Henry Walton (other)
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Henry Walton (other)
Henry Walton may refer to: *Henry Walton (politician) (died 1896), New Zealand farmer and politician *Henry Walton (judge) (1768–1844), prominent citizen of Saratoga Springs, New York * Henry Walton (English painter) (1746–1813), English painter and art dealer *Henry Walton (American painter) Henry Walton (1804–1865) was an American painter and lithographer active chiefly in Ithaca, New York and California. Biography Walton was born in Saratoga Springs, New York in 1804, the son of Judge Henry Walton and Mathilda (Cruger) Yat ... (1804–1865), American artist active in Ithaca, New York See also * George Henry Walton (1867–1933), Scottish architect and designer * Harry Walton (other) {{Hndis, name=Walton, Henry ...
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Henry Walton (politician)
Henry Walton JP (1817–1896) was a New Zealand farmer and politician. Biography Walton was born in England, the son of a crape manufacturer. Together with his brother Charles, he came to New Zealand in 1840 and settled at Maungatapere near Whangārei. Henry and Charles Walton came with workers and together with Thomas Elmsley, they established farms in the area. Henry Walton's farm was on the slopes of Maungatapere hill and was called 'Maungatapere Park'. After the Flagstaff War, Walton employed former soldiers to build stone walls that are still a feature of the area. Henry Walton married Kohura, Te Tirarau Kukupa's niece, in 1846. After she died in childbirth, he married her sister, Pehi, but she died in a measles epidemic in 1856. Walton built a road between Maungatapere and Whangarei in 1858. He also became involved in coal mining and shipbuilding, and was one of the partners in the timber mill at Te Kōpuru. Walton was one of the founding shareholders in the Bank of ...
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Henry Walton (judge)
Henry Walton (1768–1844) was a judge, early landowner, and hotel owner who played a significant role in the development of Saratoga Springs, New York in the early 1800s. Walton was born in New York City on October 8, 1768, the son of Jacob and Mary (Cruger) Walton. The Waltons were a prominent New York City family. Educated in England, Walton returned to New York in about 1788 and studied law under Aaron Burr. In 1790 he moved to Ballston, New York. There he served as surrogate court judge, where he was known as Judge Henry Walton. In 1815 he built a mansion called ''Pine Grove'' on Broadway in Saratoga Springs, New York, across from the present City Center. This property was sold in 1823 to Chancellor Reuben Hyde Walworth and was later inherited by Walworth's daughter-in-law Ellen Hardin Walworth. In 1816, Walton built the estate he called "Wood Lawn," which he sold to Henry Hilton. Walton was a large land owner in the area, and donated land for the First Presbyterian Chur ...
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Henry Walton (English Painter)
Henry Walton (1746–1813) was an English painter and art dealer. Little is known of Walton's early life. In 1770, he began studying art at the St. Martin's Lane Academy, in London. Walton primarily worked as a portraitist, painting in oil and producing miniatures. Later he painted some genre art, genre works. Records show he later worked as a picture dealer and adviser to some major private collectors. References External links A Girl Buying a Ballad exhibited 1778
from Tate Collection * * 18th-century English painters English male painters 19th-century English painters English portrait painters 1746 births 1813 deaths People from Dickleburgh 19th-century English male artists 18th-century English male artists {{England-painter-stub ...
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Henry Walton (American Painter)
Henry Walton (1804–1865) was an American painter and lithographer active chiefly in Ithaca, New York and California. Biography Walton was born in Saratoga Springs, New York in 1804, the son of Judge Henry Walton and Mathilda (Cruger) Yates. He moved to Ithaca before 1836, where he is believed to have been working for a company republishing David Burr's 1829 ''Atlas of New York State''. He produced both portraits and landscapes including ''View of Geneva'' (1837), ''Henry Clay'' (1844), ''Lithographic View of Jefferson'' (1847) (Jefferson is now Watkins Glen), and oil paintings of ''Addison'' (1850) and ''Painted Post'' (1851). In 1840, during his stay in Ithaca, he was involved in a dispute over a portrait of William Henry Harrison, which political opponents claimed was actually a portrait of Andrew Jackson over which Walton had written the name ''Harrison''. In 1851 he joined the California Gold Rush, arriving in San Francisco on the steamer ''Oregon''. In Cali ...
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George Henry Walton
George Henry Walton (3 June 1867 Glasgow – 10 December 1933 London), was a noted Scottish architect and designer of remarkable diversity. Biography George Walton was born in Glasgow in 1862. He was the youngest of twelve talented children of Jackson Walton, a Manchester commission agent and himself an accomplished painter and photographer, by his second wife, the Aberdeen-born Quaker Eliza Ann Nicholson. George was a brother of the painter Edward Arthur Walton of the Glasgow School. Work in Glasgow and Scarborough His father's death in 1873 left the family in straitened circumstances, and at the age of thirteen George started work as a clerk with the British Linen Bank. With a view to a different career, he attended art classes in the evenings at the Glasgow School of Art and with Peter McGregor Wilson (1856–1928) at the short-lived ''Glasgow Atelier of Fine Arts''. When he was commissioned to redesign one of Miss Cranston's tea rooms at 114 Argyle Street in Glasgow, Wal ...
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