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Person    | Female  Born 17/5/1792  Died 16/5/1860

Lady Byron

Lady Byron

Born as Anne Isabella Milbanke, sometimes known as Annabella, an heiress in her own right. Unusually well-educated. An unwise marriage to Lord Byron in January 1815 lasted only a year but did produce Ada Lovelace. They lived at 13 Piccadilly Terrace, which is where Ada was born and the house where Lady B left Lord B. She became convinced her husband was mad though it was she who was obsessed by him for the rest of her life. She educated Ada in science as a protection against any inherited madness.

Lived in Ealing 1822-40, at two addresses, apparently dividing her time between Hanger Hill House and Fordhook House, which seems odd, but they were an odd family.

Established the Ealing Grove School (for boys) in 1833 on the site where the Ealing College plaque is. ' explains that this was a co-operative school based on a Swiss model. Also active in; the anti-slavery campaign.

Our information comes from and other sources.

From we learn that the Byrons' short-lived home in Piccadilly had (by 1878 when Walford published Old and New London Vol. 4) been renumbered as 139 Piccadilly. It's still there; the flat-fronted house on the section between Old Park Lane and Hamilton Place. Prior to the Byrons' time, it and the house to the east used to be one house (you can see this from the similarity in the decorations of their front elevations) belonging to Lord Queensberry (as shown on this ).

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Lady Byron

Commemorated ati

Lady Byron

Lady Byron, 1792 - 1860, founded the renowned Co-operative School within thes...

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Other Subjects

City of London School

City of London School

Endowed by John Carpenter Town Clerk in 1442. The Corporation of London by an Act of Parliament in 1834 established the School at Honey Lane market in Milk Street. In 1883 the School moved to the V...

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Raine Foundation School

Raine Foundation School

This school was founded in what is now Raine Street by Henry Raine in 1719, though the street was then known as Fawdon Lane, Charles Street. The school provided an education for local poor children...

Group, Children, Education

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Twyford C. of E. High School

Twyford C. of E. High School

Set up by the London Diocesan Board for Schools. It opened as a result of a concerted campaign by local parents. The admission criteria for the school favour students from practising Christian or o...

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Joshua Watson

Joshua Watson

Philanthropist, educationalist and prominent lay churchman.  Born Tower Hill.  Went into his father's wine merchant business.  1811 he took the house at Clapton.  A leading member of the "Hackney P...

Person, Education, Philanthropy, Religion

1 memorial
Miss Hyatt

Miss Hyatt

Associated with the Wesleyan Schools, Leswin Road, 1883.

Person, Education

1 memorial