Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 5.djvu/9

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11 8. V. JAN. 6, 1912.]


NOTES AND QUERIES.


LONDON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1312.


CONTENTS. -No. 106.

NOTES : United Service Club and Pall Mall, 1 James Townsend, M.P., 2 Signs of Old London, 4 Dolben's Poems A Dickens Toy -book, 5 Pepys's 'Diary' : Bray- brooke Edition De Quincey: the Murderer Williams " Cinematograph " : " Cinemacolor " The King "Over the Water" Blindfolded Man : Japanese Variants, 6 " Nose of wax " Miniature of Mary, Queen of Scots, 7.

QUERIES : Dinner-JacketKings with Special Titles- Edgar Allan Poe's Mother : Elizabeth Arnold, 7 Decorated Shoe-Horns : R. Mindura Dean Swift: Rev.

Gery Sir William Davenant's Entertainment,

Rutland Honse-pT. R. : Letters to Lord Orrery Miner Family, 8 Patrick Archer, Merchant Mrs. Gordon, 9 Latin Phrase for " Mistletoe for the New Year," 10.

REPLIES .-Sir Francis Drake at the Middle Temple, 10 Keats's 'Ode to a Nightingale,' 11 Mistletoe " Sala- mander," a Heavy Blow, 12 London Corporation and the Medical Profession Bennetto, 13 Irving's ' Sketch- Book' ' Catalogue of Honor' Maida, 14 "Riding the high horse " Marryat : ' Diary of a Blase" ' ' Mathe- matical Transactions '" Sabbath day's journey," 15 Gordon's 'Geography' Lackington's Medals, 16 J. Suasso de Lima FitzGerald and ' N. & Q.' Matthew Prior : Major Daniel Gotherson, 17 Straw under Bridges "Latter Lammas" Penge as a Place - Name "Wigesta" Murderers reprieved for Marriage 'The Robber's Cave ' Fire-Papers, 18 - Casanoviana : Edward Tiretta, 19.

NOTES ON BOOKS :- 'The Chilterns and the Vale' ' Denominative Verbs in English ' ' Whitaker's Al- manack' and 'Whitaker's Peerage,' 1912 Reviews and Magazines.

Notices to Correspondents.


THE UNITED SERVICE CLUB AND PALL MALL.

THE forthcoming extension of the United Service Club at the expense of the adjoining property, No. 118 and No. 119, Pall Mall', suggests a note on the lines of the interesting articles which the late MB. W. E. HARLAND- OXLEY contributed from time to time on changes in Westminster, and may help that desirable work, a history of Pall Mall to date.

Through the courtesy of the Office of Woods, I learn that the site of the doomed houses is within the bailiwick or manor of St. James's-in-the-Fields, which was pur- chased by the Crown from the Abbot of Westminster in the reign of Henry VIII. Part of the manor was granted on leases by Queen Henrietta Maria and her trustees, and by Charles II., to trustees for Henry Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans, who granted sub-leases of a plot of land at the east end of the south side of Pall Mall, with seventeen small houses thereon. No. 118, Pall Mall, stands on. part of this ground, which does not


seem to have been built upon until the reign of Charles II.

The leases to the Earl of St. Albans' trustees expired in 1740, and further leases of the seventeen houses were granted by the Crown for terms which expired in 1810. The houses were stated to be in a ruinous condition in 1739, and were then to be rebuilt. Ultimately the houses came into the possession of the Prince of Wales (George IV.), and were occupied by some of the members of his establishment up to about 1826, when he relinquished the occu- pation of Carlton Palace adjoining. The houses were then demolished, and the present row of houses was built on the site. Almost the first break was made in 1881, when what is now 123, Pall Mall, was built by the Life Association of Scotland.

The United Service Club was built in 1826, and extended eastwards by the destruc- tion of a house in 1858-9. It is now to be extended still further by the destruction of 118 and 119, Pall Mall.

There is a certain appropriateness in the absorption of these houses, for both of them have been connected in a roundabout way with the Services: No. 119, latterly, by housing Hugh Rees, Ltd., military book- sellers, who have moved into the Howell & James's block in Lower Regent Street. I am, however, more interested in No. 118, through having lived there for sixteen and a half years. Its military associations are peculiarly interesting. They begin with William Cobbett, who enlisted in the 54th Foot in 1783. He started publishing in 1796, his shop (in 1800) being at "The Crown and Mitre," 18, Pall Mall. He disposed of his busi- ness in March, 1803, to a man named Hardy, who was succeeded at the end of the same year by John Budd (Edward Smith's ' Wil- liam Cobbett,' i. 308). In June, 1810, Cobbett was prosecuted, along with Budd, Hansard, and Bagshaw, for an article in The Register (of 1 July, 1809) on flogging in the Army, and the four of them were sentenced to varying terms of imprisonment, Budd getting two months. At this time Budd was at 100, Pall Mall. In 1813 the business belonged to E. Budd, and in 1814 the firm became Budd and Calkin, and moved to 98, Pall Mall in 1822. Budd was probably a Cornishman, and may have been connected with Edward Budd "(1771-1853) of the West Briton, Truro (Boase's 'Collec- tanea Cornubiensia,' p. 115: Add. MSS. 29, 281, f. 187).

On 5 July, 1827, a ninety -nine years' lease was granted to George William Budd