OBITUARY
DEATH OF SIR CHARLES WYNDHAM
A NOTABLE STAGE CAREER
Sir Charles Wyndham, the actor, died at 1:15 yesterday morning, in his 82nd year.
He had been confined to his bed for a week.
Sir Charles was about as usual last Friday week, but on the evening of that day he became unwell.
Influenza developed, and he gradually weakened until on Saturday he became unconscious.
Lady Wyndham was with him when he died.
Charles Wyndham, the son of a London doctor, was born at Liverpool in March, 1837, and was educated at St. Andrews, Neuwied, and King's College, London, to follow in his father's profession.
His determination to go on stage was kept in check by his father until he should have taken his degree, and he duly became M.R.C.S. London.
He was free then to become an actor, having been for years an amateur player; but on the outbreak of the Civil War in America he crossed the Atlantic, and after some difficulty he obtained, thanks to the help of P. T. Barnum, an appointment as surgeon in the Federal Army.
He was present at the battles of Chancellorsville, Fredericksburg, and Gettysburg, besides going all through the Red River campaign under General Banks.
His career as army surgeon was broken by a brief and
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unsuccessful appearance on the stage at New York, in a company which included John Wilkes Booth (son of Junius Brutus Booth, and brother of Edwin Booth), who later assassinated President Lincoln.
In 1865 he returned to England, and appeared in Manchester in a play of his own composition, and in the following year obtained an engagement at the Royalty Theatre, under Patty Oliver, where he played in Burnand's Black-eyed Susan and other famous burlesques and plays.
In those days he was an admirable dancer; and lightness and grace of movement were always characteristic of him.
It used to be said that he never carried a walking-stick, so that his hands and wrists might remain lissom.
Engagements with Miss Herbert at the St. James's Theatre, and in Manchester with the Calverts, for whom he played some of the lighter Shakespearian parts, led on to his inclusion in the famous company at the Queen's, Long-acre, which comprised also Toole, Irving, Lionel Brough, John Clayton, and Henrietta Hodson.
In 1868 he made a little excursion into management on his own account, and in 1869 he returned to America, with a repertory including The School for Scandal, Caste, The Heir-at-Law, and Still Waters Run Deep.
During this long visit he travelled all over the United States, in considerable discomfort but with much success; and it was in these four years that he picked up the play Saratoga, which, adapted for the English stage by Frank Marshall and renamed Brighton, was the founder of his fortunes and set him off upon a theatrical course in which he was unrivalled.
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