who is pictured in this self portrait|thumb John Cunliffe Pickersgill was born on 28 March 1819 to John Pickersgill, a banker, and Sophia
née Cunliffe; he had an elder brother, William Cunliffe Pickersgill, one of nine siblings. He was baptised on 10 June at
St Lawrence Jewry, London. Pickersgill-Cunliffe assumed Cunliffe as a second surname on 6 March 1867, having inherited the
Spaldington estate of a maternal aunt. He married Helen Hutton Dale, daughter of
Thomas Dale, Dean of
Rochester Cathedral, on 30 January 1849. The wedding, at
St Pancras New Church, was conducted by Helen's brother
Pelham Dale. They had sixteen children, including Harry Pickersgill-Cunliffe in 1858; he later became a
justice of the peace for
Ramsgate. Pickersgill-Cunliffe purchased Hooley House in
Coulsdon from the
London and Brighton Railway in 1844. He lived there until 1858. He also maintained a home in
Addingham,
West Yorkshire, and in
Portland Place, London. Portraits of Pickersgill-Cunliffe and his wife were painted by his friend the Hungarian artist
Miklós Barabás, and as of 1893 were held at Northwood Hall, London. ==Business==