Thomas Oldham Barlow

These include Dona Pepita (1858); The Prison Window (1860); The House of Commons in 1860 (1866); Prayer in Spain (1873); Highland Breakfast (1877); and the celebrated La Gloria (1877).

Barlow was the executor of Phillip's will, and drew up a catalogue of the collection of the artist's works which were shown at the Third Annual International Exhibition in London in 1873.

[1] / In 1856, Barlow engraved John Everett Millais's Huguenot, and in 1860 his My First Sermon, and during the latter part of his life was largely engaged upon that artist's works.

Portraits of John Bright, Sir William Sterndale Bennett, Gladstone, Tennyson, Cardinal Newman, Lord Salisbury, and other public characters, painted by Millais for the art dealer "Agnew's", were all engraved by Barlow.

[1] Barlow died at his house, Auburn Lodge, in Victoria Road, Kensington, on 24 December 1889, and was buried in Brompton cemetery.

Portrait of Richard Quain (engraving after Daniel Maclise )