Princess Louisa appears at the age of twelve in Eliza Haywood's picaresque novel The Fortunate Foundlings (1744).
In 1794 he was appointed reader and traveling companion to Princess Louisa of Anhalt-Dessau (wife of Leopold III, Duke of Anhalt-Dessau).
After Princess Louisa's death in 1811, he entered the service of the king of Württemberg, was ennobled, created counselor of legation, appointed intendant of the court theatre and chief librarian of the royal library at Stuttgart.
Green and Maskelyne embarked in the Princess Louisa at Spithead on 9 September 1763 and reached Barbados on 7 November, when they set up an observatory ashore and began observations to settle the longitude of the island.
Princess Louisa (1749-1768)
He was offered the situation of gentleman-usher to the Princess Louisa, who was also still a child.
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Princess Louisa, after Princess Louisa:
Princess Louisa died, at Carlton House, London, on 13 May 1768, unmarried, and without issue, at the age of 19.
The interior is dominated by a portrait of Princess Louisa of Denmark by the painter Otto Bastr and a two-part bureau of hard polished wood.
Princess Louisa of Nassau-Usingen (presumably her maternal aunt)