Biography of William Henry Millais 1828-1899
Paternal Family Tree: Millais
In 1828 William Henry Millais was born to John William Millais and Emily Mary Evermy (age 38).
In 1860 William Henry Millais (age 32) and Judith Agnes Boothby (age 27) were married.
On 06 Apr 1862 [his wife] Judith Agnes Boothby (age 29) died.
On 07 Jun 1866 William Henry Millais (age 38) and Adelaide Jane Fraser were married.
1871 Census. 7 Cromwell Place, Kensington.
[his brother] John Everett Millais 1st Baronet (age 41)
Euphemia "Effie" Gray Lady Millais (age 42)
Mary (age 11)
Geoffrey (age 7)
John (age 6)
Sophia (age 3)
Effie (age 13)
William (age 43)
03 Apr 1881. Census. 2 Palace Gate, Kensington.
[his brother] John Everett Millais 1st Baronet (age 51)
Alice Millais
Geoffrey (age 17)
Jean Gray.
William (age 53)
Five servants.
Geoffrey William Millais 4th Baronet: On 18 Sep 1863 he was born to John Everett Millais 1st Baronet and Euphemia "Effie" Gray Lady Millais. On 30 Sep 1920 John Everett Millais 3rd Baronet died. His uncle Geoffrey William Millais 4th Baronet succeeded 4th Baronet Millais of Palace Gate in Kensington in Middlesex. On 07 Nov 1941 Geoffrey William Millais 4th Baronet died. His son Ralph Regnault Millais 5th Baronet succeeded 5th Baronet Millais of Palace Gate in Kensington in Middlesex.
On 20 Mar 1899 William Henry Millais (age 71) died.
On 24 Apr 1924 [his former wife] Adelaide Jane Fraser died.
The Diary of George Price Boyce 1861. May 29. Went down to Epsom by rail and walked to the course. Met Woolner and a brother sculptor, Burnett, [his brother] John and William Millais, Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Salomon and Miss Salomon. Tom Taylor and a lady. When the 18 horses were running for the Derby Stakes and I and Woolner and Burnett were against the ropes on the side the horses took, and we were struck by the thunder and tramping rush of their progress—that was in truth a sublime moment. In the evening adiourned to Cremorne which was densely thronged by men and women in all states of hilarity and inebricty. Met Munro and Ormsby, Poynter, Du Maurier, Millais and Jopling and others.12
Note 12. The annual great Derby Day race at Epsom, won this year by ‘Kettledrum’, was an infectiously exciting occasion. William Burnett, architect and landscape painter, whose work was mostly done from 1844-60. William (1828-99) younger brother of John Millais was a landscape painter. Cremorne pleasure gardens to the west of Battersea Bridge were celebrating Derby Day with coloured lamps, dancing, fireworks and larking. Those participating in the fun were John Ormsby (1829-95), traveller, mountain-climber, illustrator, and a regular contributor to Fraser's Magazine, the Saturday Review and other periodicals; George DuMaurier (1834-96) novelist and artist, now employed by Punch, and J. M. Jopling (1831-84) a self-taught artist and friend of Millais.