Hoggan 'Armadale', Edward William Francis 24.apr.1867-22.apr.1917 Scotland Fife, Dunfermline - Wales, St Asaph
singer, as stage name he used the name Armadale or Hoggan-Armadale, 1885 residing at 72 Devonshire Road in Liverpool, 1901 as theatrical manager boarding with his group in Stoke-on-Trent Staffordshire, 1908-1911 deserted by his wife residing with his 2 children at the home of his mother 24 Peel Street in Liverpool, 17.mar.1910 as unaccompanied actor he returned from Sydney Australia, at time of death probably still residing with his mother in Liverpool ; son of doctor of medicine Edward William Francis Hoggan (India, Meerut 26.dec.1844-2.oct.1884 Liverpool) and Thomasina Robertson (Edinburgh 1844-1.dec.1922 Liverpool) ; 1.sep.1900 in London he married Elinor Pilkington Crawford (Liverpool 4.nov.1879-), 11.dec.1908 he filed for divorce on the ground of adultery, 21.feb.1910 becoming final

Title Parts


[] The cycling fever. Humorous song
composed and sung by E. Hoggan-Armadale in his humorous and musical entertainment "The queer side of life"
words A. W. Shelton
pub Francis, Day & Hunter, London 1896

[] The laughing man. Humorous song
written, composed and sung by E. Hoggan-Armadale in his humorous and musical entertainment "The queer side of life"
words and music E. H. Armadale
pub Francis, Day & Hunter, London 1896

[] The dove's romance. Song
words and music E. H. Armadale
pub Paterson & Sons, London 1897

2022-03-25 00:00:00