Charles Frederick Hall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Frederick Hall (18 December 1815 – 9 February 1874) was an English violinist and director of the Adelphi Theatre, London.

Early life[edit]

He was born 18 December 1815 in Norwich, Norfolk, England, the son of actor William Frederick Hall and Jane Greenfield.[1] He was baptized at St Michael at Thorn, Norwich, Christmas Day, 1815.[2] He was baptized again in the Swedenborgian church in Norwich as a teenager[3]

As a boy, Hall joined the juvenile opera company of London impresario Robert William Elliston at the Surrey Theatre, London.[4] He returned home to Norwich after Elliston's death in 1831.[5] He then studied the violin with Friedrich Mueller, musical director of the Theatre Royal Norwich.[4] In 1835, at the age of 15, Hall played a violin solo, an air by Joseph Mayseder, in a benefit concert.[6] That same year, the Norwich business directory listed Hall as a professor of the violin, piano, guitar, and singing.[7] He also performed at local dances and parties with a quadrille band he founded.[8]

Moving to London[edit]

At the age of 25, Hall moved to London. There he studied at the Royal Academy of Music and gave the occasional lecture at the Holborn Literary Institution. By the early fall of 1842, Hall earned the position of second leader in the Drury Lane Theatre orchestra "after a contest of skill."[9] Hall also began composing vocal pieces while in London, including the ballads "The Soft Evening Hour," "There is a Hope," "I have dream'd of hopes defeated," and "The Inconstant."[10][11]

St James Clerkenwell - panoramio

First marriage[edit]

On 6 November 1844, Hall married Eleanor Eliza Jane "Ellen" Vining at St James Church, Clerkenwell. They lived for a time at 33 North Street, near Kings Cross station, where their only child, Charles King Hall, was born in August 1845.[12]

Concert organizer[edit]

In 1847, Hall, along with George Smith, former manager of the Theatre Royal Norwich, invited the Swedish soprano Jenny Lind to give two concerts in Norwich.[13]

Jenny Lind. From a photograph made about 1851 (2)

Hall's stepfather, George Gedge, put up 1,000 pounds for the concerts.[14] Jenny Lind performed in St Andrew's Hall, Norwich, on the 22 and 23 September 1847.[15] She gave an impromptu concert the morning of the 24th before leaving the city.[16] The professional musicians who accompanied Lind had been specially selected by Hall from the Covent Garden Opera House, Drury Lane Theatre, and the Royal Philharmonic Society.[17] Michael Balfe conducted this orchestra while Hall acted as leader.[18] Additionally, Hall performed a solo himself each evening.[19]

Two years later Hall and his business partner, William Howlett, a Norwich merchant, staged six consecutive nights of "grand concerts and balls" during the city of Norwich's annual agricultural week. Hall and Howlett booked two international singers for the concerts: mezzo-soprano Jetty Treffz and baritone Johann Baptist Pischek.[20] Hall's wife made her stage debut at the first concert, in which she sang soprano in a trio and accompanied Jetty Treffz on the piano.[21] The six concerts were a financial failure. As the Norfolk Chronicle put it, "the spirited entrepreneurs [Hall and Howlett] have sustained a heavy loss."[22] Later that same year, the Choral Society of Norwich staged a benefit concert of Handel's Messiah expressly in aid of Hall and his partner.[23]

Director of Adelphi Theatre[edit]

From 1859 to 1860, Hall held the position of musical director at the newly rebuilt Adelphi Theatre, London.[24]

Second marriage[edit]

In 1866 Hall married actress Caroline Eliza Latham Haselton, with whom he lived at 179 Hampstead Road, near Euston Station.[25]

Death[edit]

Charles Frederick Hall died on 9 February 1874 at 8 Deane Street, Liverpool, England, at the age of 58.[26] He was buried two days later in Anfield Cemetery, Liverpool. The burial register records his profession as professor of music.[27] A flat tombstone says, "In Affectionate Remembrance of Charles Frederick Hall, who died Feb 9th 1874, aged 58.[28]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Baptism record, Surrey, England, Church of England Baptisms, 1813-1912,
  2. ^ Norfolk, England, Transcripts of Church of England Baptism, Marriage and Burial Registers, 1600-1935
  3. ^ England & Wales, Non-Conformist and Non-Parochial Registers, 1567-1970.
  4. ^ a b The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Violin, by George Dubourg, 4th edition published in 1852, Robert Cocks & Co, London, pages 304-5
  5. ^ Christopher Murray, ‘Elliston, Robert William (1774–1831)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  6. ^ Norwich Mercury, 30 May 1835, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive,
  7. ^ Advertisement, Norfolk Chronicle, 18 July 1835, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive,
  8. ^ Norwich Mercury, 20 Oct. 1838, Norwich, England. The British Newspaper Archives, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  9. ^ e-book, Charles Mackie, Volume 1 (1805-1850), Norfolk Annals: A Chronological Record of Remarkable Events in the Nineteenth Century, printed in 1901, Norfolk Chronicle
  10. ^ Hull Packet, 21 Aug. 1840, Yorkshire, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  11. ^ The Musical World, Volume 17, pg. 132. J. Alfredo Novello, London.
  12. ^ Birth Certificate for Charles King Hall, born at 33 North Street, Islington, to Charles Frederick Hall, professor of music, and Eleanor Eliza Jane Hall, formerly Vining, certified as a true copy by General Register Office in the Registration District of Clerkenwell, County of Middlesex, 5 March 2004
  13. ^ Norwich News, 2 Oct 1847, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  14. ^ Norfolk Chronicle, 28 August 1847, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  15. ^ The Essex Standard, 1 October 1847, Essex, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  16. ^ The Essex Standard, 1 Oct. 1847, Essex, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  17. ^ Bury and Norwich Post, 18 Aug. 1847, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  18. ^ Advertisement, Norfolk Women in History, www.norfolkwomeninhistory.com/1800-1850/jenny-lind
  19. ^ Essex Standard 1 Oct. 1847, Essex, England. The British Newspaper Archives, www.britishnewspaperarchives.co.uk
  20. ^ Norwich Mercury, 19 May 1849, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  21. ^ Norfolk Chronicle, 21 July 1849, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  22. ^ 28 Jul. 1849, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  23. ^ Norwich Mercury, 22 December 1849, Norfolk, England. The British Newspaper Archive, www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk
  24. ^ Nelson, Alfred L, Gilbert B Cross, and Joseph Donohue. "Calendar for 1859-1860," Theatre Management and Back Stage Personnel, The Adelphi Theatre Calendar, U. of Massachusetts
  25. ^ 1871 English census,Ancestry.com
  26. ^ Death notice. England & Wales, FreeBMD Death Index: 1837-1915
  27. ^ England & Scotland, Select Cemetery Registers, 1800-2016
  28. ^ "Charles Frederick Hall (1815-1874) - Find A Grave..." www.findagrave.com. Retrieved 29 December 2020.