Samuel Houghton Cowell, 18201864 (aged 43 years)

Name
Samuel Houghton /Cowell/
Type of name
birth name
Given names
Samuel Houghton
Surname
Cowell
Birth
5 April 1820 27 39
Death of a maternal grandfather
Source: Stirnet
Death of a mother
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Robert Jenkinson
from 8 June 1812 to 12 April 1827
British King
George IV
from 29 January 1820 to 26 June 1830
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
George Canning
from 12 April 1827 to 31 August 1827
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Frederick John Robinson
from 31 August 1827 to 22 January 1828
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington
from 22 January 1828 to 22 November 1830
British King
William IV
from 26 June 1830 to 20 June 1837
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Charles Grey
from 22 November 1830 to 16 July 1834
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
William Lamb
from 16 July 1834 to 17 November 1834
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington
from 17 November 1834 to 10 December 1834
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Robert Peel
from 10 December 1834 to 18 April 1835
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
William Lamb
from 18 April 1835 to 30 August 1841
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Robert Peel
from 30 August 1841 to 30 June 1846
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
John Russell
from 30 June 1846 to 20 February 1852
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Edward Smith-Stanley
from 20 February 1852 to 19 December 1852
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
George Hamilton-Gordon
from 19 December 1852 to 6 February 1855
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Henry John Temple
from 6 February 1855 to 20 February 1858
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Edward Smith-Stanley
from 20 February 1858 to 12 June 1859
Death of a father
British Queen
Victoria
from 20 June 1837 to 22 January 1901
The Crimean War
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Henry John Temple
from 12 June 1859 to 29 October 1865
Death
11 March 1864 (aged 43 years)
Note

Born in London, he was the son of Joseph Cowell, a British actor who took him to the United States in 1822. He was educated in a military academy near Philadelphia, and worked as a child actor in the United States. He first appeared there aged nine in Boston as Crack in The Turnpike Gate, a play by Thomas Knight, in which he sang a duet with his father "When off in curricle we go". Thereafter, he appeared at many major theatres in America, hailed as "the young American Roscius". He also appeared in Shakespeare plays, notably in the Comedy of Errors playing one of twin brothers, with his father playing the other.[1]

At the age of 20, he returned to Britain, first to Edinburgh where he became a successful actor working for his uncle W. H. Murray, who managed the Theatre Royal and the Adelphi there.[1] He also succeeded as a comic singer in entr'actes, and by the late 1840s concentrated entirely on singing.[2] As his career developed, he became primarily a music hall artist, performing comical songs and burlesques in London song and supper rooms. Songs that he made famous included "The Ratcatcher's Daughter" and "Villikins and his Dinah".

Cowell became extremely popular and successful, and is credited with establishing the music hall, a new form of entertainment. He appeared twice before Queen Victoria at her court theatricals. According to music hall historian Harold Scott, Cowell was "a vividly remembered personality.. [who] ranks.. among the greatest exponents of entertainment."

He toured throughout England, staging a concert almost every night between 1857 and 1859. His schedule led to overwork, and to alcohol dependence. In 1860, he returned to America to tour, again with a very busy schedule. His health, previously robust, began to break down; his wife's diary described him at one point as "feeble as an infant... merely skin and bone", but he continued to tour in the U.S. and Canada.

He developed consumption after his return to London in 1862. He continued to act in the provinces. Eventually his failing health made it impossible for him to continue performing and, in 1863, he was declared bankrupt. He moved with his family to stay with friends in Blandford Forum, Dorset, to recuperate.

Sam Cowell died in the following March and was buried in the cemetery at Blandford Forum, where there is a monument to him erected by his friends.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Cowell

Birth
Source: Wikipedia
Death
Source: Wikipedia