Person    | Male  Born 22/3/1884  Died 9/5/1968

Edward Arthur Last-Smith

Edward Arthur Last-Smith

Edward Arthur Last Smith was born on 22 March 1884 in Torquay, Devon, the second of the five children of Edward Last Smith (1856-1937) and Emily Phyllis Smith née Dixon (1863-1936). His father was a physician and surgeon. The 1891 census shows him living at Mayfield, St Marychurch Road, Torquay, with his parents, elder sister Muriel Phyllis Last Smith (1882-1969), his brother Sinclair Osborne Last Smith (b.1886), his maternal grandmother Emily Dixon, a butler, a cook and a housemaid.

His two younger sisters were Eileen Isabel Last Smith (1894-1965) and Phyllis Gertrude Last Smith (1897-1902). By the time of the 1901 census the family were using Last-Smith as their surname and he is shown as a schoolboy boarder at Blundell's School, Tiverton, Devon, residing at North Close, Tiverton. 

On 7 January 1902 he was indentured and made an apprentice of Arthur Wesley Townsend, a Citizen and Haberdasher of London to serve for four years and was made Free of The Haberdashers Company on 6 February 1906. In early 1907 he married Alice Hubertha Pelegrina Milner (1881-1927) in the Kensington registration district and they had one son Edward Sinclair Last-Smith (1907-1907) who died in infancy.

The 1911 census shows him as a solicitor living at Flat H, 63 Drayton Gardens, South Kensington, with his wife who was shown as a British subject by parentage having been born in British Guiana (now Guyana). Electoral registers from 1919 to 1936 show him registered at both 63H Drayton Gardens and 5 Grey's Inn Square, Holborn and the London Gazette informs that the solicitor's partnership of H. E. Griffith and Son at 5 Grey's Inn Square that he had with Edward Arthur Bayly Griffith was dissolved by mutual consent on 31 December 1936.

He was also on the voters register for his residence at Hazelbury Cottage, New Street, Painswick, Stroud, Gloucester, from 1926 to 1962. The 1939 England and Wales Register confirms him at this address as a solicitor and also records that he was a member of Air Raid Precautions in Westminster. The plaque in Pitfield Street, Islington, confirms that he was the Master of the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers in 1952.

He died, aged 84 years, on 9 May 1968 at the Bath Club, Brook Street, Westminster and when probate was granted on 5 June 1968 his effects totalled £42,387. He was buried on 22 May 1968 in Plot A, Grave 1127, in Littlehampton Cemetery, Horsham Road, Littlehampton, BN17 6LX.

Credit for this entry to: Andrew Behan.

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Edward Arthur Last-Smith

Creations i

Haberdashers Place - 1952

Haberdashers Place was destroyed by enemy action on 11th May 1941 and re-buil...

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Other Subjects

Watch House in Hampstead

Watch House in Hampstead

A watch house was an early form of local police station. Soon after the formation of the Hampstead police force in 1829, prisoners were kept in the Watch House at the top of Holly Walk.

Building, Law

1 memorial
Police Station, Upper Street, Islington

Police Station, Upper Street, Islington

Police Station at 277 Upper Street, Islington, N1.The picture source website also has a photograph of this very lamp being fixed to the Upper Street building in 1938.

Place, Armed Forces, Law

1 memorial
Bridewell Palace / Prison

Bridewell Palace / Prison

Built by Henry VIII, who lived there 1515-23. It deteriorated so that Edward VI gave it to the City of London who then used it as a prison, hospital (actually school) and workrooms. "Bridewell" was...

Building, Architecture, Law, Royalty

2 memorials
Edwin Bedford

Edwin Bedford

Co-executor, with Charles Jellicoe, to Mary Gray Ratray who died in 1873. He was a solicitor who lived at 5 Royal Crescent and worked at Haberdasher's Hall. We were shocked to read in The Law Time...

Person, Law

1 memorial
transportation to Australia

transportation to Australia

One of the (many) supposed origins of the word 'pom' for an Englishman, is that convicts were branded with the initials of 'Prisoner of Millbank'.

Event, Law, Transport, Australia

5 memorials