Charles Addington Hanbury (bapt. 16 September 1828[1] – 13 December 1900) was an English brewer from the Hanbury brewing family and a master of the Brewers' Company in 1857.[2]
Hanbury was born in Upper Clapton, Hackney, London,[3] to Robert Hanbury, a partner for more than 50 years in the brewers Truman, Hanbury, Buxton & Co., and his wife, Emily Hall Hanbury.[1]
In 1853, he married Christine Isabella MacKenzie in Inverness.[4] [5] One of their sons was the geographer, traveller and author, David Theophilus Hanbury.[6]
In 1859, Hanbury was commissioned as a lieutenant in the 12th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers, a unit got up by Wilbraham Taylor of Hadley Hurst, a gentleman usher to Queen Victoria who became a captain in the unit. They had premises in High Street, Barnet.[7]
Around 1861, he bought Mount Pleasant in East Barnet.[8]
The London Metropolitan Archives contain a number of leases entered into by Hanbury in the 1880s on behalf of Truman, Hanbury, Buxton & Co.[9]
Hanbury died in a riding accident when he was thrown from his horse and broke his neck while hunting with the Warwickshire Hounds at Grandborough near Rugby.[10]