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J. H. Stocqueler (21 July 1801 - 14 March 1886) was a journalist, author and lecturer with interests in the theatre and in Indian and military affairs; he lived in England, India, and the United States of America.


Biography

Joachim Hayward Stocqueler was born 21 July 1801 in Abchurch Lane, City of London and baptized 25 August 1801 at the Portuguese Embassy Chapel in London. His father was Joachim Christian Stocqueler, son of the Italian opera singer Giovanna Sestini and her Portuguese husband José Christiano Stocqueler. His mother was Elizabeth Hayward, a daughter of Francis Hayward, physician of Hackney. He was educated at Brochard's academy in Camden. After occasional jobs in a bank and with a traveling theatre company, he trained at Chatham as a non-commissioned officer in the East India Company Army, and then sailed for Bombay in 1819 on the East Indiaman ''Hythe'', in charge of 100 men. Stocqueler purchased his discharge from the army in 1824; he had obtained a clerical job with the Chief Secretary to the Bombay Government but his increasingly radical views and interest in the press made him unpopular. He made a visit to England returning to Bombay in 1827 with printing materials. He edited the ''Bombay Courier'', started the ''Bombay Sporting Magazine'' and ''Racing Calendar'', helped with the foundation of the Bombay Public Library, but found himself seriously in debt. Leaving Bombay hurriedly in a small Arab boat bound for the Persian Gulf, Stocqueler embarked on a perilous journey during 1831 and 1832. Plans to investigate an overland route from the river Euphrates to Europe via Baghdad were foiled by war and plague and he was obliged to travel via the hazardous Buctarian mountains in Persia, apparently never before crossed by a white man. He survived sickness and attack and eventually reached the Black Sea and a ship to Odessa, where he was quarantined. He then journeyed across Europe encountering the exiled Polish general
Jan Zygmunt Skrzynecki Jan Zygmunt Skrzynecki (2/8/1787–1/12 or 12/1/1860) was a Polish general, and commander-in-chief of the November Uprising (1830–1831). Biography He was born in Żebrak, Siedlce County, in 1787, and completed his education at the Lwów Unive ...
in Linz and
Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, (Adolphus Frederick; 24 February 1774 – 8 July 1850) was the tenth child and seventh son of the British king George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. He held the title of Duke of Cambridge from 18 ...
, Viceroy in Hanover. He gave thanks for his survival when he reached London in May 1832 and published the account of his journeys in two volumes entitled ''Fifteen Months Pilgrimage through Untrodden Tracts in Khuzistan and Persia'' . Early in 1833 Stocqueler was back in India, but now in Calcutta where, with the help of the Bengali entrepreneur
Dwarkanath Tagore Dwarkanath Tagore ( bn, দ্বারকানাথ ঠাকুর, ''Darokanath Ţhakur''; 1794–1846) was one of the first Indian industrialists to form an enterprise with British partners. He was the son of Ramlochon Tagore, the founder ...
, he purchased the newspaper ''John Bull''. He changed its name to ''The Englishman'' and, as its editor, gave it a liberal focus but at times annoyed local residents. Stocqueler also published the ''Bengal Sporting Magazine'' (1833-1845) and ''East India United Services Journal''. In 1836, the Calcutta Public Library was established at his suggestion. He was involved with theatrical performances in fashionable
Chowringhee Chowringhee (also Chourangi) is a neighbourhood of Central Kolkata, in Kolkata district in the Indian state of West Bengal. Chowringhee Road (officially Jawaharlal Nehru Road) runs on its western side. A neighbourhood steeped in history, it is a ...
and with the new ''Sans Souci'' theatre there. As a journalist Stocqueler observed the
First Anglo-Afghan War The First Anglo-Afghan War ( fa, جنگ اول افغان و انگلیس) was fought between the British Empire and the Emirate of Kabul from 1838 to 1842. The British initially successfully invaded the country taking sides in a succession d ...
, but on his return to Calcutta financial problems landed him in the Debtors’ Prison there from October 1840 until February 1841. He sold ''The Englishman'' (which continued successfully) and left India on the new P&O paddle steamer ''Hindostan'' in 1843, bound for Suez. He travelled via Egypt and Italy to London, which he made his home for the next 16 years. Stocqueler was a prolific writer, making use of his experiences of India, the military and his travels. He wrote for the theatre, including the text for successful spectacles such as ''The Battle of The Alma'' and ''The Fall of Sebastopol'', both elaborately staged at
Astley's Amphitheatre Astley's Amphitheatre was a performance venue in London opened by Philip Astley in 1773, considered the first modern circus ring. It was burned and rebuilt several times, and went through many owners and managers. Despite no trace of the thea ...
in south London. He was a charismatic lecturer and provided the commentary for dioramas at the Gallery of Illustration in Regent Street: subjects included the Overland Route to Australia, the continuing story of the Crimean War, and the exploits of the
Duke of Wellington Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, (1 May 1769 – 14 September 1852) was an Anglo-Irish people, Anglo-Irish soldier and Tories (British political party), Tory statesman who was one of the leading military and political figures of Uni ...
, whose biography Stocqueler also wrote. He was less successful as a newspaperman in London, but was army editor of the ''United Service Gazette'' for several years. He tutored candidates for military colleges and was involved with the short-lived Cavalry College in Richmond. His reputation was not helped by suggestions of involvement in the illegal sale of army commissions. Despite his varied occupations, during his years in London Stocqueler was frequently in financial difficulties. He used family money (including all the assets of a wealthy maiden aunt) and faced bankruptcy on several occasions, even once using sequestration under Scottish law to evade further imprisonment in London. Then sensationally, in 1859 he ran away during a court hearing in Maidstone, Kent and escaped, under the pseudonym of Siddons, to New York. In North America he continued to write and lecture; a post at Columbia College in New York was interrupted by the onset of the Civil War but Siddons (as he was now known) offered some military instruction to Unionist recruits. He then lectured in Canada and New England,''Toronto Globe'', 26 March 1863; ''Cambridge Chronicle'', 24 October 1863 before going back to England to recruit artisans who would emigrate and take up manufacturing work in the States. Life was not easy in London, or briefly in Ireland, and in 1875 Stocqueler returned again to the United States, settling in Washington DC where found clerical work as a civil servant and gained some reputation as a Shakespearean scholar. He died on 14 March 1886, not 1885 in Bath, England, as is sometimes stated. At intervals from 1860 to his death, Stocqueler used the surname Siddons, mainly in the United States of America and, at times in Britain, claiming that he was the illegitimate son of George Siddons, son of
Sarah Siddons Sarah Siddons (''née'' Kemble; 5 July 1755 – 8 June 1831) was a Welsh actress, the best-known tragedienne of the 18th century. Contemporaneous critic William Hazlitt dubbed Siddons as "tragedy personified". She was the elder sister of Joh ...
the actress. Although apparently believed by some of his family, this claim was vehemently disputed by Sarah Siddons’s true great-grand-daughter, the actress Mary Frances Scott-Siddons.


Family life

Stocqueler married Jane Spencer in Bombay in 1828; their son Edwin Roper Loftus Stocqueler was born in the following year. A second son born in Calcutta died in infancy. Following a long separation from her husband, and time in England, Jane Stocqueler and Edwin departed for the Victorian gold fields in Australia. Edwin, an artist, was present on the Bendigo gold fields during the mid-1850s, where he painted several scenes of the diggings. Jane Stocqueler died in Bombay in 1870, and Edwin in London in 1895. In 1844 Joachim Hayward Stocqueler was married. by the Rev. Charles Wesley at St Paul’s Church Covent Garden, to Eliza Wilson Pepper of Deal, Kent. This was a bigamous marriage as he was already married to Jane. Eliza bore him four children, two of whom (Fanny and Edgar) survived. The family joined Stocqueler in New York in 1860. Fanny Stocqueler became a musical theatre artiste in America. Edgar Stocqueler became a master mariner who married in England and whose large family all emigrated to New South Wales. Eliza Stocqueler was married secondly, in New Jersey in 1868, to the disgraced British lawyer
Edwin John James Edwin John James Queen's Counsel, QC (''c.''1812 – 4 March 1882) was an English lawyer who also practised in the U.S., a Member of Parliament and would-be actor. Disbarred in England and Wales for professional misconduct, he ended his life in ...
, and then returned to England. Stocqueler also fathered three children, between 1852 and 1857, in an adulterous affair with Mrs Louise Wardroper. Two children, Arthur and Marion Stocqueler Wardroper, survived. Arthur became a clergyman and Marion was the mother of the songwriter and film actor Arthur Charles Margetson. When in the United States Stocqueler met aspiring actress Mary Agnes Cameron, nearly forty years his junior. They performed together, giving readings in Canada and New England, where he pretended she was his niece. They sailed together to England in 1864 and their son was born later that year. Two daughters followed and then in London in 1870, when he was almost 69 and Jane Stocqueler had died in Bombay, Stocqueler married Mary Cameron. In 1875, the family settled in the United States. The most famous of the three children was Frederick Lincoln Siddons, who later became a United States federal judge, and is remembered ''inter alia'' for his part in the
Teapot Dome scandal The Teapot Dome scandal was a bribery scandal involving the administration of United States President Warren G. Harding from 1921 to 1923. Secretary of the Interior Albert Bacon Fall had leased Navy petroleum reserves at Teapot Dome in Wyomi ...
and as the grandfather-in-law of the writer
Anne Rivers Siddons Anne Rivers Siddons (born Sybil Anne Rivers, January 9, 1936 – September 11, 2019) was an American novelist who wrote stories set in the southern United States. Early years The only child of Marvin and Katherine Rivers, she was born in Atlanta ...
.


Writings


Authored

* ''Fifteen Months Pilgrimage through Untrodden Tracts in Khuzistan and Persia... in the Years 1831 and 1832''. 2 vols London: Saunders & Otley, 1832. * ''The Wellington Manual, being a compilation from the dispatches of ... the Duke of Wellington, embracing his sentiments on various points relating to military discipline and administration, &c''. Calcutta: W. Rushton & Co., 1840. * ''Memorials of Affghanistan... between the Years 1838 and 1842''. Calcutta: 1843. * ''Lucretia Borgia, a romance of history''. London: William Barth, 1844 * ''The Handbook of India, A guide to the Stranger and the Traveller, and a Companion to the Resident''. London: W.H. Allen, 1844. * ''The Oriental Interpreter and Treasury of East India Knowledge : companion to The Handbook of British India''. London: C. Cox, 1848. * ''Maid Marian: the Forest Queen''. London: George Peirce, 1849. Originally serialized in 31 parts. * ''A Catechism of Field Fortifications''. London: United Service Gazette Press, 1850 * ''The Overland Companion: being a guide for the traveller to India via Egypt''. London: Wm. H. Allen & Co., 1850. * ''The British Officer, His Position, Duties and Emoluments and Privileges''. London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1851. * ''The Victory must be won''. Song: Words by J H Stocqueler. Music composed by Miss Harriet Georgina Willoughby. London: T. E. Purday, 1852 * ''The Old Field Officer; or, the military and sporting adventures of Major Worthington''. Edinburgh: A. & C. Black, 1853 * ''The Military Encyclopædia; A Technical, Biographical, and Historical Dictionary, referring exclusively to the Military Sciences, the Memoirs of Distinguished Soldiers, and the Narratives of Remarkable Battles''. London: Wm. H. Allen & Co., 1853. * ''India: its history, climate, productions, and field sports; with notices of European life and manners, and of the various travelling routes''. London: G. Routledge and Co., 1853. * ''The Life of Field-Marshal the
Duke of Wellington Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, (1 May 1769 – 14 September 1852) was an Anglo-Irish people, Anglo-Irish soldier and Tories (British political party), Tory statesman who was one of the leading military and political figures of Uni ...
''. Two volumes. London: Ingram, Cooke, and Company, 1853; Philadelphia: 1855. * ''Memoirs and Correspondence of Major-General Sir
William Nott Major-General Sir William Nott (20 January 1782 – 1 January 1845) was a British military officer of the Bengal Army, East India Company in British India. Early life Nott was born in 1782, near Neath in Wales,Lloyd (1958), pg 686. the seco ...
''. 2 vols. London: Hurst & Blackett, 1854. * ''Military Catechism and Handbook of Regimental Standing Orders'' by Anthony Walshe, revised and enlarged by J H Stocqueler. London: W. Thacker & Co., 1855. * ''The British Soldier: an anecdotal history of the British Army from its earliest formation to the present time''. London: Orr & Co., 1857. * ''The True Causes of the Revolt of the Bengal army''. London: Charles Evans, 1858. * ''A Familiar History of
British India The provinces of India, earlier presidencies of British India and still earlier, presidency towns, were the administrative divisions of British governance on the Indian subcontinent. Collectively, they have been called British India. In one ...
, from the earliest period to the transfer of the government of India to the British crown in 1858''. London: Darton, 1859. * ''The War in Italy, and all about it''. London: Henry Lea, 1859. * ''Norton’s Hand-book to Europe: or, How to Travel in the Old World''. By J H Siddons (J H Stocqueler). New York: Charles B Norton, 1860 * ''The Canadian Volunteers' hand-book : a compendium of military facts and suggestions adapted to field service''. By J H Siddons (J H Stocqueler). Toronto: Rollo & Adam, 1863. * ''The Emigrant's Friend; a true guide to the emigrant proceeding to New York, Boston, Philadelphia or the Canadas''. Liverpool: W. Gilling, 1864. * ''Yankeeland in her Trouble: An Englishman's Correspondence during the War''. By J H Siddons (J H Stocqueler). Pamphlet (no publisher), 1864. * ''A Familiar History of the United States of America from the date of the earliest settlements down to the present time''. London: Darton & Hodge, 1865. * ''A Familiar History of the British army, from the Restoration in 1660 to the Present Time''. London: Stanford, 1871. * ''A Personal History of The Horse-Guards from 1750 to 1872''. London: Hurst & Blackett, 1873. * ''The Memoirs of a Journalist''. London: Hurst and Blackett, 1873. * ''A Review of the Life and Labours of Dr. G.W. Leitner'', (reprinted from ''The Oriental''). Brighton: Tower Press, 1875 * ''The Rajahate of Saràwak'', (reprinted from ''The Oriental''). Brighton: Tower Press, 1875 * ''Utterance and Expression: a few words on the importance of high art reading and effective speaking''. By J H Siddons (J H Stocqueler). New York: Sheldon & Co., 1876. * ''The Language and Literature of Shakespeare''. By J H Siddons (J H Stocqueler). Washington: Gibson brothers, printers, 1884. * ''The Shakespearian Referee''. By J H Siddons (J H Stocqueler). Washington: W.H. Lowdermilk & Co., 1886


Minor Plays

* ''Polkamania: an apropos bagatelle in one act''. 1844 * ''The Three Fra Diavolos''. 1844 * ''A Good Name''. 1845 * ''An Object of Interest''. 1845 * ''The Seven Champions of Christendom''. 1845 * ''Robin Hood and Richard Coeur de Lion''. 1846 * ''The Marble Maiden''. 1846 * ''Crusoe the Second''. 1847 * ''Emigration, the Remedy''. 1848 * ''The Fortress''. 1848 * ''The Provisional Government''. 1848 * ''Any Port in a Storm''. 1853 * ''The Butterfly’s Ball''. 1855 * ''Dead Heart''. (as J.H. Siddons). 1860


Productions at Astley’s Amphitheatre and Elsewhere

* The Sikh Invasion. 1846 * The Camp of Silesia; or the Gypsy Queen. 1847 * The Revolt of the Harem. 1848 * The Battle of the Alma. 1854 * The Fall of Sebastopol. 1855 * England and France in the Days of Chivalry. 1855 * The Bombardment and Capture of Canton. 1858 * La Belle France and the Maid of Orleans. 1868


Newspapers edited

Bombay (1822–1830)* ''Iris''* ''Bombay Chronicle'' (formerly ''The Argus'')* ''Bombay Sporting Magazine''* ''Bombay Racing Calendar'' Calcutta (1833–1842)* ''The Englishman''* ''The Oriental Observer''* ''The Bengal Sporting Magazine''* ''The Indian Racing Calendar for 1836-37''*''The East Indian United Service Journal and Military Magazine''London (1843–1859; 1865–1875)* ''The English Gentleman''* ''Pictorial Times''* ''The Court Journal''* ''United Service Gazette'' (military section)* ''The Oriental''


References

1801 births 1886 deaths


Further reading

* * * {{cite book , last1 = Carpenter , first1 = Audrey T. , title = A Resouceful Rogue: Joachim Hayward Stocqueler (1801-1886) , publisher = FeedaRead.com , pages = 304 , date = May 2018 , isbn = 9781788763707