The Aristocracy of London: Part I: Kensington - Part 49
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Part 49

WRIGHT'S LANE.

_Scarsdale House_. CURZON, Hon. Edw. Cecil,

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, an officer of the Royal Artillery; Mrs.

Wentworth Gore, and three other daus. Educ. at Harrow, and Christ Church, Oxford; a member of Lincoln's-Inn; c. to the bar, 1840; an a.s.sist. registrar of designs; a magistrate for Middles.e.x (and dep.-lieut.) and Westminster; a director of the London Exchange Insurance Company (1, _Whitehall_, S.W.; _Travellers'_, _Oxford and Cambridge_, _and Volunteer Clubs_).

YORK VILLAS.

4. MALINGS, William, Esq.

An East India and China merchant (4, _George-yard_, _Lombard-street_, E.C.)

_Windham Villa_. DESBARRES, Lieut., Henry Wyndham,

Unattached; entd. the army, 1814; obtained his present rank in the same year. Has been on half-pay, since 1826.

_Chalfont Lodge_. VIZETELLY, Henry, Esq.

A wood-engraver, of the firm of Vizetelly and Loudan (15, and 16, _Gough-square_, E.C.)

_The Elms_. EGG, Augustus Leopold, Esq.

A royal academician. B. in London, 1816. First exhibited at the Academy, 1838; elected a.s.sociate 1848; selected to arrange the Gallery of Modern Paintings, at the Manchester Exhibition, 1857. A painter of scenic and humourous subjects (_Athenaeum and Garrick Clubs_).

YOUNG STREET.

5. HEWARD, Robert, Esq.,

A member of the Linnaean Society.

9. HOWLETT, Rev. John Henry,

Educated at Pembroke Coll., Cambridge; obtained his M.A. 1807. Reader at the Chapel Royal, Whitehall. Has been Rector of Foston, in the diocese of Peterboro', since 1834.

11. STOATT, Charles, Esq.,

A sculptor.

11. CLINT, Alfred, Esq.

A landscape painter. A member of the Society of British Artists, Incorporated by Royal Charter.

The Country Gentleman's London Agency.

_Annual Subscription-One Guinea_.

The want has long been felt, by residents in the country, of a house in London to represent their interests in those ever-recurring matters which connect them with the metropolis.

Whether for the effecting of purchases, large or small, the receipt or transmission of parcels, the receipt of interest and dividends, the inst.i.tuting of inquiries, or the general attention to requirements as various as the occasions which produce them-the country portion of the public has. .h.i.therto been unable to utilise the resources of the British capital, except through the often unpleasant alternative of troubling friends, or of an expensive, and sometimes fruitless journey to town.

This general want the firm of Messrs. O'BYRNE supplies to its subscribers at the simple charge of one guinea per annum.

For the payment, therefore, of this sum, made annually in advance, their subscribers are ent.i.tled:-

1. To have all their purchases effected, of a domestic or other character, in the London market, at a cheaper rate, and of a better quality, than can be done generally in the country.

2. To a constant address, where all letters and parcels may be sent.

3. To the supply of information on all subjects on which information can be obtained.

4. To the receipt of interest and dividends.

5. To the effecting of sales and investments.

6. To the procuring of pa.s.sages to all foreign and colonial ports.

7. To the supplying of outfits, &c.

8. To the effecting of fire and life a.s.surances, &c. &c.

Estimates provided.