The Strand Magazine/Volume 5/Issue 26/Portraits of Celebrities

Portraits of Celebrities at Different Times of their Lives.

LORD HOUGHTON.
Born 1858.


Age 18.
From a Photo. by W. & D. Downey.

Present Day.
From a Photo. by Alice Hughes, 52, Gower Street, W.C.


L

ORD HOUGHTON, whose appointment to the post of Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland came somewhat as a surprise, is a Yorkshire landowner, and a son of the peer so well known both in literary and social circles as Richard Monckton Milnes, whose poems and prose writings alike will long keep his memory alive. This literary faculty has descended to the present peer, his recent volume of poems having been received by the best critics as bearing evidence of a true poetic gift. Lord Houghton, who served as a Lord-in-Waiting in Mr. Gladstone's Government of 1886, is a rich man and the reputed heir of Lord Crewe; he has studied and travelled, and has taken some share, though hitherto not a very prominent one, in politics. He is a widower, and his sister presides over his establishment.

JOHN PETTIE, R.A.
Born 1839.


Age 16.
From a Sketch in Crayons by Himself.

Age 26.
From a Photo. by G. W. Wilson, Aberdeen.

Age 40.
From a Photo. by Fradelle & Marshall.

Age 26.
From a Photo. by Raymond Lynde.


M

R. JOHN PETTIE was born in Edinburgh, and exhibited his earliest works in the Royal Scottish Academy. He came to London at the age of twenty-three, and at the age of twenty-seven was elected an A.R.A. His election to the distinction of R.A. took place when he was thirty-four, in the place of Sir Edwin Landseer. Mr. Pettie's portraits and historical pictures are within the knowledge of every reader—his armour, carbines, lances, broadswords, and pistols are well-known features in every year's Academy—for his subjects are chiefly scenes of battle and of military life. His first picture hung in the Royal Academy was "The Armourers." He has also painted many subjects from Shakespeare's works; his "Scene in the Temple Gardens" being one of his most popular productions. "The Death Warrant" represents an episode in the career of the consumptive little son of Henry VIII. and Jane Seymour. In "Two Strings to His Bow," Mr. Pettie showed a considerable sense of humour.

THE DUCHESS OF TECK.


Age 17.
From a Painting by A. Winterhalter.

Age 40.
From a Painting.

Present Day.
From a Photo. by Russell & Sons.


P

RINCESS MARY ADELAIDE, daughter of H.R.H. Prince Adolphus Frederick, Duke of Cambridge, the seventh son of His Majesty King George III., married on June 12th, 1866, H.S.H. the Duke of Teck, whose portrait at different ages we have the pleasure of presenting on the opposite page. The Duchess of Teck and her daughter Princess Victoria are well known and esteemed far beyond their own circle of society for their interest in works of charity and the genuine kindness of heart, which render them ever ready to enter into schemes of benevolence. We may remind our readers that a charming series of portraits of Princess Victoria of Teck appeared in our issue of February, 1892.

THE DUKE OF TECK.
Born 1837.


Age 5.
From a Painting by Johan Elmer.

Present Day.
From a Photo. by Elliott & Fry.


H

IS Serene Highness Francis Paul Charles Louis Alexander, G.C.B., Prince and Duke of Teck, is the only son of Duke Alexander of Würtemberg and the Countess Claudine Rhédy and Countess of Hohenstein, a lady of a most illustrious but not princely house. It is not generally known that a family law, which decrees that the son of a marriage between a prince of the Royal Family of Würtemberg and a lady not of princely birth, however nobly born, cannot inherit the crown, alone prevents the Duke of Teck from being King of Würtemberg. The Duke of Teck has served with distinction in the Army, having received the Egyptian medal and the Khedive's star, together with the rank of colonel.

REV. H. R. HAWEIS, M.A.
Born 1838.


Age 18.
From a Daguerreotype.

Present Day.
From a Photo. by Russell & Sons.


T

HE REVEREND HUGH REGINALD HAWEIS, preacher, lecturer, educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and appointed in 1866 incumbent of St. James's, Marylebone. He has been an indefatigable advocate of the Sunday opening of museums, and a frequent lecturer at the Royal Institution, notably on violins, church bells, and American humorists. He also took a great interest in the Italian Revolution.

FREDERIC H. COWEN.
Born 1852.


Age 3.
From a Photograph.

Age 16.
From a Photograph.

Age 24.
From a Photograph.

Age 11.
From a Photograph.

Present Day.
From a Photo. by Elliott & Fry.


M R. F. H. COWEN, whose new opera will appear about the same time as these portraits, was born at Kingston, in Jamaica, and showed at a very early age so much musical talent that it was decided he should follow music as a career, with what excellent results is known to all musicians. His more important works comprise five cantatas, "The Rose Maiden," "The Corsair," "Saint Ursula," "The Sleeping Beauty," and "St. John's Eve," several symphonies, the opera "Thorgrim," considered his finest work, and over two hundred songs and ballads, many of which have attained great popularity.