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Introduction to Programming Using Visual Basic 2012 9th Edition Schneider Solutions Manual instant download

The document provides links to various educational resources, including solutions manuals and test banks for programming books in Visual Basic and Python. It features multiple editions of these resources, indicating their availability for download. Additionally, it includes brief biographical entries of notable individuals, detailing their contributions and achievements.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
15 views

Introduction to Programming Using Visual Basic 2012 9th Edition Schneider Solutions Manual instant download

The document provides links to various educational resources, including solutions manuals and test banks for programming books in Visual Basic and Python. It features multiple editions of these resources, indicating their availability for download. Additionally, it includes brief biographical entries of notable individuals, detailing their contributions and achievements.

Uploaded by

bradyhkavka9z
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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CHAMBERS, William (brother of the preceding). b. Peebles 16
April 1800; bookseller at Leith 1819–23, at Broughton st. Edin.
1823; edited Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal 4 Feb. 1832 to
death; partner with his brother Robert 1832; lord provost of
Edin. 1865–9; LLD. Edin. 1872; presented town of Peebles with
a library (10,000 volumes) and other buildings called the
Chambers Institution opened Aug. 1859; spent about £25,000
on St. Giles’s church, Edin., re-opened 23 May 1883; accepted
offer of a baronetcy May 1883 but died before receiving the
honour. d. Chester st. Edinburgh 20 May 1883. Dublin Univ.
Mag. xxxvii, 177–90 (1851); Drawing room portrait gallery of
eminent personages, fourth series 1860, portrait.
CHAMBERS, William Frederic (eld. son of Wm. Chambers of
H.E.I.Co’s civil service who d. 1793). b. India 1786; ed. at
Westminster and Trin. coll. Cam., scholar, B.A. 1808, M.A.
1811, M.D. 1818; physician to St. George’s hospital, London 20
April 1816 to 1839; F.R.C.P. 30 Sep. 1819, censor 1822, 1836,
consilarius 1836, 1841, 1845, an Elect 1847; F.R.S. 13 March
1828; phys. in ord. to Queen Adelaide 25 Oct. 1836; phys. to
Wm. IV. 4 May 1837; created K.C.H. by Queen Victoria at St.
James’s palace 8 Aug. 1837 but allowed to decline assumption
of the prefix Sir; the leading phys. in London 1836–48, being
the last who to any extent monopolised consulting practice
among the rich and noble; phys. in ord. to Queen Victoria 8
Aug. 1837. d. Hordle Cliff near Lymington, Hants. 16 Dec.
1855. Lives of British physicians 2 ed. 1857 pp. 388–402;
Munk’s Roll of physicians iii, 196–200 (1878); Medical Circular
i, 373 (1852), portrait.
CHAMBRE, William (younger son of Meredith Calcott Chambre of
Hawthorn hill, co. Armagh, who d. 8 Feb. 1812). Lieut. York
light infantry volunteers 27 May 1812; captain 11 foot 10 Jany.
1822 to 30 July 1844 when placed on h.p.; L.G. 26 Jany. 1874.
d. 1 Duncairn terrace, Bray, co. Dublin 24 Oct. 1876.
CHAMIER, Frederick (4 son of John Chamier, member of council
for Madras presidency, who d. 23 Feb. 1831). b. London 1796;
midshipman R.N. 24 June 1809; served in United States war
1812; commander 9 Aug. 1826; placed on reserved list July
1851; retired captain 1 April 1856; author of The life of a sailor
3 vols. 1832; Ben Brace 3 vols. 1836; Jack Adams 3 vols.
1838; Tom Bowling 3 vols. 1841; My travels, or an
unsentimental journey through France, Switzerland and Italy 3
vols. 1855, and of many papers in New Monthly Mag.; edited
W. James’s Naval history of Great Britain, 3 ed. 6 vols. 1837. d.
29 Warrior sq. St. Leonard’s on Sea 31 Oct. 1870. New Monthly
Mag. lii, 508–10 (1838), portrait.
CHAMIER, Henry. Writer Madras civil service 1812; chief sec. to
Madras government 1837–43; member of council 1843–8;
pres. of the revenue, marine and college boards 1843 to 14
Jany. 1867 when he resigned the service. d. 9 Waterloo
crescent, Dover 4 Feb. 1867 aged 71.
CHAMPAIN, Sir John Underwood Bateman (2 son of Agnew
Champain, major 9 foot, who d. 1876). b. Gloucester place,
London 22 July 1835; ed. at Cheltenham and Addiscombe; 2
lieut. Bengal Engineers 11 June 1853, lieut. col. 31 Dec. 1878
to death; director in chief of Indo-European government
telegraph department 1869 to death; granted special
permission to accept a sword of honour from Shah of Persia
1885 an honour quite unprecedented; K.C.M.G. 31 Dec. 1885;
assumed additional name of Bateman 1870. d. San Remo 1
Feb. 1887. Sir F. J. Goldsmid’s Telegraph and Travel (1874)
206–388, 639.
CHAMPION, John George. b. Edinburgh 5 May 1815; Ensign 95
foot 2 Aug. 1831, major 11 Nov. 1851 to death; served at
Hong-kong 1847–50; brought a collection of dried plants to
England 1850, most of his novelties were described in Hooker’s
Journals; placed last set of his plants in the Kew herbarium
1854, his name is commemorated in the genus Championia
and by the splendid plant Rhodoleia Championi. d. Scutari
hospital 30 Nov. 1854 of wounds received at battle of
Inkerman 5 Nov. G. Bentham’s Flora Hongkongensis (1861)
8*–9*; Gardener’s Chronicle (1854) 819–20; G. Ryan’s Our
heroes of the Crimea (1855) 93–5.
CHAMPNEYS, Very Rev. William Weldon (eld. son of Rev. Wm.
Beyton Champneys). b. Camden Town, London 6 April 1807;
matric. from Brasenose coll. Ox. 3 July 1824, scholar of his
college, fellow 1831; B.A. 1828, M.A. 1831; C. of St. Ebbe’s,
Oxford 1831–7; R. of St. Mary’s, Whitechapel, London 1837–
60; canon residentiary of St. Paul’s cath. 3 Nov. 1851 to 11
Nov. 1868; V. of St. Pancras, London 1860–8; dean of Lichfield
and R. of Tatenhill, Staffs. 11 Nov. 1868 to death; author of
Images or allegories for the young 1849, 8 ed. 1868; Six
lectures on Protestantism 1852; The Sunday school teacher, 3
ed. 1857; The Spirit in the word 1862, 4 ed. 1866; Facts and
Fragments 1864. d. the Deanery, Lichfield 4 Feb. 1875. Rev. W.
W. Champneys’s Story of the tentmaker (1875) 7–14, portrait;
Drawing room portrait gallery (4th series 1860) 1–2, portrait.
CHANCE, Henry (youngest son of Wm. Chance of Birmingham).
b. Newhall st. Birmingham 1794; a certificated conveyancer
1819; barrister L.I. 21 May 1824; practised as conveyancer
1819–66 when he retired; author of A treatise on Powers 2
vols. 1831. d. 7 North villas, Camden sq. London 16 Feb. 1876.
CHANDLER, Very Rev. George. Educ. at Winchester and New coll.
Ox.; B.C.L. 1804, D.C.L. 1824; R. of Southam, Warws. 1815–
30; R. of All Souls, St. Marylebone, London 1825–47; Bampton
lecturer 1825; dean of Chichester 20 Feb. 1830 to death,
installed 18 March 1830; R. of Felpham, Sussex 1832 to death;
F.R.S. 7 Feb. 1833; author of The Bampton lectures 1825. d.
The Deanery, Chichester 3 Feb. 1859 aged 80.
CHANDLER, Johanna. b. 1820; called a meeting at Mansion
House, London 2 Nov. 1859 when sum of £800 was collected
for a National hospital for the paralysed and epileptic, which
was opened in Queen’s square, Bloomsbury, May 1860;
founded Samaritan society to give aid to out-door patients and
Home for convalescent women patients at East Finchley. d. 43
Albany st. Regent’s Park, London 12 Jany. 1875. Facta non
verba by the author of Contrasts [Wm. Gilbert] (1874) 101–25;
Good Words vii, 537–42 (1866).
CHANDLESS, Thomas (eld. son of Thomas Chandless of York
place, Portman square, London). b. 1798; barrister G.I. 19
June 1822, practised in court of chancery; bencher of his inn 5
May 1847, treasurer 1850–51; Q.C. 11 July 1851. d. 45
Harewood sq. London 22 Feb. 1883 in 85 year.
CHANNELL, Sir William Fry (son of Pike Channell, an officer in
the navy, afterwards a merchant in London). b. 31 Aug. 1804;
barrister I.T. 25 May 1827, went Home circuit; serjeant at law
19 Feb. 1840; shared with Serjeant Talfourd leading business
of Court of Common Pleas 1840–6 when practice was thrown
open to the bar generally; obtained patent of precedence
1844; leader of Home circuit 1845–57; Baron of Court of
Exchequer 12 Feb. 1857 to Jany. 1873; knighted at St. James’s
palace 18 June 1857; issued an address to Beverley at general
election July 1852 but withdrew before the election; nominated
a P.C. Feb. 1873 but did not live to be sworn in. d. 2 Clarendon
place, Hyde park gardens, London 26 Feb. 1873. Law mag.
and law review ii, 351–4 (1873); I.L.N. lxii, 234, 249, 318
(1873), portrait.
CHAPLIN, Charles. b. 21 April 1786; M.P. for Lincolnshire 25 June
1818 to 23 April 1831. d. London 24 May 1859.
CHAPLIN, Edward. b. Ryhall, Rutland 28 March 1842; ed. at
Harrow; captain Coldstream guards 1871; M.P. for Lincoln 4
Feb. 1874 to 24 March 1880; master of the Blankney hounds
1872–6; a member of the Four-in-hand club 1877. d. 25
Charles st. Berkeley sq. London 23 Dec. 1883. Baily’s mag.
xxxi, 311–2 (1878), portrait.
CHAPLIN, William James (son of Wm. Chaplin of Rochester). b.
Rochester 1787; one of the largest coach proprietors in the
kingdom, being owner of 64 stage coaches worked by 1500
horses; chairman of London and South western railway
company to death; sheriff of London 1845–46; M.P. for
Salisbury 1847–1857. d. 2 Hyde Park gardens, London 24 April
1859 aged 71.
CHAPMAN, Rev. Benedict. Educ. at Gonville and Caius coll. Cam.,
6 Wr. 1792, B.A. 1792, M.A. 1795, D.D. 1840; fellow of his
college, tutor, master, May or June 1839 to death; R. of
Ashdon, Essex 1818 to death. d. Ashdon rectory 23 Oct. 1852
in 83 year. bur. in chapel of his college 30 Oct.
CHAPMAN, Henry Samuel. b. Kennington, London, July 1803; went
to Canada 1823; founded at Montreal 1833 Daily Advertiser
first daily newspaper published in Canada, edited it 1833–4;
barrister M.T. 12 June 1840; a judge of supreme court of New
Zealand, June 1843 to March 1852; colonial sec. of Van
Diemen’s Land, March 1852 to Nov. 1852; attorney general of
Victoria 11 March 1857 to 29 April 1857 and March 1858 to 27
Oct. 1859; formed a ministry, March 1858; acted as judge of
supreme court of Victoria 1862 to March 1863; judge of
supreme court of New Zealand 1865–77; author of Thoughts
on the money and exchanges of Lower Canada 1832; The New
Zealand portfolio 1843. d. Dunedin, N.Z. 27 Dec. 1881.
CHAPMAN, Henry Thomas (elder son of Thomas Chapman of
Ampthill, Beds. who lived to be 94). b. Ampthill 1806; studied
at St. Bartholomew’s hospital, London, house surgeon;
surgeon in Lower Seymour st. London; lecturer on surgery in
school next St. George’s hospital; fellow of Med. and Chir. Soc.
1837; author of A brief description of surgical apparatus 1832;
The treatment of obstinate ulcers and cutaneous eruptions of
the leg without confinement 1848, 3 ed. 1859; Varicose veins,
their nature, consequences and treatment 1856. d.
Cheltenham 19 Nov. 1874.
CHAPMAN, Right Rev. James. b. 1799; ed. at Eton and King’s coll.
Cam., B.A. 1823, M.A. 1826, D.D. 1845; Fell. of his coll.;
deacon 1824, priest 1825; assistant master at Eton; R. of
Dunton Waylett, Essex 1834–45; Bishop of Colombo 24 April
1845–1861; Fell. of Eton, April 1862; R. of Wootton Courtney,
Somerset 1863 to death; Preb. of Wells cath. 1868. d. Wootton
Courtney 20 Oct. 1879.
CHAPMAN, John (son of John Chapman of Loughborough,
clockmaker). b. Loughborough 20 Jany. 1801; manufacturer
with his brother Wm. of machinery required for the bobbinet
trade technically called insides 1823–34 when completely
ruined by the protection laws; wrote for the Mechanics
Magazine which he edited short time 1835; sec. to Safety
cabriolet and two-wheel carriage company in London 1836;
invented all the valuable improvements found in the modern
‘Hansom cab,’ a patent for his cab was granted 31 Dec. 1836;
laid before Board of Trade a project for constructing Great
Indian Peninsular railway 1844; prepared a great scheme for
irrigation of India which was formally sanctioned by the
government just after his death; author of The cotton and
commerce of India, published 1 Jany. 1851; Principles of
Indian reform 1853, and of many articles in periodicals and
newspapers. d. London 11 Sep. 1854. General Baptist Mag. iii,
169–76, 209–17, 292–8, 329–32 (1856); Nottingham Review
11 Sep. to 3 Dec. 1833.
CHAPMAN, John (son of John Chapman of Ashton, Lancs. who d.
19 May 1819 aged 55). b. Ashton 1810; sheriff of Cheshire
1856; M.P. for Great Grimsby 14 Feb. 1862 to 6 July 1865 and
5 Feb. 1874 to death. d. Hill End, Mottram in Longdendale,
Cheshire 18 July 1877 in 67 year.
CHAPMAN, Mary Francis (dau. of Mr. Chapman of Dublin, custom
house officer). b. Dublin 28 Nov. 1838; ed. at Staplehurst,
Kent; published following novels under pseud. of J. C. Ayrton,
Mary Bertrand 1856, Lord Bridgnorth’s Niece 1862, A Scotch
Wooing 1875, Gerald Marlowe’s Wife 1876; wrote with her
father in Churchman’s family magazine 1869 an historical tale
called Bellasis or the fortunes of a cavalier; her last work The
gift of the Gods 1879 appeared under her own name. d. Old
Charlton, Kent 18 Feb. 1884.
CHAPMAN, Matthew James. Educ. at Univ. of Edin. and Trin. coll.
Cam.; M.D. Edin. 1820; B.A. Cam. 1832, M.A. 1835; published
Barbadoes and other poems 1833; Jephtha’s Daughter a
dramatic poem 1834; Theocritus, Bion and Moschus, translated
1836. d. 25 Albemarle st. Piccadilly, London 15 Nov. 1865 aged
69.
CHAPMAN, Sir Montague Lowther, 3 Baronet (eld. son of Sir
Thomas Chapman, 2 baronet 1756–1837). b. 10 Dec. 1808;
M.P. for Westmeath 12 Aug. 1830 to 23 June 1841; succeeded
23 Dec. 1837; sheriff of Westmeath 1844; sailed from
Melbourne for Sydney May 1852 but his ship was never heard
of again; death announced as having occurred on the coast of
Australia 17 May 1852. Annual Register 1853 p. 229.
CHAPMAN, Sir Stephen Remnant (son of Richard Chapman of
Tainfield house, Taunton). b. Tainfield house 1776; second
lieut. R.E. 18 Sep. 1793; sec. to Lord Mulgrave, master general
of the ordnance 1810 to 29 July 1825; civil sec. at Gibraltar
1825–31; col. R.E. 29 July 1825 to 10 Jany. 1837; governor,
vice admiral and commander in chief at Bermuda 23 April 1831
to 8 Feb. 1839; carried into effect emancipation of the slaves
there 1834; L.G. 9 Nov. 1846; col. commandant R.E. 9 March
1860 to death; C.B. 4 June 1815; knighted at St. James’s
palace 8 June 1831; F.R.S. 21 Nov. 1816. d. Tainfield house 6
March 1851.
CHAPPELL, Edward. b. 10 Aug. 1792; entered navy, May 1804;
captain 27 Dec. 1838; retired R.A. 20 Jany. 1858; secretary to
Royal mail steam packet company, Feb. 1842; author of
Narrative of a voyage to Hudson’s Bay 1817; Voyage to
Newfoundland and the southern coast of Labrador 1818. d.
Charlwood st. west, Warwick sq. London 21 Jany. 1861.
CHAPPLE, James. b. Exeter; Won the Derby on Dangerous 1833
on Amato 1838; won the Oaks on Vespa 1833; won
Cesarewitch on Glauca 1850 and Cambridgeshire on Landgrave
1850; rode many years for Sir Gilbert Heathcote; had no
superior for a knowledge of pace and fineness of hand. d.
Newmarket, 10 June 1858 in 63 year. Sporting Review xxvii,
58–61 (1852), portrait; Bell’s Life in London 13 June 1858 p. 4.
CHAPPLE, John. b. 10 Jany. 1826; worked under I. K. Brunel the
civil engineer and G. G. Scott the architect; restored churches
at Frinstead, Kent and Chesham, Bucks.; clerk of the works for
restoration of St. Albans Abbey 1870–6 and 1877 to death;
supervised restoration of great church of St. Nicholai, Hamburg
1876–7; member of council of St. Albans 1877, mayor 1879,
alderman 1883 to death, d. Torrington hall, St. Albans 6 Feb.
1887. The Herts Advertiser 12 Feb. 1887.
CHARLEMONT, Francis William Caulfield, 2 Earl of (eld. son of 1
Earl of Charlemont 1728–99). b. 3 Jany. 1775; M.P. for Armagh
in Irish House of Commons 1797 to 4 Aug. 1799 when he
succeeded; one of representative peers for Ireland 22 Nov.
1806 to death; K.P. Oct. 1831; P.C. Ireland 1832; lord lieut. of
Tyrone 1839 to death; created Baron Charlemont in peerage of
the U.K. 13 Feb. 1837. d. Clontarf 26 Dec. 1863.
CHARLES, Rev. John (son of John Charles of Laurencekirk,
Kincardineshire). b. 1770; M.A. Marischal college and Univ. of
Aberdeen 26 March 1792; schoolmaster of Glenbervie; minister
of Garvock 7 June 1821 to death; author of A sermon
preached in the church of Glenbervie 1814; The Protestant’s
Hand Book 1855. d. 17 Nov. 1868 aged nearly 99.
CHARLES, Thomas (younger son of Wm. Charles of Maidstone,
felter and blanket cleaner, who d. 1832). Apprenticed to his
father, became his partner, succeeded to the business 1832
which he sold 1840; author of a translation of Boethius’s
Consolations of philosophy; bequeathed his valuable collections
to the town of Maidstone which purchased his house and
opened The Charles Museum in it, Jany. 1858. d. Chillington
house, Maidstone 29 April 1855 aged 77. C. R. Smith’s
Retrospections i, 141–6 (1883); J. M. Russell’s History of
Maidstone (1881) 357–62.
CHARLESWORTH, Edward Parker (son of Rev. John Charlesworth,
R. of Ossington, Notts.) b. 1783; ed. at Univ. of Edin., M.D.
1807; physician at Lincoln 1807 to death; visiting phys. to
Lincoln lunatic asylum 1820 to death, where he substituted
moral control and kindness in place of physical control and
coercion; author of Remarks on the treatment of the insane
1828. d. Lincoln 20 Feb. 1853. G.M. xxxix, 548–50 (1853).
CHARLESWORTH, Rev. John (brother of the preceding). b.
Ossington parsonage 1782; practised with a surgeon at
Clapham, London 1804; ordained deacon by Bishop of Norwich
1809; R. of Flowton, Suffolk 1814–44; kept his terms at
Queen’s coll. Cam. 1820–3, B.D. 1826; R. of St. Mildred’s,
Bread st. London 1844 to death. d. Islington, London 22 April
1864. bur. churchyard of Limpsfield, Surrey. J. P. Fitzgerald’s
The quiet worker for good, a sketch of the late John
Charlesworth 1865.
CHARLESWORTH, John Charlesworth Dodgson. b. Chapelthorpe
hall near Wakefield 1815; ed. at Sedbergh, Yorkshire and St.
John’s coll. Cam., B.A. 1837, M.A. 1840; M.P. for Wakefield 27
March 1857 to 23 April 1859. d. 21 March 1880.
CHARLESWORTH, Maria Louisa (dau. of Rev. John Charlesworth
1782–1864). b. rectory of Blakenham Parva near Ipswich 1
Oct. 1819; lived at Nutfield, Surrey 1864 to death; author of
The female visitor to the poor, by a Clergyman’s daughter
1846; A book for the cottage 1848; The light of life 1850;
Ministering Children 1854 which had a very large circulation;
Where dwellest thou? or the Inner home 1871. d. Nutfield 16
Oct. 1880. Woman’s Work in the great harvest field x, 45–7
(1881).
CHARLETON, Robert (eld. son of James Charleton, who d. Ashley
hill, Bristol 1847). b. Bristol 15 April 1809; pin manufacturer at
Kingswood near Bristol 1833–52; one of the deputation of 3
Friends, to Emperor of Russia Feb. 1854; went with Robert
Forster as a deputation to governments of Northern Europe to
present the “Plea for liberty of conscience” issued by Society of
Friends 1858; lectured in England and Ireland 1860 to death;
author of Opposition to the war, an address 1855; A brief
memoir of Wm. Forster 1867; Thoughts on the Atonement
1869. d. Ashley Down, Bristol 5 Dec. 1872. Memoir of Robert
Charleton edited by his sister-in-law Anna F. Fox 1873, portrait.
CHARLEVILLE, Charles William Bury, 2 Earl of (only son of 1 Earl
of Charleville 1764–1835, by Catherine Maria dau. of Thomas
Townley Dawson and widow of James Tisdall, she was b. 22
Dec. 1762 and d. 24 Feb. 1851). b. 29 April 1801; M.P. for
Carlow 15 June 1826 to 3 Dec. 1832, for Penryn and Falmouth
11 Dec. 1832 to 29 Dec. 1834; succeeded as 2 Earl 31 Oct.
1835; representative peer of Ireland 13 April 1838 to death. d.
near London 14 July 1851. Burke’s Portrait gallery of
distinguished females i, 5 and ii, 8 (1833); G.M. xxxv, 429–30
(1851).
CHARLEVILLE, Charles William George Bury, 3 Earl of. b. Geneva 8
March 1822; succeeded 14 July 1851. d. Charleville forest,
Tullamore, King’s county 19 Jany. 1859.
CHARLEVILLE, Charles William Francis Bury, 4 Earl of. b.
Charleville Forest 16 May 1852; succeeded 19 Jany. 1859. d.
Staten island, New York 3 Nov. 1874.
CHARLEVILLE, Alfred Bury, 5 Earl of. b. 19 Feb. 1829; succeeded
3 Nov. 1874. d. Brighton 26 June 1875.
CHARLTON, Edward (2 son of Wm. John Charlton of Hesleyside,
Northumberland 1784–1846). b. 23 July 1814; M.D. Edin.
1836; M.D. Durham 1856, D.C.L. 1870; practised at Newcastle;
pres. of Royal Med. Soc. of Edin.; pres. of British Medical
Assoc. 1870; author of An account of the late epidemic of
scarlatina in Newcastle 1847; Memorials of North Tyndale and
its four surnames 1871. d. 7 Eldon sq. Newcastle 14 May 1874.
Medical times and gazette i, 632, (1874).
CHARLTON, John. b. Hartlepool, Durham 1828; Jockey to Baron
Rothschild 1851; won the One thousand guineas on Mentmore
Lass 1853, Oaks on Mincemeat 1854, Derby and Oaks on Blink
Bonny 1857, Ascot cup on Skirmisher 1857. d. Malton 27 July
1862. Sporting Review xxxviii, 17–19 (1857), portrait; I.L.N.
xxii, 416 (1857), portrait; Bell’s Life in London 3 Aug. 1862 p.
5.
CHARLTON, Rev. William Henry. Educ. at Magd. hall, Ox., B.A.
1819, M.A. 1822; V. of Felmingham, Norfolk 1834 to death;
P.C. of parish chapel of St. Marylebone, London 1851 to death;
author of Poems and translations 1834; Sacred sonnets and
other poems 1854. d. 11 July 1866 aged 79.
CHARNOCK, Richard (2 son of James Charnock of Islington,
London). b. 1799; student of Gray’s Inn 28 July 1813; admitted
solicitor 1820; barrister I.T. 12 June 1840; one of Her Majesty’s
gentlemen at arms 1837–41; author of A digest of all the new
rules as to practice and pleading in all the courts 1836, 2 ed.
1845; Digest of the various decisions since the new pleading
rules came into operation 1837; The act for abolishing arrest
on mesne process in civil actions 1838; The police guide,
containing the Metropolitan and City of London police acts
1841; edited J. Story’s Commentaries on the law of Bailments
1839. d. 5 King’s Bench Walk, Temple 26 May 1864.
CHARRETIE, Anna Maria (dau. of Mr. Kenwell of Vauxhall,
London, architect). b. Vauxhall 5 May 1819; studied drawing
under Valentine Bartholomew; miniature and oil painter;
exhibited 40 pictures at R.A., 4 at B.I. and 32 at Suffolk st.
Gallery 1843–75. (m. 1841 John Charretie, captain H.E.I.Co.,
he d. 18 Nov. 1868). d. 8 Hornton St. Kensington, London 5
Oct. 1875. E. C. Clayton’s English female artists i, 415–9
(1876).
CHARRINGTON, Harold (son of Spencer Charrington of Hunsden
house, Ware, Herts.) Naval cadet 13 April 1869; lieut. 23 June
1880; flag lieut. of Euryalus 16 guns 15 April 1882; went with
E. H. Palmer and Wm. Gill to Egypt for the purpose of
detaching the Arabs from Arabi Pacha; shot by the Arabs near
Gaza 11 Aug. 1882. bur. in crypt of St. Paul’s cathedral, London
6 April 1883. Graphic xxvi, 469 (1882), portrait; I.L.N. lxxxi,
461 (1882), portrait.
CHART, Henry Nye (eld. son of John Chart of London, who d.
1863 aged 76). b. 1822; acted at Sadler’s Wells theatre under
name of Henry Nye; low comedian and stage manager at
Brighton theatre, July 1850 and acting manager 1852 to 28
Feb. 1854; lessee of Brighton theatre 29 July 1854 to 7 May
1866 when he purchased theatre and opened a new house on
same site 15 Oct. 1866. (m. 27 July 1867 Ellen Elizabeth
Rollason, leading actress at Brighton theatre). d. 9 New road,
Brighton 18 June 1876. Era 25 June 1876 p. 5, col. 1, 2 July p.
10, col. 4.
CHARY, Chintamanny Ragoonatha. Attached to the Madras
observatory nearly 40 years, first assistant 1863 to death; took
a chief share in making 38,000 observations with transit-circle
for the star catalogue; member of expeditions to observe total
eclipses of the sun 18 Aug. 1868 and 11 Dec. 1871; discovered
2 new variable stars; F.R.A.S. 12 Jany. 1872; edited for 12
years astronomical portion of Asylum Press Almanac; published
1874 a pamphlet on the Transit of Venus, which appeared in 6
Indian languages as well as in English, d. Madras 5 Feb. 1880.
Monthly notices of Royal Astronom. Soc. xli, 180 (1881).
CHASE, Ann (dau. of Mr. M’Clarnonde, who d. 1818). b. North of
Ireland 1807; went to New York 1824; m. 1836 Franklin Chase,
consul general at Tampico, Mexico; in the Mexican war 1846
city of Tampico was surprised and taken by the American
forces, through her instrumentality, without loss of life, the
fortress of the city was named Fort Ann in her honour, and the
ladies of New Orleans presented to her a service of plate; lived
at Tampico 1834–71 and at Brooklyn, New York 1871 to death,
d. Brooklyn 24 Dec. 1874. S. J. Hale’s Woman’s Record 2 ed.
1855 pp. 859–61, portrait.
CHASE, John. b. John st. Fitzroy sq. London 26 Feb. 1810;
landscape water-colour painter; member of New Society of
painters in water-colours 1835: exhibited 11 pictures at R.A.
and 8 at Suffolk st. gallery 1826–70; author of A practical
treatise on landscape painting and sketching from nature in
water-colours, edited by Rev. James Harris 1861. d. 113
Charlotte st. Fitzroy sq. London 8 Jany. 1879.
CHASLES, Victor Euphémion Philarète. b. Mainvilliers near Chartres
8 Oct. 1798; fled to England soon after the Bourbon
restoration 1815; a proof reader at Valpy’s printing office in
Took’s Court, Chancery lane, London; wrote in the Athenæum
1832 to death; keeper of Mazarin library, Paris 1837; professor
in Collége de France, Paris; translated many books from
English into French, d. Venice 19 July 1873.
CHASSELS, Rev. David, b. Glasgow 30 April 1787; went with his
parents to United States 1795; graduated at Dartmouth
college, Vermont 1810; principal of the academy in Peacham,
Vermont, and then of academy in Cambridge, New York;
ordained by Presbytery of Troy 1820; took charge of the
Fairfield academy 1821 and then of academy at Herkimer; a
good teacher and fine classical scholar, d. Holland Patent,
Oneida county, New York 10 Jany. 1870.
CHATELAIN, Clara De (dau. of M. de Pontigny). b. London 31
July 1807; wrote a number of fugitive pieces in English under
pseudonyms of Leopold Wray, Baronne Cornelie de B., Rosalia
Santa Croce and Leopoldine Ziska; wrote and composed many
ballads; translated upwards of 400 songs; author of The Silver
Swan 1847; A handbook of the four elements of vocalization
1850; The sedan chair 1866; Truly noble 1870; her name and
her assumed names are attached to 140 original tales, 50 fairy
tales and 16 handbooks, (m. 13 April 1843 the succeeding,
they received the Dunmow flitch of bacon from W. H.
Ainsworth 19 July 1855). d. insane in London 30 June 1876;
bur. in Lyndhurst churchyard, Hants. 7 July. In Memoriam of
Clara de Chatelain with a catalogue of her works 1876; Fleurs
et fruits, souvenirs de feu Madame C. de Chatelain 1877,
portrait; Andrews’s History of the Dunmow flitch (1877) 18,
27–31.
CHATELAIN, Jean Baptiste François Ernest De. b. Paris 19 Jany
1801; published a weekly paper in London called Le petit
Mercure 1825 which he changed to Le Mercure de Londre
1826; went on foot from Paris to Rome to study sayings and
doings of Pope Leo XII, 1827; edited Le propagateur de la
Gironde at Bordeaux 1830 for which he was condemned to 6
month’s imprisonment and fined 1320 francs 5 May 1831;
published many works in France 1833–8; assumed title of
Chevalier 1840; lived in England 1842 to death, naturalised 6
June 1848; author of Rumbles through Rome 1852; Ronces et
Chardons 1869 and 50 other works, the chief being Beautés de
la poesie Anglaise, 5 tomes 1860–72 containing over 1000
translations of poems from Chaucer to Tennyson; received
Prussian order of Merit 1835. d. 20 Warwick crescent, Regent’s
park, London 15 Aug. 1881. bur. in Lyndhurst churchyard 22
Aug. Catalogue des Ouvrages du Chevalier De Chatelain 1875.
CHATTERLEY, Louisa (dau. of Madame Simeon of St. James’s st.
Piccadilly, London, milliner). b. St. James’s st. 16 Oct. 1797;
made her début on the stage at Bath, Nov. 1814 as Juliet; first
appeared in London at Lyceum theatre 9 July 1816 as Harriet
in Is he jealous; acted at Surrey theatre 1817, Olympic 1820,
Covent Garden 1821; the best representative of a
Frenchwoman on the English stage, (m. 11 Aug. 1814 Wm.
Simmonds Chatterley, actor 1787–1822, she m. (2) 13 Feb.
1830 Mr. Place), d. 37 Brompton sq. London 3 Nov. 1866.
Oxberry’s Dramatic biography v, 271–82 (1826), portrait;
British Stage iv, 237 (1820), portrait; The Era 18 Nov. 1866 p.
11.
CHATTERTON, Frederick Balsir (eld. son of Edward A. Chatterton
of London, box bookkeeper at many theatres who d. 5 Dec.
1875 in 65 year). b. Euston sq. London 17 Sep. 1834; amateur
actor at Cabinet and Soho theatres 1852; acting manager at
Lyceum theatre 1857 and 1861–2; lessee of St. James’s
theatre 1859–60; joint lessee with Edmund Falconer of Drury
Lane theatre 12 Sep. 1863, sole lessee 22 Sep. 1866 to 4 Feb.
1879 when he closed the theatre being £36,000 in debt; joint
manager with B. Webster of Princess’s and Adelphi theatres
1871; made his début as a reciter at St. James’s hall, London
14 March 1883. d. 18 Feb. 1886. E. Stirling’s Old Drury Lane i,
273–317 (1881); Illust. sporting news v, 593 (1866), portrait;
Touchstone, March 1879 p. 3, portrait.
CHATTERTON, Lady Henrietta Georgiana Marcia (only child of Rev.
Lascelles Iremonger, prebendary of Winchester, who d. 6 Jany.
1830). b. 24 Arlington st. Piccadilly, London 11 Nov. 1806;
author of Aunt Dorothy’s Tales, 2 vols. 1837 anon.; Rambles in
the South of Ireland 1839, 2 ed. 1839; Home sketches and
foreign recollections 1841; Allanston or the Infidel 1843;
Compensation, 2 vols. 1856 anon.; The reigning beauty 3 vols.
1858; Memorials of Admiral Lord Gambier 2 vols. 1861;
Leonore a tale and other poems 2 vols. 1864; Won at last 3
vols. 1874 and 20 other books; received into Church of Rome,
Aug. 1875. (m. (1) 3 Aug. 1824 Sir W. A. Chatterton 1787–
1855. m. (2) 1 June 1859 Edward Heneage Dering 2 son of
Rev. John Dering, R. of Pluckley, Kent, he was b. 15 March
1827). d. Malvern Wells 6 Feb. 1876. Memoirs of Georgiana,
Lady Chatterton with some passages from her diary by E. H.
Dering 1878; J. Gillow’s English Catholics i, 478–80 (1885).
CHATTERTON, Sir James Charles, 3 Baronet (youngest son of Sir
James Chatterton, 1 baronet, who d. 9 April 1806). b. 1792;
cornet 12 light dragoons 23 Nov. 1809; lieut. col. 4 dragoon
guards 9 Dec. 1831 to 3 Oct. 1848 when placed on h.p.; col. 5
lancers 23 Feb. 1858 to 22 Nov. 1868; general 31 March 1866;
col. 4 dragoon guards 22 Nov. 1868 to death; M.P. for co. Cork
1831–5 and 1849–52; sheriff of co. Cork 1851–2; a gentleman
of the privy chamber; succeeded his brother 7 Aug. 1855;
K.S.F.; K.H. 1832; K.C.B. 10 Nov. 1862, G.C.B. 24 May 1873. d.
Albemarle st. Piccadilly, London 5 Jany. 1874. I.L.N. xvi, 133
(1850), portrait; Graphic ix, 52, 59 (1874), portrait.
CHATTERTON, John Balsir (son of John Chatterton of
Portsmouth, professor of music). b. Portsmouth 1802; pupil of
Robert Bochsa the harpist; professor of the harp at R.A. of
Music, London 1827; harpist to the Queen 1842 to death;
published numerous transcriptions from popular operas for the
harp. (m. Eliza Davenport only dau. of Thomas Davenport
Latham of Coombe hill, Croydon, she d. 9 Jany. 1877 in 71
year), d. 32 Manchester st. Portman sq. London 9 April 1871.
Wm. Ball’s Musical Gem (1831) 50–1, portrait.
CHATTERTON, Sir William Abraham, 2 Baronet, b. 6 Aug. 1787;
succeeded 9 April 1806. d. Rolls park, Chigwell, Essex 7 Aug.
1855.
CHATTO, William Andrew (only son of Wm. Chatto of Newcastle,
merchant, who d. 1804). b. Newcastle 17 April 1799;
wholesale tea-dealer in Eastcheap, London 1830–4; edited
New Sporting Magazine 1839–41; projected Puck a journalette
of fun, a penny daily comic illustrated paper 22 numbers 6 May
1844 to 29 June 1844; author of Scenes and recollections of
fly-fishing by Stephen Oliver the younger 1834; The angler’s
souvenir by P. Fisher 1836, 2 ed. 1871; A treatise on wood
engraving 1839, 3 ed. 1877; Facts and speculations on the
origin and history of playing cards 1848. d. The Charterhouse,
London 28 Feb. 1864.
CHAVASSE, Pye Henry, b. Cirencester 1810; L.S.A. 1833; M.R.C.S.
18 Jany. 1833, F.R.C.S. 12 Aug. 1852; practised at Birmingham
1834–74; pres. of Queen’s college medical chirurgical society
1856–8; author of Advice to mothers on the management of
their offspring 1839, 14 ed. 1885; Advice to a mother on the
management of herself 1869, 4 ed. 1879; Counsel to a mother
1869, 4 ed. 1879; Aphorisms on mental culture of a child
1872, 2 ed. 1877; his books were translated into nearly every
European language and several Asiatic. d. 214 Hagley road,
Edgbaston, Birmingham 21 Sep. 1879.
CHAYTOR, Sir William Richard Carter, 2 Baronet, b. 7 Feb. 1805;
M.P. for city of Durham 23 March 1831 to 29 Dec. 1834;
succeeded 28 Jany. 1847. d. Scrafton lodge, Middleham,
Yorkshire 9 Feb. 1871.
CHEAPE, Douglas (younger son of John Cheape of Rossie,
Fifeshire 1757–1838). b. 1797; member of Faculty of
Advocates, Edin. 1819; professor of civil law in Univ. of Edin.
1827–42, substituted English for Latin in class examinations;
author of Res Judicata and other squibs published in the Court
of Session Garland 1839, his other squibs were The book of
the chronicles of the city, being a Scriptural account of the
election of a member for the city of Edinburgh in May 1834,
and probably La festa d’Overgroghi (Over Gogar near
Edinburgh) a burlesque opera in Italian and English. d. Trinity
grove, Trinity near Edin. 1 Sep. 1861. Blackwood’s Mag. cix,
111–2 (1871).
CHEAPE, Sir John (brother of the preceding). b. 1792; second
lieut. Bengal engineers 3 Nov. 1809, col. commandant 19 Feb.
1844 to death; general 6 Dec. 1866; C.B. 20 July 1838, K.C.B.
5 June 1849, G.C.B. 28 March 1865; served in the 3 campaigns
of first Burmese war 1824–6; second in command in second
Burmese war 1852–3. d. Old park, Ventnor, Isle of Wight 30
March 1875. W. F. B. Laurie’s Second Burmese war 1853.
CHEEKE, Alfred, b. Evesham, Worcs. 1811; barrister M.T. 29
Jany. 1836; went to Sydney, Oct. 1837; comr. of Court of
Claims, March 1841; crown prosecutor at quarter sessions,
June 1841; chairman of quarter sessions 1844–5 and 1851–7;
comr. of Court of requests for county of Cumberland, Jany.
1845; district court judge 1858 to June 1865; puisne judge of
supreme court, June 1865 to death. d. Darling point, Sydney
14 March 1876. Heads of the people ii, 151–2 (1848), portrait.
CHEETHAM, John (son of George Cheetham of Stayleybridge). b.
Stayleybridge 1802; a merchant and manufacturer; M.P. for
South Lancashire 14 July 1852 to 23 April 1859, and for
Salford ll July 1865 to 11 Nov. 1868. d. 18 May 1886.
CHELMSFORD, Frederick Thesiger, 1 Baron (youngest son of
Charles Thesiger, collector of customs in island of St. Vincent,
who d. 18 Feb. 1831). b. 1 Fowkes buildings, Tower st. London
15 July 1794; midshipman R.N. 1807; student of G.I. 5 Nov.
1818, of I.T. 2 March 1824, barrister I.T. 21 May 1824; went
Home circuit, became leader; K.C. 7 July 1834; bencher of IT.
18, Nov. 1834, reader 1842, treasurer 1843; solicitor general
17 April 1844 to July 1845; knighted at Buckingham palace 23
May 1844; attorney general 29 June 1845 to 3 July 1846 and
Feb. 1852 to Dec. 1852; lord chancellor 26 Feb. 1858 to 18
June 1859 and 6 July 1866 to 29 Feb. 1868, when he resigned
office; P.C. 26 Feb. 1858; M.P. for Woodstock 20 March 1840 to
April 1844, for Abingdon 11 May 1844 to 1 July 1852 and for
Stamford 10 July 1852 to 1 March 1858; F.R.S. 19 June 1845;
created baron Chelmsford of Chelmsford, Essex 1 March 1858.
d. 7 Eaton sq. London 5 Oct. 1878. Illust. news of the world,
vol. 1 (1858), portrait; London Society xi, 87, 95 (1867),
portrait.
CHENERY, Thomas, b. Barbados 1826; ed. at Eton and Caius coll.
Cam., B.A. 1854, M.A. 1868; correspondent of Times at
Constantinople 1854–6, wrote leading articles and reviews in
Times; barrister L.I. 10 June 1859; Lord Almoner’s professor of
Arabic at Oxford, April 1868 to Nov. 1877; member of Ch. Ch.
Ox., incorporated M.A. 1868; member of 2 class of Imperial
order of Medjidie, July 1869; secretary to Royal Asiatic Society;
one of the revisers of Old Testament 1870–83; editor of Times
Nov. 1877 to death, worked on it to 1 Feb. 1884; published
The six assemblies of El Hariry translated 1867; edited the
Machberoth Ithiel of Jehudah ben Shelomo Alkharzi. d. 16
Serjeant’s Inn, Fleet st. London 11 Feb. 1884. Journal of Royal
Asiatic Soc. xvi, pp. xii-xv (1884); Times 12 Feb. 1884 p. 6,
cols. 5–6; I.L.N. lxxxiv, 180 (1884), portrait; Graphic xxix, 148
(1884), portrait.
CHEPMELL, Rev. Havilland Le Mesurier. Educ. at Pembroke coll.
Ox., Townsend scholar, B.A. 1833, M.A. 1836, B.D. and D.D.
1851; chaplain to Royal military college, Sandhurst 1841–67;
translated Lectures on Roman History by B. G. Niebuhr 1849;
author of Course of history, Greek, Roman and English, 10 ed.
1874, 2nd series 2 vols. 1857. d. The hermitage, St. Martin’s,
Guernsey 21 March 1887.
CHERMSIDE, Henry Lowther (2 son of the succeeding). b. 1825;
second lieut. R.A. 19 June 1844, colonel 8 Sep. 1875 to 16
Nov. 1878 when he retired with hon. rank of major general;
commanded R.A. at Poona 1876–8; C.B. 29 May 1875. d. Regia
house, Teignmouth 2 Jany. 1886.
CHERMSIDE, Sir Robert Alexander (3 son of Dr. Chermside of
Portaferry, co. Down). b. Portaferry 1787; Assist, surgeon to
7th Hussars 16 Aug. 1810; Surgeon to 10th Hussars 29 June
1815 to 30 Oct. 1823; graduated M.D. at Edin. 1817; L.R.C.P.
London 16 April 1821, F.R.C.P. 27 April 1843; phys. to British
embassy at Paris; physician extraordinary to Duchess of Kent;
K.C.H. 31 July 1835; Knight of St. John of Jerusalem; Knight of
Red Eagle of Prussia; Knight of Legion of Honour. d. Oxford 8
Sep. 1860.
CHERRY, Frederick Clifford. Veterinary surgeon of 11 light
dragoons 12 Oct. 1803, of Waggon Train 16 July 1807 to 25
Sep. 1819 when placed on h.p.; Vet. surgeon 2 life guards 10
May 1833; principal vet. surgeon in the army 17 Sep. 1839 to
death. d. Clapham, London 11 July 1854.
CHESHAM, Charles Compton Cavendish, 1 Baron (4 son of 1 Earl of
Burlington 1754–1834). b. Savile row, London 28 Aug. 1793;
M.P. for Newtown, Hants. 1821–6 for Yarmouth, Isle of Wight
1831–2, for East Sussex 1832–41, for Youghal 1841–7, for
Bucks 1847–57; created Baron Chesham of Chesham, Bucks.
15 Jany. 1858. d. 19 Grosvenor sq. London 10 Nov. 1863.
CHESHAM, William George Cavendish, 2 Baron, b. 20 Oct. 1815;
ed. at Eton; M.P. for Peterborough 30 July 1847 to 1 July 1852,
for Bucks. 23 Dec. 1857 to 10 Nov. 1863 when he succeeded.
d. Latimer, near Chesham, Bucks. 26 June 1882.
CHESHAM, Sarah. Tried at Chelmsford assizes 1847 upon a
charge of poisoning the illegitimate child of Lydia Taylor but
acquitted; tried 1848 for poisoning two of her children but
acquitted; tried at Chelmsford assizes 6 March 1851 for
poisoning with arsenic her husband Richard Chesham, who d.
May 1850, when she was found guilty and sentenced to death;
known as ‘Arsenic Sal’; executed at Chelmsford 25 March 1851.
A.R. (1850) 109, (1851) 396–400; A. H. Dymond’s The law on
its trial (1865) 211–19.
CHESNEY, Charles Cornwallis (son of Charles Cornwallis Chesney,
captain Bengal artillery who d. 1830). b. Packolet, near Kilkeel,
co. Down 29 Sept. 1826; second lieut R.E. 18 June 1845, lieut
col. 1 March 1868 to death; commanded R.E. in home district
1873 to death; professor of military history at Sandhurst 1858–
68; the best military critic of his day; member of royal
commission on military education 1868–70; sent by
government to report on Franco-German war 1871; author of
A military view of recent campaigns in Virginia and Maryland
1863, 2 ed. 1864; Waterloo lectures, a study of the campaign
of 1815, 1868, 3 ed. 1874; Essays in military biography 1874.
d. 11 Grosvenor mansions, Victoria st. London 19 March 1876.
Graphic xiii, 342, 348 (1876), portrait.
CHESNEY, Francis Rawdon (2 son of Alexander Chesney 1755–
1843, coast-officer in the district of Mourne, co. Down). b.
Ballyvea Mourne 16 March 1789; 2 lieut. R.A. 9 Nov. 1804,
commanded R.A. at Hong Kong 1843–7, col. 11 Nov. 1851 to 6
Jany. 1855, col. commandant 27 June 1864 to death; general 1
Jany. 1868; explored Syrian route to India 1830–1;
commanded expedition for examining route to India by the
Euphrates 1835–6; explored the Tigris and Karūm 1836–7;
surveyed Euphrates route again 1857; F.R.G.S. 1838, gold
medallist 1838; F.R.S. 6 Feb. 1834; author of Expedition for
survey of Euphrates and Tigris 2 vols. 1850; Observations on
past and present state of fire arms 1852; The Russo-Turkish
campaign of 1828 and 1829, 1854; Narrative of Euphrates
expedition 1868. d. Packolet 30 Jany. 1872. The Life of F. R.
Chesney, by his wife and daughter, edited by S. Lane-Poole
(1885), portrait; Dublin Univ. mag. xviii, 574–80 (1841),
portrait; Journal of Royal Geog. Soc. xlii, 159–61 (1872).
CHESSAR, Jane Agnes. b. Edinburgh 1835; had charge of a class
in Home and Colonial training college, London 1852–66;
lecturer and private tutor in London 1866–75; member for
Marylebone of London school board 27 Nov. 1873 to 1875;
edited Mrs. Somerville’s Physical geography 1877; W. Hughes’s
Manual of geography 1880; wrote much for the Queen and
other newspapers. d. Brussels 3 Sep. 1880. Graphic ix, 30
(1874), portrait.
CHESTER, Harry (youngest son of sir Robert Chester of Bush
hall, Herts. 1768–1848). b. 1 Oct. 1806; ed. at Charterhouse,
Westminster and Trin. coll. Cam.; clerk in Privy Council office
May 1826 to 1 Jany. 1859; assistant sec. to Committee of Privy
Council on education 1840–58; author of The lay of the Lady
Ellen, a tale of 1834, London 1835, and of an article entitled
The food of the people in Macmillan’s Mag. Oct. and Nov.
1868. d. 63 Rutland gate, London 5 Oct. 1868.
CHESTER, Joseph Lemuel (son of Joseph Chester of Norwich,
Connecticut, grocer, who d. 1832). b. Norwich 30 April 1821; a
merchant’s clerk in New York 1840, in Philadelphia 1845; a
temperance lecturer in many of the states; musical editor of
Godey’s Lady’s Book 1845–50; one of the editors of
Philadelphia Inquirer and of the Daily Sun 1852; member of
council of Philadelphia 1854; one of aide-de-camps of governor
of Pennsylvania with rank of colonel 1855–8; lived in London
1859 to death; made most extensive extracts from parish
registers, and at his death left 87 folio vols. of such extracts;
copied the matriculation register of the university of Oxford
1866–9; D.C.L. Ox. 22 June 1881; one of founders of Harleian
Society 1869; a member of first council of Royal Historical
Society 1870; published Greenwood cemetery and other
poems 1843; The registers of the abbey of St. Peter,
Westminster 1876, (Harleian Society) also Privately Printed for
the author; The parish registers of St. Michael, Cornhill,
London 1882. d. 124 Southwark park road, London 26 May
1882. Latting’s Memoir of Colonel Chester 1882; Dean’s
Memoir of Colonel Chester 1884, portrait; Marshall’s
Genealogist vi, 189*–92* (1882); New Monthly Mag. June
1881 pp. 626–30, portrait.
CHESTERFIELD, George Augustus Frederick Stanhope, 6 Earl of
(only son of 5 Earl of Chesterfield 1755–1815). b. Bretby hall,
Burton-on-Trent, Derbyshire 23 May 1805; ed. at Eton and Ch.
Ch. Ox.; succeeded 29 Aug. 1815; lord of the bedchamber to
George iv, 11 Aug. 1828 to 26 June 1830; master of the
Buckhounds 30 Dec. 1834 to April 1835; P.C. 29 Dec. 1834;
began racing 1826, won Ascot cup with Zinganee 1829, the
Oaks with Industry 1838 and Lady Evelyn 1849 and St. Leger
with Don John 1838; master of Pytchley hounds 1838–40; the
yellow gossamer overcoat known as a Chesterfield was called
after him; he is depicted under name of Earl of Chesterlane in
D’Horsay, or the follies of the day by A man of fashion 1844. d.
3 Grosvenor sq. London 1 June 1866. bur. at Bretby church 8
June. Rice’s History of the British turf i, 284–6 (1879); Sporting
Preview xxix, 450–2 (1858), lvi, 10, 79 (1866); Baily’s Mag. ii,
55–8 (1861), portrait; Sporting Times 7 March 1885; Doyle’s
Official baronage i, 374, (1886), portrait.
CHESTERFIELD, George Philip Cecil Arthur Stanhope, 7 Earl of. b.
28 Sep. 1831; ed. at Eton; cornet Royal horse guards 21 Aug.
1849, lieut. 2 Sep. 1853 to 1860; M.P. for south Notts. 18 Dec.
1860 to 1 June 1866 when he succeeded, d. Bretby hall 1 Dec.
1871.
CHESTERFIELD, George Philip Stanhope, 8 Earl of. b. 29 Nov.
1822; succeeded 1 Dec. 1871, his claim was admitted by
House of Lords 7 July 1873. d. Killendanagh near Lifford, co.
Donegal 19 Oct. 1883.
CHESTERFIELD, Henry Edwyn Chandos Scudamore Stanhope, 9 Earl
of (eld. son of Sir Edwyn Francis Scudamore Stanhope, 2
baronet 1793–1874). b. Teignmouth, Devon 8 April 1821; ed.
at Balliol coll. Ox., B.A. 1841; succeeded as 3 baronet 8 Feb.
1874, as 9 Earl 19 Oct. 1883. d. St. Leonard’s on Sea 21 Jany.
1887.
CHETHAM-STRODE, Sir Edward (4 son of Thomas Chetham of
Mellon hall, Derbyshire). b. 5 July 1775; entered navy 29 April
1786; captain 13 Oct. 1807; captain of the Leander 50 guns 1
May 1816 to July 1819; superintendent of Haslar hospital and
Royal Clarence Victualling yard 5 April 1838 to 23 Nov. 1841;
R.A. on h.p. 23 Nov. 1841; C.B. 8 Dec. 1815; K.C.H. 1 Jany.
1837; knighted by Wm. iv, at St. James’s palace 1 March 1837;

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