Sorry but I have to say that when using the suffix esq. the prefix Mr. should never be used. It's one or the other. Just something I remember from school. As you can see I havn't wasted my life.
After reading this thread I've decided to change the way I will refer to Adam Hammill to "His Royal Highness the Right Honourable Admiral Lord General Sir Adam Hammill of Barnsley ESQUIRE"
I'd love to comment upon this but unfortunately O Level English was as far as I got. Looks like 1 or 2 commas and capitals missing but I could be wrong.
I've sorted the capitals but I'm struggling with the commas. We're knackered if we need some full stops, as Tyrone has nicked the lot.
I got an A for English at A-Level, really weird because I find myself Googling the spelling of the most simple words at times, I think we set our educational bar far too low.
when i went to school we wrote on slate ...lol ..bye the way for all the nosey buggers MR A White esq = Management Requests Andrew White Expands Scheduled Questions and your all non the wiser ....pmsl