1194 Supplement to the London Gazette, February 27,1863

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1194 Supplement to the London Gazette, February 27,1863 1194 SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 27,1863. NAME RESIDENCE OCCUPATION. Chatfield, Charles Croydon Esquire Cundale, John W. 5, Cecil-villa, Malvern-road, Dalston Gentleman Dickson, James 16, New Broad-street Merchant Diggles, Robert Cheshunt, Herts Esquire Doxat, E. Theos, 54a, Moorgate-street-buildings Wool Broker Dutton, Richard 4, Sanbrook-court, Basinghall-street Wool Broker Doxat, Alphonso Leytonstone, Essex Gentleman Daunt, Edward R. 30, Clemen t's-lane Share Broker Dingnan, Henry Lichfield-street, Walsall Banker Dickson William 38, Gracechurch-street Merchant Dutton, Charles M. 4, Sanbrook-court, Basinghall-street Wool Broker Dodd, John D. Liverpool-street, E.G. Gentleman Divers, James 5, Meadow-place, South Lambeth Gentleman Dunn, William Inglewood, Hungerford Major-General Dodgson, William O. 26, Royal Exchange Broker Duncan, John W. 5, Woburn-villas, Well-street, Hackney Gentleman Dutton, George T. 3, Lowndes-terrace, Knightsbridge Esquire Dumphy, Henry M. •3, Dr. Johnson's-buildings, Temple Barrister Davy, Frederick King-street Yarmouth Gentleman Dowse, Henrietta 39, Upper Charlotte-street, Fitzroy-square Widow Dahan, Helene, Mrs., wife of 7, Lothbury Nicholas Dahan Edenborough, Samuel B. 54, Moorgate-street-buildings Wool Broker Elder, Alexander L. 2, Fenchurch-buildings Merchant Evans, John Charles 33 and 34, King William-street, E.C. Stove Maker Edwards, Alfred 150, Fenchurch-street Insurance Broker Evans, Jeremiah 33, King William-street, E.C. Ironmonger Edenborough, Frederick 54A, Moorgate-street Wool Broker Elder, George Knock Castle, by Wemyss Bay, Ayrshire Esquire Esslinger, Jeanne F. Thrift-hill, Waltham Abbey Spinster Evans, Albert 403, Strand Bookseller Egg, Rirhard W. Dartmouth Esquire Fox, Edwin G., and 41, Coleman-street Bousfield, Edward H. Auctioneers Fraser, William Inveikeithing Banker Furness, George 36, Great George-street Contractor Fielden, John T. 25, Surrey-terrace, Lorrimore-road, Wai- Commercial Traveller worth . Fraser, Arthur, (of Cahossie) 10, Randolph-crescent, Edinburgh Esquire Furlonger, Charles John Stock Exchange Stock Broker Flight, Thomas Bond-court-house, Walbrook Merchant Frith, Edward Stock Exchange Share Broker Ferguson, Mrs. E. L. 2, Eton-terrace, Edinburgh Widow Fish, Philip T. 18, Highbury-terrace Esquire Felton, John James Old-street-road, E.G. Carriage Manufac- turer Flintoff, Owen S. Micldlesborough Esquire • Greenwell, Smith 20, Park-square, East Regent's-park Merchant Gillham, John ItalUin-vill, Broom-lane, Fulham East India Merchant Gladman, Selina A. 153, Westbourne-terrace Spinster Gcck, Adam 39 & 40. Chiswell-street Bootmaker Gilchrist, John 48, Porchestcr-terrace Merchant Grain, John Henry 7, Pope's Head-alley Notary Grain, William 7, Pope's Head-alley Notary Grimwade, Charles 3, New Earl-street, Cannon-street Wholesale Stationer Greenstreet, Edward S. 25, Feuchurch-street Merchant Greig, Walter 19, Birchin-lane Gentleman Gill, James ,7, Wilmot-street, Brunswick-square Gentleman GaUskell, James G. Waldow-house, Cheltenham Lieutenant-Colonel Giddes, David 8, Kildare-gardens M.D. Gaven, Dennis 81, Old Broad-street . Gentleman Grigga, Ebenezer 67, Lombard-street Gentleman Gaskell, Richard A. St. Helen's, Lancashire Esquire Gray, Robert 4, Halliford-street, Lower-road, N. Gentleman.
Recommended publications
  • Lord Lyon King of Arms
    VI. E FEUDAE BOBETH TH F O LS BABONAG F SCOTLANDO E . BY THOMAS INNES OP LEABNEY AND KINNAIRDY, F.S.A.ScoT., LORD LYON KIN ARMSF GO . Read October 27, 1945. The Baronage is an Order derived partly from the allodial system of territorial tribalis whicn mi patriarce hth h hel s countrydhi "under God", d partlan y froe latemth r feudal system—whic e shale wasw hse n li , Western Europe at any rate, itself a developed form of tribalism—in which the territory came to be held "of and under" the King (i.e. "head of the kindred") in an organised parental realm. The robes and insignia of the Baronage will be found to trace back to both these forms of tenure, which first require some examination from angle t usuallno s y co-ordinatedf i , the later insignia (not to add, the writer thinks, some of even the earlier understoode symbolsb o t e )ar . Feudalism has aptly been described as "the development, the extension organisatione th y sa y e Family",o familyth fma e oe th f on n r i upon,2o d an Scotlandrelationn i Land;e d th , an to fundamentall o s , tribaa y l country, wher e predominanth e t influences have consistently been Tribality and Inheritance,3 the feudal system was immensely popular, took root as a means of consolidating and preserving the earlier clannish institutions,4 e clan-systeth d an m itself was s modera , n historian recognisew no s t no , only closely intermingled with feudalism, but that clan-system was "feudal in the strictly historical sense".5 1 Stavanger Museums Aarshefle, 1016.
    [Show full text]
  • Golnaz Nanbakhsh University of Edinburgh Politeness and Address Forms in Contemporary Persian: Thirty Years On
    Golnaz Nanbakhsh University of Edinburgh Politeness and address forms in contemporary Persian: Thirty years on Abstract. This paper examines the correlation between language use (particularly address terms and pronouns), politeness norms, and social structure in contemporary Iranian society. The Persian system of address terms in post-revolutionary Iran was influenced by the Islamic ideology of the early 1979 Iranian revolution (Keshavarz 1988). These terms include extensive use of kinship terms such as bæradær ‘brother’ and xahær ‘sister’ in public domains, which clearly illustrate that influence. In an attempt to investigate the impact of the 1979 revolution on language use and politeness, the patterns of contemporary Persian address usage are compared with the social and political structure of the 1979 egalitarian ethos. Ten hours of spontaneous media conversation (candid camera and interviews) and 20 sociolinguistics interviews gathered in Iran are analysed. The interactional analysis reveals variation within the Persian address system leading to changes in linguistic and social structuring of language in contemporary Iran. Keywords: Address terms, politeness, variation, social and cultural revolution, Persian. Acknowledgments I would like to express my profound appreciation to Prof. Miriam Meyerhoff, and Dr. Graeme Trousdale, my PhD supervisors at the University of Edinburgh, for their persistent and insightful comments on the thesis on which this article is based. Whatever infelicities remain are of course my own responsibility. 1. Introduction Macro- and micro-sociolinguistic research indicates variations and changes in the address systems of many languages, including those with a T ‘informal you’ (French Tu) and V ‘formal you’ (French Vous) distinction (Brown and Gilman 1960).
    [Show full text]
  • Cross-Cultural Pragmatics: Honorifics in British English, Peninsular
    DEPARTAMENT DE FILOLOGIA ANGLESA I DE GERMANÍSTICA Cross-Cultural Pragmatics: Honorifics in British English, Peninsular Spanish and Ukrainian Treball de Fi de Grau/ BA dissertation Author: Kateryna Koval Supervisor: Sònia Prats Carreras Grau d’Estudis Anglesos/Grau d’Estudis d’Anglès i Francès June 2019 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would first like to thank my tutor, Sònia Prats Carreras, who helped me to choose the topic for my dissertation as well as to develop it. Additionally, I would like to acknowledge Yolanda Rodríguez and Natalya Dychka, who both provided me with valuable advices concerning the use of honorifics in Spanish and Ukrainian, respectively. TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract ........................................................................................................................ 1 1. Introduction .............................................................................................................. 2 2. Cross-cultural and Politeness pragmatics ................................................................... 4 2.1. The cultural approach to pragmatics................................................................... 4 2.2. Characteristics of politeness ............................................................................... 5 3. Pronouns of address and honorific titles .................................................................... 8 4. Hofstede’s Cultural Dimensions Theory .................................................................. 11 5. Comparison ............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Titles – a Primer
    Titles – A Primer The Society of Scottish Armigers, INC. Information Leaflet No. 21 Titles – A Primer The Peerage – There are five grades of the peerage: 1) Duke, 2) Marquess, 3) Earl, 4) Viscount and 5) Baron (England, GB, UK)/Lord of Parliament (Scotland). Over the centuries, certain customs and traditions have been established regarding styles and forms of address; they follow below: a. Duke & Duchess: Formal style: "The Most Noble the Duke of (title); although this is now very rare; the style is more usually, “His Grace the Duke of (Hamilton), and his address is, "Your Grace" or simply, "Duke” or “Duchess.” The eldest son uses one of his father's subsidiary titles as a courtesy. Younger sons use "Lord" followed by their first name (e.g., Lord David Scott); daughters are "Lady" followed by their first name (e.g., Lady Christina Hamilton); in conversation, they would be addressed as Lord David or Lady Christina. The same rules apply to eldest son's sons and daughters. The wife of a younger son uses”Lady” prior to her husbands name, (e.g. Lady David Scot) b. Marquess & Marchioness: Formal style: "The Most Honourable the Marquess/Marchioness (of) (title)" and address is "My Lord" or e.g., "Lord “Bute.” Other rules are the same as dukes. The eldest son, by courtesy, uses one of his father’s subsidiary titles. Wives of younger sons as for Dukes. c. Earl & Countess: Formal style: "The Right Honourable the Earl/Countess (of) (title)” and address style is the same as for a marquess. The eldest son uses one of his father's subsidiary titles as a courtesy.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gentleman Dancing-Master. by WILLIAM WYCHERLEY "Non Satis Est Risu Diducere Rictum Auditorus: Et Est Quædam Tamen
    The Gentleman Dancing-Master. BY WILLIAM WYCHERLEY "Non satis est risu diducere rictum Auditorus: et est quædam tamen his quoque virtus."[51]--HORAT. If we may trust the author's statement to Pope, this admirable comedy was written when Wycherley was twenty-one years of age, in the year 1661-2. It is impossible to fix with certainty the date of its first performance. The Duke's Company, then under the management of the widow of Sir William Davenant, opened its new theatre in Dorset Gardens, near Salisbury Court, on the 9th of November, 1671, with a performance of Dryden's Sir Martin Mar-all, and Wycherley's "Prologue to the City" points to the production of his play in the new theatre shortly after its opening. Genest states, on the authority of Downes, that "The Gentleman Dancing-Master was the third new play acted at this theatre, and that several of the old stock plays were acted between each of the new ones." Sir Martin Mar-all, having been three times performed, was succeeded by Etherege's Love in a Tub, which, after two representations, gave place to a new piece, Crowne's tragedy of Charles the Eighth. This was played six times in succession, and was followed, probably after an interval devoted to stock pieces, by a second novelty, an adaptation by Ravenscroft from Molière, entitled The Citizen turn'd Gentleman, or Mamamouchi, which ran for nine days together. The Gentleman Dancing-Master was then acted, probably after another short interval, and must therefore have been produced either in December, 1671, or in January, 1672.
    [Show full text]
  • Are You Being Conned? (Second Edition)
    Are You Being Conned? (second edition) Are You Being Conned? No! Of course not! You’re street smart. You’ve been He’s in town on business, well, not really serious around a bit. I mean – you see ’em coming, don’t you? business – he represents a charity. And you’re the sort who in this town would know the right kind of people But look at this one. Smart suit, cut’s a bit old- he ought to meet. Would you enjoy that – introducing fashioned, but it’s clean and has been pressed. Striped your new friend, a real lord, to your old friends? Well, tie; good shoes (you always look carefully at the shoes, would you? don’t you?), hair a bit too long, and an English accent. ____◊____ Perhaps that’s the famous old school tie they talk about in Agatha Christie. Then it’s a few days later and you’re sitting alone, crying into your beer. How could it be your fault? I What’s that they’re saying over there in the corner? mean, there are hundreds of English lords, and you had He’s a lord, an English lord? Well, that could explain to meet the one phony. Just one among hundreds. How his clothes. He looks a bit odd, but then perhaps they bad can your luck be ? One among hundreds ! all do. It’s the inbreeding, you suppose. But now he’s smiling at you. And he’s offering to buy you a drink. But you’re wrong. He wasn’t one alone.
    [Show full text]
  • The Aspiring Men of Punch: Patrolling the Boundaries of the Victorian Gentleman a Thesis Submitted to the College of Graduate S
    The Aspiring Men of Punch: Patrolling the boundaries of the Victorian gentleman A Thesis Submitted to the College of Graduate Studies and Research in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Department of History University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon By Marc Usunier © Copyright Marc Usunier, April 2010. All rights reserved. PERMISSION TO USE In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Master of Arts degree from the University of Saskatchewan, I agree that the Libraries of this University may make it freely available for inspection. I further agree that permission for copying of this thesis in any manner, in whole or in part, for scholarly purposes may be granted by the professor or professors who supervised my thesis work or, in their absence, by the Head of the Department or the Dean of the College in which my thesis work was done. It is understood that any copying or publication or use of this thesis or parts thereof for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. It is also understood that due recognition shall be given to me and to the University of Saskatchewan in any scholarly use which may be made of any material in my thesis. Requests for permission to copy or to make other use of material in this thesis in whole or in part should be addressed to: Head of the Department of History 9 Campus Drive University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5A5 i ABSTRACT In the mid 1830s, the engraver Ebenezer Landells and the journalist Henry Mayhew began discussions about establishing a satirical news magazine together.
    [Show full text]
  • The Wealth of the English Landed Gentry, 1870–1935*
    The wealth of the English landed gentry, 1870–1935* by Mark Rothery Abstract This article explores changing levels of unsettled personal wealth amongst the landed gentry of Devon, Hertfordshire and Lincolnshire during the period of the Agricultural Depression of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The main quantitative sources employed for this research are the National Probate Calendars. Despite problems with agricultural incomes and land values, overall levels of gentry wealth were sustained. This was a result of the diversification of wealth away from land and into other safer investments of a non-agricultural character. A final section shows how one Devon gentry family converted land into liquid investments at the end of the First World War. The highly adaptable nature of landed elites in the face of profound changes in modern society and the flexibility of relations between landed and non-landed elites have been amongst the most important findings of scholars of landed society over the past fifty years. F. M. L. Thompson and David Cannadine amongst others have shown that the aristocracy and the gentry were willing to diversify their investments into mining, railways and a range of other urban and industrial ventures as economic conditions came to permit such behaviour.1 This has contributed to more general explanations of the openness and flexibility of the British landed order during the mod- ern period. The slow and gradual decline of landed elites along with their fluid relations with new aspirants to elite society helps explain, it has been argued, the smooth and evolutionary na- ture of modernisation in Britain.
    [Show full text]
  • An Historical View of the Term Esquire As Used by Modern Women Attorneys
    Volume 80 Issue 2 Issues 2 & 3 Article 4 January 1978 An Historical View of the Term Esquire as Used by Modern Women Attorneys Richard Bozman Eaton West Virginia University Follow this and additional works at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/wvlr Part of the Legal History Commons, and the Legal Profession Commons Recommended Citation Richard B. Eaton, An Historical View of the Term Esquire as Used by Modern Women Attorneys, 80 W. Va. L. Rev. (1978). Available at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/wvlr/vol80/iss2/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the WVU College of Law at The Research Repository @ WVU. It has been accepted for inclusion in West Virginia Law Review by an authorized editor of The Research Repository @ WVU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Eaton: An Historical View of the Term Esquire as Used by Modern Women At AN HISTORICAL VIEW OF THE TERM ESQUIRE AS USED BY MODERN WOMEN ATTORNEYS RICHARD BOZMAN EATON* Few developments in philological history are as interesting to the general mind as those which represent the emergence of an aristocracy of words-words which have established an ascendency over others and have begun to claim more than their share of the connotative spoils of language, thereby profoundly reflecting, pos- sibly influencing, the civilization they are supposed to serve. One such word is esquire. Although there may be doubt as to the influ- ence this word has had on civilization, there should be none-at least by the end of this essay-about the extent to which it has reflected the evolving values of civilization.
    [Show full text]
  • 762 Supplement to the London Gazette, February 25, 1857
    762 SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 25, 1857. NAME. RESIDENCE. OCCUPATION. Manning, John Sandfield-place, Lewisham, Kent Master Mariner Maple, John Tottenham-court-road Gentleman Mason, Edward Flyder House, Kingskerswell, South Devon Lieutenant-Colonel Mason Rev. George 15, Westbourne-park Clerk Mason, Thomas 12, Cross-lane, St. Mary-at-Hill Gentleman Mathews, John Gurney Garratt, Wandsworth Gentleman Mathews, Thomas East Ham, Essex Gentleman Matthews, James Bexley-heath, Kent Esquire Maudson, Rev. William Thomas Grosvenor-park, Camberwell Clerk Maughan, Margaret Lanercost Prior, Cumberland Spinster Mayo, Frederick Richard 99, London-wall Boot and Shoe Factor Meyer, Meyer Raphael 13, Trinity-square, Tower-hill Gentleman Meyerstein, William 47, Friday-street, Cheapside Merchant Milaad, John 4, Mount-street, Berkeley-square Esquire Milton, William 66, High-street, Exeter Chemist Mollison, Alexander Fullerton 3, Grove-terrace, St. John's Wood Gentleman Mollison, Miss Elizabeth 3, Grove-terrace, St. John's Wood Spinster Mollison, Miss Jane 3, Grove-terrace, St. John's Wood Spinster Monins, William Godfrey Clerk The Priory, Huntingdon Esquire Morris, Henry 25, Mark-lane Esquire Moxon, Charles High-street, Marylebone Gentleman Mudd, William Hadleigh, Suffolk Surgeon Muggeridge, Edward St. Andrew's-hill, City Corn Factor Muggeridge, Sir Henry St. Andrew's-hill, City Knight and Alder- man of London Muggeridge, Thomas Berrjamin St. Andrew's-hill, City Corn Factor Muggeridge, William 3, Fowkes-buildings, Great Tower-street Corn Factor Muller, Barnard 172, Aldersgate-street Wholesale Furrier Mumford, William Furneaux Pelham, near Hadham, Herts Esquire Mutlow, Samuel 56, Church-road, Kingsland Esquire Nalder, Francis Chamber of London, Guildhall Esquire Nicholson, George 7, Shoreditch Gentleman Nicholson, Henry 7, Shoreditch Esquire Noble, William Forest Lodge, Maresfield, Sussex Captain in the Army Novello, Joseph Alfred 69, Dean-street, Soho Music Publisher Nunn Frederick, the younger Risley-gate St.; Bury St.
    [Show full text]
  • A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Honorifics in Modern Chinese and American English
    ISSN 1712-8358[Print] Cross-Cultural Communication ISSN 1923-6700[Online] Vol. 12, No. 11, 2016, pp. 7-15 www.cscanada.net DOI:10.3968/9062 www.cscanada.org A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Honorifics in Modern Chinese and American English HUI Min[a] ,*; MENG Meng[b]; HUI Ying[c] [a]Professor, School of Foreign Languages, Shandong Normal University, The need for effective communication in conjunction with Jinan, China. cultural awareness, sensitivity, and understanding thus [b]BA Candidate, School of Foreign Languages, Shandong Normal University, Jinan, China. is intensified. As one of the elements that affect cross- [c]BA Candidate, School of Arts, Qufu Normal University, Qufu, China. cultural communication effectiveness, honorifics act as a *Corresponding author. window through which we can view what is valued in a particular culture. Supported by Projects of Shandong Provincial Education Department (J11WD25, SDYC11105); Project of National University Students’ Innovation and Entrepreneurship (201610445271). 1. HONORIFICS Received 25 August 2016; accepted 10 October 2016 Published online 26 November 2016 Honorific is an expression or title that is used to show respect for the person you are speaking to (Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, 2008, p.943). Abstract Honorifics are a particular group in both modern Chinese This paper draws a cross-cultural comparison of the and American English, which are employed by people in honorifics in modern Chinese and American English. their daily communication for the purpose of establishing It first discusses how they are used in different socio- and maintaining various interpersonal relationships. cultural situations, and then explores the cultural sources of the differences between them.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ideal Gentleman As Conceived by the Essayists of the Early Seventeenth Century
    THE IDEAL GENTLEMAN AS CONCEIVED BY THE ESSAYISTS OF THE EARLY SEVENTEENTH CENTURY BY LOREL ATTA PRUITT A. B. Franklin College, 1918 THESIS Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS IN ENGLISH IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 1919 p UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS THE GRADUATE SCHOOL UUty^Jt, i 2- 191_^ 1 HEREBY RECOMMEND THAT THE THESIS PREPARED UNDER MY SUPERVISION RY ^ -CL^ BE ACCEPTED AS FULFILLING THIS PART OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF In Charge of Thesis Head of Department Recommendation concurred in* Committee on Final Examination* *Required for doctor's degree but not for master's Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2013 http://archive.org/details/idealgentlemanasOOprui CONTENTS page Chapter I. The Ideal Gentleman of the Renaissance 1 Chapter II* The Ideal Gentleman as Conceived, by the Essayist of the First Half of the Seventeenth Century 16 I. r:he Word, "Gentleman", defined 19 II. His Physical Training 22 III. His Mental Education 24 IV. His Social Graces 42 V. His Llental and Moral Outlook 46 Bibliography 51 CHAPTiSR I. THE IDEAL G EN TL EMAN OP THE RENAISSANCE. As a background for ray study of the ideal gentleman as con- ceived by the essayists of the seventeenth century, I have con- sidered it profitable to discuss what four representative sixteenth century writers considered excellent in a gentleman* The old civilization was passing away. The feudal system was rapidly crumbling to decay and slowly and almost imperceptibly strong nations arose out of the feudal ruins.
    [Show full text]