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 THE ANGELO FAMILY January 6th, 1779, and married to Henry Angelo some time between 1831 and 1841, but his children appear to have been the issue of a former marriage. She died also in Wimpole Street. Henry Angelo II. is described in the Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 38, as "sociable and amiable in private life, endearing himself to all." One of his contemporaries also writes of him, " Henry seemed to me a model man in stature, mien, looks, dress, and in manners too." With such a tribute to his excellence we may safely leave him to his repose in Kensal Green. He was succeeded in St. James' Street by his son HENRY ANGELo III., or in full, Henry Charles Angelo, a record of whose birth I do not possess, but he was married as Henry Charles Angelo, bachelor, on December 26th, 1832, to Elizabeth Mary Bungay, spinster, a minor, of Brighthelm- stone, Sussex. To him, Dame Sophia Angelo, of Eton, in 1847, left the interest of her house in Carlisle Street, Soho Square-the old Carlisle House, the home for so many years of old Domenick-and he, too, it must have been who, as Charles Henry Angelo, published The Bayonet Laercise, in 1853. He is stated to have left four sons: (1) Charles Heathcote, who went to Australia; (2) Arthur Angelo, a grotégé of Lord Frederick Fitz-Clarence and Colonel Yorke's, who was born on March 23rd, 1836, was gazetted Ensign in the 6th Foot on October 13th, 1854, and Lieutenant in the 74th on January 15th, 1858. He retired on sale of his commission on March 5th, 1861, and went to New Zealand; (3) Michacl Angelo, born January 12th, 1888, a clerk in the War Office (1855-1872); and (4) Stewart Angelo, who also went to New Zealand; and one daughter, still living. The third son of Henry Angelo I. (the author, that is to say, of this volume) was- IXV1li