 78s. 96s. to 120s. |
Whisky, Gin, Rum,Schiedam-Hollands, from the most noted Distilleries, andaged, pure, as from the Still.
Maraschino, Noyeau, Curaçoa,andCherry Brandy, in Pints andQuarts, at half the former cost.
Bass’s, Allsopp’s,Scotch, and other Ales in Imperial bottles.
P.S.—To Families residing in Town, only during thefashionable season,James Padgett andSon solicit confidence for the supply of
ALFRED PLACE, THURLOE SQUARE.
The Days for GENTLEMEN are Tuesdays Wednesday, Fridays,and Saturdays.
PRIVATE BATHS (Entrance,No. 8,NorthTerrace,Alexander Square,) Mondays, Thursdays, andSaturdays.
The Days for LADIES are Mondays and Thursdays.
PRIVATE BATHS, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.
TESTIMONIALS.
“Nothing is wanting in this Establishment calculated totest the value of the agent, in a manner which would meet theapprobation of all.”—Lancet,June1st, 1861.
“The ventilation in this Bath is admirable: thecleanliness most perfect; the attendants well instructed andpractised manipulators; and the temperature of the hot room isnot driven up to the absurd excess which has been too common atother baths.”—Med. Times,May25th, 1861.
“Having taken several Baths at this Establishment, I canspeak from my own observation, and state, that in every respectit is complete.”—J. Spencer Wells,F.R.C.S.
“I have no hesitation in saying, that the Messrs.Pollard’s Baths are by far the best that I have ever yetfound.”—Aubrey Charles Price,Minister ofLock Chapel.
“I am bound to bear my testimony to the excellence ofthe Brompton Baths. I consider them most admirable in everyrespect.”—R. H. Goolden,M.D.
“I have this day enjoyed the best Bath I have evertaken. The Brompton Bath is the Bath of Health, the hightemperature Baths the Bath of theAcrobat.”—Erasmus Wilson,F.R.C.S.
“I have much pleasure in stating, that after visitingmost of the Baths of the Metropolis, that Messrs.
“I have great pleasure in testifying to the greatsuperiority of the Baths in thisEstablishment.”—T. Cahill,M.D.
“I have derived so much comfort and benefit from Messrs.Pollard’s Baths, that it will bea duty, as well as a pleasure, to recommend them to my neighboursand friends.”—S. C. Hall.
“This is the best arranged Turkish Bath that I have everyet seen, the ventilation is excellent.”—RobertRawlinson,Sanitary Commissioner to the Army in theEast.
Messrs. E. & C. POLLARD, M.R.C.S.E., Proprietors.
MESSRS. JAY
Respectfully announce that great Economy is effected bypurchasing Mourning at their Establishment,
247, 249, and 251, REGENTSTREET,
Their Stock of Family Mourningbeing the largest in Europe.
ThoughMessrs. Jay professedly keepthe best articles forMourning andHalf-Mourning, they supply a completeSuit of
Domestic Mourning, forTwo-and-a-Half Guineas.
Mourning Costume of everydescription is kept ready-mode, and can be forwarded in Town orCountry, at a moment’s notice.
The most reasonable Prices are charged, and the wear of everyArticle is guaranteed.
LONDON GENERAL MOURNING WAREHOUSE,
REGENT STREET
(NEXT TO THE CIRCUS).
AnnualSubscription—One Guinea.
O’Byrne Brothers, & Co.,invite Public attention to their long-established Agency,through which the business of Subscribers is transacted in eachor all of the following Departments forOneGuineaper Annum, withoutfurthercharge.
BAKING Accounts Opened with Individuals or Firms.
INCOMER ALLOWANCES, and ANNUITIES Drawn and Remitted.
INVESTMENTS Effected,
DOMESTIC and Other Orders Executed.
PARCELS and LETTERS Received and Forwarded.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
Parties Subscribing One Guinea a Year to this Agency, have theadvantage of Opening Accounts, however limited, and of Drawingupon the same in Settlement of Trade and other Domestic Bills,however small, without troubling their Bankers.
O’BYRNE BROTHERS, &CO.
[0] By error, printed Percy Square inbody of work.
***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ARISTOCRACY OF LONDON: PART I:KENSINGTON***
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