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Walker, Benjamin, 1753-1818
n96087719 · Person · 1753-1818

Benjamin Walker was born in 1753 in London, England, and died in 1818 in Utica, New York. At a young age, he entered a merchant house which brought him to the United States. Walker settled in New York City and resided with a merchant. On August 30, 1784, he married a Quaker woman named Mary Robinson, and they had one daughter named Eliza (1789-1850), whom they raised along with Mary’s niece. Before this, Walker joined the Revolutionary War and was appointed Captain of the Second New York Regiment. He then worked as the First Secretary to the Governor of New York as a broker. Walker was formally adopted by Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, a Prussian military officer, and was made his heir. According to the US Census, Walker owned two enslaved people in 1800. Walker Street in Manhattan was named in his honour.

Person · 1821-1902

Alfred Edmund Walker was born on June 2, 1820 or 1821, in London, England.

He was a paleontologist. He was interested in the study of rocks and fossils of the Hamilton district. In 1895, he presented his collection of fossils acquired over a period of thirty years to the Geological Section of the Hamilton Association for the Advancement of Literature, Science and Art. He repeatedly served as Vice-President of the Association and was also President of its Geological Section. A newly discovered fossil sponge Acaulospora Walkeri was named in his honour.

In 1845, he married Fanny Murton (1824–1907). He died on April 17, 1902, in Hamilton, Ontario.

Walery
no2007069200 · Corporate body · Approximately 1857-1939

Walery was a series of photography studios run by Count Stanislaw Julian Ostrotog (1836-1890) and his son, Stanislaw Julian Ignacy Ostrorog (1863-1929). Born into Polish nobility, Ostroróg the father migrated to London in approximately 1856, and then Paris in 1857, after serving in the Ottoman army. He opened photography studios in Marseilles and Paris, and later one in Nice in 1879. He sold these in approximately 1884 to open a studio in London. The studios specialized in portraiture, especially of the upper classes, and the studio's customers included Queen Victoria. Upon his death in 1890, Ostroróg's son took over the business, having learned photography from his father. He eventually partnered with theatrical photographer Alfred Ellis (1854–1930) as "Ellis and Walery." In 1900, Ostroróg moved to Paris and opened a studio there, specializing in portraits and cabinet cards of theatre and cabaret stars.He died in 1929.