_J. W. Kaye’s Lives of Indian officers i_ 417–91 (1867); _R. G.
Wilberforce’s An unrecorded chapter of the Indian_ _mutiny_
(1894), _dedicated ‘To the memory of John Nicholson,’ contains
a view of his grave_; _I.L.N. xxxi_ 426, 564 (1857) _portrait_;
_Reynold’s Miscellany xix_ 349 (1858) _portrait_; _J. J.
Higginbotham’s Men whom India has known_ (1874) 329–31.
NICHOLSON, JOHN (son of a carrier between Dumfries and Galloway,
and brother of Wm. Nicholson, the Galloway poet 1782–1849). _b._
in parish of Tongland, Kirkcudbright 1777; a handloom weaver;
enlisted in the Scots Greys; publisher at Kirkcudbright to
death; proprietor of the Stewartey Times. _d._ Kirkcudbright 11
Sept. 1866, left a son a bookseller at Kirkcudbright. _M. M.
Harper’s Rambles in Galloway_ (1876) 64–6.
NICHOLSON, JOHN (1 son of rev. Mark Nicholson, president of
Codrington college, Barbadoes, _d._ 1838). _b._ Barbadoes 1809;
educ. Queen’s coll. Oxf., B.A. 1830; studied oriental languages
under professor G. H. A. von Ewald in Germany; Ph.D. of univ.
of Tübingen 1840; settled at Penrith in 1840; spent his life
in studying Eastern languages; a member of the Oriental soc.
40 years; contributed to J. Kitto’s Cyclopædia of Biblical
literature 1843–5; translated G. H. A. von Ewald’s A grammar of
the Hebrew language of the Old Testament 1836; An account of
the establishment of the Fatemite dynasty in Africa by Ali ibn
Husain ibn Ali 1840. _d._ Penrith Dec. 1886. _The Times 9 Dec.
1886 p._ 7.
NICHOLSON, JOHN. _b._ 1829 or 1830; assistant librarian in
library of society of Lincoln’s Inn, London 1843, librarian
11 Dec. 1877 to death; author of Catalogue of the Mendham
collection, being a selection of books and pamphlets from the
library of the late rev. Joseph Mendham 1871 and Supplement
1874; Catalogue of the printed books in the library of the hon.
society of Lincoln’s Inn, Supplementary volume containing the
additions from 1859–90, 1890. _d._ suddenly of heart disease
at his residence 228 Peckham rye, London 24 July 1894. _bur._
Forest hill, cemet. 28 July.
NICHOLSON, JOSHUA (son of Joshua Nicholson). _b._ Luddenden
Foot, near Halifax 26 Oct. 1812; apprenticed to a draper at
Bradford; resided at Leek, Staffs. 1837 to death, and travelled
over the United Kingdom for the silk manufacturing firm of J. &
J. Brough & Co. of Leek many years, admitted by them as partner,
title of firm being changed to J. & J. Brough, Nicholson & Co.,
he became the head of the firm which he made the most important
house in the trade; president of North Staffordshire Liberal
association many years; built the Nicholson Institute at Leek,
completed 1884 at cost of £30,000, the library contains 8,000
volumes, and 350 students attend the schools of art, science and
technology. _d._ Stockwell house, Leek 24 Aug. 1885. _W. Smith’s
Old Yorkshire ii_ 118–9 (1890) _portrait_.
NICHOLSON, SIR LOTHIAN (3 son of George Thomas Nicholson of
Waverley abbey, Surrey). _b._ Ham Common, Surrey 19 Jany. 1827;
ed. at R.M. academy, Woolwich 1844–6; 2 lieut. R.E. 6 Aug.
1846, colonel 20 July 1866, colonel commandant 28 June 1890 to
death; served in Crimean war July 1855 to June 1856, and in
Indian mutiny 1857–8; granted distinguished service reward 3
March 1881; commanded the R.E. in the London district 1861–6,
and at Gibraltar 1866–8; assistant A G. of R.E. in Ireland
1868–70; commanded the R.E. at Shorncliffe 27 Jany. 1872 to
1 Oct. 1878; lieutenant governor of Jersey 1 Oct. 1878 to 30
Sept. 1883; inspector general of fortifications and of the R.E.
8 July 1886 to 25 March 1891; general 5 May 1888; governor and
commander-in-chief of Gibraltar 26 March 1891 to death; C.B. 14
May 1859, K.C.B. 21 June 1887. _d._ The Convent, Gibraltar 27
June 1893. _I.L.N. 8 July 1893 p._ 30 _portrait_.
NICHOLSON, NANCY (only dau. of rev. John Jackson, vicar of Drax,
Yorkshire, _d._ 1810). _b._ Drax 3 May 1787; _m._ Oct. 1811 rev.
John Nicholson, formerly an assistant in Mr. Jackson’s school
at Drax, then vicar of Drax 1810 and master of the grammar
school, _d._ 1850; separated from her husband Nov. 1814; a
great termagant, very eccentric, dishonest and a miser; was
burnt in effigy at Asselby, near Howden, Yorkshire 1850; joined
the church of Rome 1850 and again left it on being asked for a
subscription. _d._ Asselby 6 Aug. 1854, leaving considerable
property to her relations. _Life of Nancy Nicholson_; _S. B.
Gould’s Yorkshire Oddities ii_ 25–95 (1874).
NICHOLSON, NATHANIEL ALEXANDER (2 son of John Armytage Nicholson
of Dublin). Matric. from Trin. coll. Oxf. 26 Oct. 1843 aged
16; B.A. 1849, M.A. 1858; acted in Frank Talfourd’s burlesque
Macbeth travestie at Oxford 17 June 1847; author of The science
of exchanges 1861, 4 ed. 1873; E pur si muove 1866; Observations
on coinage, seignorage, etc. 1868, 3 ed. 1869; Matter and motion
1870; A shilling’s worth of political economy 1871; resided at 2
Oakland villas, Rathgar, near Dublin. _d._ 15 Feb. 1874.
NICHOLSON, RENTON. _b._ Hackney road, London 4 April 1809; ed.
at Henry Butter’s school, Islington; apprenticed to a pawnbroker
1821–4; employed by various pawnbrokers until 1830; a jeweller
at 99 Quadrant, Regent st. about March 1830, became insolvent
Nov. 1831; kept a cigar shop Warwick st. Regent st.; a wine
merchant in Leicester place, bankrupt 22 April 1836; edited
a weekly paper of fast life, entitled The Town 156 numbers 3
June 1837 to 23 May 1840; started with Joseph Last and Charles
Pitcher The Crown, a weekly paper supporting the beer-sellers,
which ran to 42 numbers 28 June 1838 to 14 April 1839; opened
with T. B. Simpson The Garrick’s head and Town hotel 27 Bow st.
Covent Garden 1841, where he established 8 March 1841 the Judge
and jury society, over which he presided as ‘The Lord Chief
Baron’; gave a three days’ fête at Cremorne Gardens 31 July and
1–2 Aug. 1843, and another fête at Easter 1844; had refreshment
booths on race courses and dancing booths at fairs; removed the
Judge and jury society to the Coal Hole tavern, Fountain court
103 Strand 1844; landlord of The Garrick’s Head 1847–9, where
he introduced the poses plastiques 1847, he presided there till
July 1851; rented the Justices’ tavern, Bow st. 1849 or 1850;
landlord of the Coal Hole tavern July 1851 to 1856; presided at
the Cider Cellar tavern 20 Maiden lane, Covent Garden 16 Jany.
1858 to death; was insolvent 6 Oct. 1849 and again 23 Feb. 1856;
proprietor and editor of Illustrated London Life 25 numbers
1843; author of Boxing, with a chronology of the ring 1837;
Cockney adventures 1838; Owen Swift’s Handbook of boxing 1840
anon; Miscellaneous writings of the lord chief baron, in monthly
numbers, part 1 May 1849 with portrait; Nicholson’s Noctes,
or nights and sights of London, 11 numbers 1852; Dombey and
daughter, a moral fiction 1858. _d._ Gordon tavern, 3 Piazza,
Covent Garden, London 18 May 1861. _bur._ Brompton cemet.
22 May. _The lord chief baron Nicholson, an autobiography_
(1860) _portrait_; _C. H. Ross’s Painted Faces_ (1891) 103–8
_portrait_; _Notes and Queries vi_ 477 (1870), _vii_ 18, 286,
327 (1871), _iii_ 3–5 (1893); _Vizetelly’s Glances back i_
168–70 (1893); _The Era 26 May 1861 p._ 7.
NOTE.--Views of the Judge and Jury club are in The Bachelor’s guide
to life in London, p. 8, and in The Illust. Sporting News 21 May
1864, pp. 129, 133. A view of the Garrick’s Head booth at Epsom is
in _Illustrated London Life_ 28 May 1843, p. 126, and a view of
Nicholson’s Parlour at the Garrick’s Head is in the same paper 11 June
p. 161.
The last scene of Frank Talfourd’s burlesque Shylock, produced at
Olympic theatre 4 July 1853, represented the Judge and Jury society,
in which Charles Bender, made up like Nicholson, opened the proceedings
by calling ‘Waiter a glass of brandy and water and & cigar.’ The
Society is referred to in R. H. Barham’s Ingoldsby Legends, 18 ed. 1860
in The Ghost, vol. ii, p. 296 as follows--
It more resembled one of later date
And tenfold talent, as I’m told, in Bow st.,
Where kindlier souls do congregate;
And though there are who deem that same a low street,
Yet I’m assured, for frolicsome debate
And genuine humour it’s surpassed by no street,
When the ‘Chief Baron’ enters and assumes
To rule o’er mimic Thesigers and Broughams.
NICHOLSON, ROBERT LAWRANCE (only son of Robert Lawrance
Nicholson of Cambridge). Author of Lady Nell and other poems.
_d._ Neuilly, near Paris 18 March 1880.
NICHOLSON, THOMAS. _b._ Hunslet, near Leeds 1805; a wire worker
in Manchester; a self taught French scholar; gave instruction in
French at the Ancoats lyceum; wrote in magazines and newspapers;
author of Visions of the muse, poems, and the Gallic lovers,
a tale 1828; A peal for the people 1849; The warehouse boy
of Manchester 1852; The thunderstorm 1857; The miser’s will,
MS. 1863; some of his poems are in John Harland’s Lancashire
Lyrics 1866, and others are in Gems of thought. _d._ Woodhouse,
Lancashire Dec. 1863. _R. W. Proctor’s Memorials of bygone
Manchester_ (1880) 207–9.
NICHOLSON, THOMAS. _b._ 12 March 1777; solicitor at Hertford
1803–24; town clerk of Hertford; under-sheriff for Herts.
1820–4; a barrister in Tasmania and comr. for investigating
claims to grants of land. _d._ Hawkswell, near Bedale, Yorkshire
9 Sept. 1878. _Solicitors’ Journal 21 Sept. 1878 p._ 888.
NICHOLSON, THOMAS WILLIAM. Lieutenant 55 foot 11 Oct. 1805,
major 12 June 1839; placed on h.p. with rank of lieut. col. 28
June 1839; served in the campaign of 1814 in Holland, severely
wounded at storming of Bergen-op-Zoom; lieut. col. 88 foot 31
Dec. 1841, but sold out same day; K.H. 1835. _d._ 1883.
NICHOLSON, WILLIAM (son of Miles Nicholson, farmer). _b._
Tretting Mill, Lamplough, Cumberland 27 Feb. 1816; went to
Melbourne Oct. 1841, kept a grocer’s shop there, which became
the mercantile firm of W. Nicholson & Co. of Flinders street;
member of the city council for Latrobe ward 1848–52, alderman
1850, mayor 9 Nov. 1850; member for North Bourke in the
legislative council Oct. 1852; moved a resolution that any
electoral act should be based upon the principle of voting by
ballot 18 Dec. 1855, which he carried against the ministry by
eight votes; went to England 1856, became known as the ‘Father
of the ballot’; member of legislative assembly for Murray Jany.
1859, and for Sandridge Aug. 1859; chief secretary 27 Oct. 1859
to 26 Nov. 1860; settled the land question by the Land act of
1860; chairman of Melbourne chamber of commerce 1859. _d._ St.
Hilda, Melbourne 10 March 1865, portrait in council chamber of
Melbourne town-hall. _Heaton’s Australian dictionary_ (1879)
153, _part ii_ 158.
NICHOLSON, WILLIAM ADAMS (son of James Nicholson, a carpenter).
_b._ Southwell, Notts. 8 Aug. 1803; articled to J. B. Papworth
of London, architect July 1821–4; architect at Lincoln 1828
to death; partner with Goddard 1839–46; designed the churches
at Glandford-Brigg, at Wragby, and at Kirmond; restored many
churches; designed Worsborough hall, Yorkshire, the castle
of Bayons manor, and Elkington hall near Louth; designed the
town-hall at Mansfield; superintended rebuilding of village of
Blankney, near Lincoln, erected the Wesleyan chapel, Lincoln
1837, and the corn exchange 1847; F.R.I.B.A. _d._ Boston,
Lincs. 8 April 1853. _bur._ churchyard of St. Swithin, Lincoln.
_Dictionary of architecture vi_ 29 (1881).
NICHOLSON, WILLIAM NORRIS (eld. son of Isaac Nicholson of
Clapham common, Surrey). _b._ 1815; ed. at Charterhouse and
Trin. coll. Camb., B.A. 1838, M.A. 1841; rowed in the first
match against the Leander club 9 June 1837, and again in 1844;
barrister L.I. 11 June 1841; a visitor in lunacy 1860 to 1877;
master in lunacy, with salary of £2,000, 1877 to death; an
active member of Marylebone cricket club; author of A statement
of the case of the deposed Rajah of Sattara 1845. _d._ 43
Phillimore gardens, Kensington, London 17 Jany. 1889. _Law Times
23 Feb. 1889 p._ 322.
NICKINSON, JOHN (son of a Chelsea pensioner). _b._ London
1808; a drummer boy in 24 foot 1823, a sergeant 1825, bought
his discharge 1830; first appeared on the stage at Albany, New
York 6 Oct. 1830; played engagements at the Franklin, Park, and
Olympic theatres, New York; the original Mr. Dombey in John
Brougham’s play Dombey and Son at Burton’s theatre, New York
1848; played Haversac in Napoleon’s Old Guard, Monsieur Jacques,
and other character parts in the country; went to Canada with
a company of his own 1852; lessee of the royal Lyceum theatre,
Toronto 1852–8; stage manager at Pike’s opera house Cincinnati
to death. _d._ suddenly in a drug store at Cincinnati 9 Feb.