Brochner 'St. Amory', Carl Milberg 13.jul.1850-21.jul.1926 England Yorkshire, Hull - Suffolk, Lowestoft
violinist, cellist, 1884 BA and 1888 MA from Jesus College University of Cambridge, 1881 as undergraduate at Jesus College residing with wife, 3 children and 5 servants (head nurse, under nurse, upper housemaid, under housemaid, cook) at 4 Salisbury Villas in Cambridge, by 1890 he used the surname St. Amory, 1893 teacher violin and cello and practice of concerted music for students of piano, violin, cello at 26 Alexandra Road in Bedford Bedfordshire, 1897 actor at the Haymarket Theatre, 1901 as actor residing with wife, 3 children and 2 servants (housemaid, cook) at Lurke Street in Bedford, 1903 retired from the stage, 1911-1913 as secretary at Gordon Dental Hospital residing with wife, 2 children and no servants at 33D London Road in London Forest Hill, he died at Taylors Farm near Lowestoft ; son of corn merchant Carl Christian Brochner Esq. (Denmark, Sovind 22.dec.1814-12.jun.1882 France, Contrexeville) and Berta Juliane Maria Milberg (Germany, Hamburg 11.oct.1824-29.sep.1892 Bedford) ; 6.jun.1872 in Copenhagen he married Maria Christiane Puggaard (1853-1.mar.1877 Copenhagen) ; c1877 he married Amory Helene Hingelberg (St Thomas West Indies 1858-20.may.1888) ; 9.nov.1892 in Copenhagen he married Harriet Emilie Krieger (Copenhagen 5.nov1859-)

Title Parts


[] Four songs. Voice and piano
verses by Hamilton Aide (1826-1906)
pub Joseph Williams, London 1895
ms Royal College of Music, London
[] 1 - The morning and evening star
[] 2 - Hymn to the night
[] 3 - The music of the sea
[] 4 - From a battlement
[] Hymn to the night
no.2 from Four Songs 1895
pub J. Williams, London 1909

[] The music of the sea
no.3 from Four Songs 1895
pub J. Williams, London 1909

[] Golden hair "This morning at the dawn of day". Song
words from the French
pub Reid Bros., 436 Oxford Street, London 1882/1897

[] It was a lover and his lass. Song
words William Shakespeare
pub Reid Bros., 436 Oxford Street, London 1882/1897

[] Haunted. A Song
verses by M. Byron
pub J. Williams, London 1899

[] Nothing matters. Song for baritone
words E. H. Clark
pub J. Williams, London 1909

[] For Scotland and the King. Song
words H. de Hamel
pub J. Williams, London 1915

[] Anti-Barb. Song
words L. Johnston
pub West & Co., London 1916

2021-11-06 00:00:00