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The Viscount Galway, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 5 January 1899
George Edmund Milnes Monckton-Arundell was a British Conservative politician and courtier. Pictured here in his murder clothes.
I drew my previous dog named Alvin, Next to my doggy oc, Leslie! Alvin is the reason that Leslie is a thing till today!
Soooo...I drew a dedication art for him <3 I really miss him, I hope hes doin well in heaven or somehwere
Happy birthday @fuslie @fooozley ❤️ I hope it is the greatest birthday you could ever imagine surrounded by friends and family because we all love you and adore you! ❤️🎂💕
(Surprise patronus socko cameo)
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#fusliefanart #happybirthdayleslie
HBD LESLIEEE!! Wishing you a very great birthday! Have this scuffed art as my gift lol🥳❣
#fusliefanart
Horace Farquhar, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 2 June 1898
He was a British financier, courtier and Conservative politician. He died as an undisclosed bankrupt. He had no children, and all his titles became extinct.
Mr Alfred Cooper, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 30 December 1897
He was a fashionable English surgeon and clubman of the late 19th century whose patients included Albert Edward, Prince of Wales. He is an ancestor of David Cameron, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
Frederic Andrew Inderwick, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 30 July 1896
He was an English lawyer, antiquarian, and Liberal Party politician. As a barrister he mainly took divorce cases, which at the time was thought to have impeded his progress to judge.
"Our Indian Policy", Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 18 September 1873.
Joseph Keppler here ridicules the U.S. Indian policy through the caricature of alleged frauds in Indian supplies from peace commissioners.
Front cover of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper for December 15, 1860, featuring Mary Todd Lincoln with sons William (left) and Tad (right)
Rudolf Chambers Lehmann, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 17 January 1895
He was an English writer and Liberal Party politician. As a writer he was best known for three decades in which he was a major contributor to Punch as well as founding editor of Granta magazine.
Lord Charles Beresford, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 3 January 1895
Charles William de la Poer Beresford was a British admiral and Member of Parliament. He was considered by many to be a personification of John Bull, indeed was normally accompanied by his trademark, a bulldog.
Mr R Kipling, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 7 June 1894
Joseph Rudyard Kipling was an English novelist, short-story writer, poet, and journalist. He was born in British India, which inspired much of his work.
Robinson Ellis, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 24 May 1894
He was an English classical scholar. He is buried in St Sepulchre's Cemetery, Jericho, Oxford.
Mr G Alexander, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 22 February 1894
George Alexander, born George Alexander Gibb Samson, was an English stage actor, theatre producer and theatre manager.
Harry Lawson Webster Lawson, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 16 November 1893
He was a British newspaper proprietor. He was originally a Liberal politician before joining the Liberal Unionist Party in the late 1890s.
Mr W Allan, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 26 October 1893
William Allan was a Scottish Liberal Party politician and engineer. He published a number of books of traditional Scottish poetry.
Thomas Henry Bolton, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 12 October 1893
He as an English solicitor and a Liberal politician. He was admitted a solicitor 1869 and became a partner in the firm of Bolton & Mote, of Gray's Inn, London.
Lord Morris of Spiddal, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 14 September 1893
Michael Morris was an Irish lawyer and judge. He was Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland from 1887 to 1889 and sat in the House of Lords as a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary from 1889 to 1900.