Regency Ball



Regency women, at least those who could afford the beautiful ball gowns in these images, would have made, or had those gowns made, personally and individually. The result would have been gowns that fit well and made the most of any given woman's figure. Learn Regency Dances, Regency Dancing and Regency Dancers. Close × Dance Animations List of Dances Dance Steps Music CDs History Etiquette Regency Style Upcoming Balls Dance Societies What to wear Interpretation Research Papers About Us. Regency Ball Gown - Women's 12 - Jane Austen Dress - Emma Dress - Pride and Prejudice - Ready to Ship - Sample Sale stitchinaddiction1. From shop stitchinaddiction1. 5 out of 5 stars (24) 24 reviews. Most ball gowns would have been made of silk but today Regency ball gowns can be made of silk, taffeta, organza, voile, cotton or modern blends. Sari material is another option. The lighter the color and the more transparent the fabric, the better. The late Regency pictures of people and fashion come from The Lady’s Monthly Museum, from the years 1824 and 1825 and Repository of Arts, Literature, Fashions &c from the year 1824. If you click on the images, you will be linked to the correct journal where you can find a description of the fashions.

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(Redirected from The Golden Ball (dandy))

Edward Hughes Ball Hughes (28 May 1798 – 10 March 1863),[1] also known as 'The Golden Ball', was an English dandy known for his extravagant lifestyle.[2]

Life[edit]

Hughes was born in Lambourne, Essex, and was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.[3] He spent some time in the 7th Hussars but left army life to enjoy his fortune. He soon attracted attention for his wealth and extravagance, with etchings of him publicly available as early as 1819. Hughes was a handsome man who was known for his chocolate-coloured coach and his invention of the black cravat.

In 1823 he suddenly married Maria Mercandotti, a 16-year-old Spanish dancer, who left a theatre full of patrons waiting in vain to see her. Ainsworth quipped, 'The damsel is gone, and no wonder at all / that, bred to the dance, she is gone to a Ball.' They later separated and were divorced in 1839.

In 1824 Hughes purchased Oatlands Palace from the Duke of York (although the sale was not final until 1827 due to problems with the deed). The later sale of the grounds for housing lots (creating the modern community of Oatlands) was a profitable venture for Hughes.

Hughes lost enormous sums through extravagant living and gambling; a pamphlet published in 1824 warned him by name about gamblers who would take his money.[4] He was forced to move to France in 1829 to avoid his creditors, and his affairs were left in the hands of his solicitors, Freere and Forster, who sent him an allowance to live on.[5] He still had substantial sums; according to a government report, he was one of the foreign investors in the Second Bank of the United States in 1832, holding $51,000 in stock.[6]

In 1834 Hughes came into the possession of the manor of Sidmouth.[7] In 1835 he helped finance a new sea wall for the town.[8] In 1839 a law was passed by Parliament allowing Hughes to tear down the market and build a new one. An 1846 law confirmed that the new market had been built and that no one could sell anything in the manor except at the market, unless they paid a toll at the market building.[9]

Family[edit]

Many stories were told about Hughes' origins and family, most of them untrue.[10] His grandmother Ruth (c. 1731–1800), after her first husband, a Mr. Ball, had died, married Admiral Edward Hughes. Admiral Hughes advanced the career of his wife's eldest son, Captain Henry Ball (c. 1754–1792), who served under him as captain of his flagship Superb in India, but Henry predeceased him.[11] Admiral Hughes died in 1794 without issue, and Edward Hughes Ball, son of Ruth's second son David Ball (c. 1760–1798),[12] inherited the Hughes money (40,000 pounds a year, an enormous fortune) upon turning 21; he adopted the Hughes last name at that time.[13] Ball Hughes' mother's name was Sarah; she later remarried, to a man named Thomas Johnson.[14]

Hughes' older sister Catherine Ball was a socialite, journalist, and novelist who eventually styled herself the 'Baroness de Calabrella' after acquiring property in Italy.[15] She married an older man, the Rev. Francis Lee, at the age of 16 in 1804, without her mother's permission, and was separated from him in 1810 on charges of adultery; her lover, Captain George de Blaquiere, was successfully sued by Lee for criminal conversation.[16] She was later a friend of the Countess of Blessington and married the Countess' first patron, Thomas Jenkins. Another sister, Ruth, married Houlton Hartwell, son of Admiral Francis Hartwell, in 1812; he was one of the Prince Regent's chaplains.[17][18] A third sister, Sydney, married Sir John Ignatius Burke, 10th Baronet of Glinsk.[19][20] There was a fourth sister, Elizabeth Ball. Despite the similarity in names and dates, the sculptor Robert Ball Hughes is unrelated.

Hughes had several relationships while in France, although it is unclear whether he actually remarried. With actress Eliza Breugnot Monborne he had three children: Edward Seymour (1831–1867); Adeline Eleanor (1833–?), and Sydney Matilda (1835–1908). Edward Seymour died in 1867 in Dieppe after his horse fell on him;[21] d'Orsay had made a portrait of him as a young man. Adeline married Ernest Louis Auguste Graves Van der Smissen (1824–95), the brother of Alfred Baron Van der Smissen (1823–95), a notable Belgian general.[22] Sydney Matilda married first Emile Lagarde, and after his death Louis Alphonse Evrard in 1881.[23] In 1871 Sydney and a companion, Julien Garnuchot, were convicted of defrauding creditors, including an elderly field marshal named Baron Schwarz-Wieler, and sentenced to prison and labour.[24]

Regency Ball Abq

Edward Hughes Ball Hughes later had several children with Anne Henriette de Dauvet: Edward Edmund Hughes Ball Hughes (1850–?) and Kate Henrietta Edwardine Hughes Ball Hughes (1851–?). He died at St. Germains, France, aged 64.

Regency Ballroom

Portraits[edit]

Ball

A drawing of Hughes by Alfred d'Orsay is in the National Portrait Gallery in London. d'Orsay and Hughes were acquainted; Hughes' sister Catherine married Thomas Jenkins, an early patron of the Countess of Blessington, d'Orsay's friend and patroness,[25] and Hughes attended d'Orsay's funeral.[26] A color plate of Hughes, Mercandotti, her former patron the Earl of Fife, and others appears in Bernard Blackmantle'sThe English Spy (1825/6).[27] There exist a number of contemporary caricatures of Hughes and his wife; for example, Richard Dighton published an etching of Hughes in 1819 titled The Golden Ball,[28] and an 1825 caricature by Robert Cruikshank satirised Hughes' wife's new-found respectability.[29] Hughes was included in a 1932 set of 'Dandies' cigarette cards published by Player's.

In literature[edit]

As a colourful figure of the Regency period, Hughes is mentioned in Georgette Heyer's Sylvester, False Colours and Cotillion along with Jeffery Farnol's The Amateur Gentleman, among other works set in the Regency period.

References[edit]

  1. ^Notes and Queries, Vol. 5, January–June 1870, p. 92
  2. ^Georgian Index bio of Hughes
  3. ^'Ball [post Ball-Hughes], Edward Hughes (BL815EH)'. A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^A letter to Ball Hughes Esq. on club house and private gaming..., 'Admonisher', London, J. Evans, 1824
  5. ^Celebrities of London and Paris, R. H. Gronow, London, 1865, p. 112-3
  6. ^Hazard's Register of Pennsylvania, January–July 1832, Philadelphia, p. 110
  7. ^legal document detailing the ownership
  8. ^History, gazetteer and directory of the county of Devon, William White, Sheffield, 1878-9, p. 709
  9. ^The Law Times Reports, Vol. 84, 10 August 1901. p. 796
  10. ^For example, Gronow, who knew Ball at Eton, thought that Admiral Hughes was his uncle. There was also a rumor that he was the son of a slopseller – see Modern English Biography, Frederic Boase, Truro, Netherington and Worth, 1892, p. 147
  11. ^Henry Ball obit notice, Aug. 9, 1792
  12. ^Views of the most interesting collegiate and parochial churches in Great Britain..., 1824, John Preston Neale with John Le Keux, entry for 'St. Mary and All Saints, Lambourne, Essex'
  13. ^Records of the Chicheley Plowdens, Walter Chicheley-Plowden, London, 1914
  14. ^Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of Chancery During the Time of Lord Chancellor Eldon, Volume I, Francis Vesey and John Beames, London, Reed and Hunter, 1813, p. 292
  15. ^Catherine Ball Hughes at Victorian Research
  16. ^The Sporting Magazine, Volume 36 (1810), p. 128-132
  17. ^Dod's peerage, baronetage and knightage, of Great Britain and Ireland..., 1865, entry 'Hartwell', p. 313
  18. ^Debrett's Baronetage of England, ed. William Courthope, London, 1839, p. 318-9
  19. ^genealogy from Peerage.com showing marriage
  20. ^The Peerage Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland..., Charles L. Dodd, London, 1844, p. 55
  21. ^The Argosy, 1 December 1867, p. 70
  22. ^Van der Smissen genealogy
  23. ^The London Gazette, May 25, 1909, notice to creditors, p. 4013
  24. ^'How They Do These Things at Vienna', Cornelius O'Dowd, in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 110, p. 449-457
  25. ^bio of Blessington
  26. ^The beaux and the dandies: Nash, Brummell, and D'Orsay with their courts, Clare Armstrong Bridgman Jerrold, New York, 1910, p. 383
  27. ^Notes and Queries, Vol. 5, January–June 1870, p. 452
  28. ^A page of Dighton etchings, with The Golden Ball at the top
  29. ^Cruikshank's A Visit to Court, 1825
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