Mary Moore as Ida Ingot in 'David Garrick'
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Mary Moore as Ida Ingot in 'David Garrick'
after Helen Howard Hatton
photogravure, (1888)
21 1/8 in. x 15 1/8 in. (536 mm x 385 mm) plate size; 24 1/8 in. x 19 1/4 in. (612 mm x 489 mm) paper size
Purchased with help from the Friends of the National Libraries and the Pilgrim Trust, 1966
Reference Collection
NPG D38951
Sitterback to top
- Mary Charlotte (née Moore), Lady Wyndham (1861-1931), Actress and theatre manager; former wife of James Albery, and later wife of Sir Charles Wyndham. Sitter in 14 portraits.
Artistback to top
- Helen Howard Hatton (1860-circa 1904), Painter. Artist or producer associated with 1 portrait.
Events of 1888back to top
Current affairs
Charles Ritchie, President of the Local Government Board, is responsible for the Local Government Act, a landmark piece of reform that establishes 62 elected county councils and over sixty county boroughs, with responsibility for roads, bridges, drains and general county business.Five prostitutes are murdered, and their bodies mutilated, in Whitechapel, East London, by an unidentified killer who became known as 'Jack the Ripper'. The murderer was never discovered.
Art and science
Heinrich Hertz performs experiments validating James Clark Maxwell's model of electromagnetic radiation, a form of wireless energy transfer. His apparatus for generating electromagnetic waves is recognised as the first radio transmitter.The term 'arts and crafts' is coined by the bookbinder T J Cobden-Sanderson with the establishment of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society.
International
Accession of Kaiser Wilhelm II to the German throne. Wilhelm, the son of Kaiser Frederick III and Victoria, daughter of Queen Victoria, was the last Kaiser of Germany.George Eastman invents the Kodak box camera, the first commercially successful box camera for roll film, with the slogan 'you press the button - we do the rest'.
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