Showing 21091 results

People & Organisations
GB-2014-WSA-03827 · Person · 1814-1901

BROADFOOT, ALEXANDER, brother of William Broadfoot (qv); b. 23 Feb 1814; adm. 12 Jan 1824; with firm Harvey, Brand & Co., Old Broad Street, London, warehousemen, for some years; emigrated to New Zealand 1863; m. 1st, 2 Jan 1841 Margaret, eldest dau. of William Douglas, Drummond Place, Edinburgh, Writer to the Signet; m. 2nd. 29 Apr 1863 Hannah Katherine, dau. of Edward James Charles Richardson, Mount Panther, co. Dublin, EICS Bengal; d. Amberley, New Zealand, 3 Oct 1901.

GB-2014-WSA-03828 · Person · 1816-1840

BROADFOOT, JAMES SUTHERLAND, brother of William Broadfoot (qv); b. 29 Aug 1816; adm. 15 Jan 1827; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1833; Addiscombe Coll. 1833-5; 2nd Lieut., Bengal Engineers, 12 Jun 1835; served in First Afghan War; present at assault and capture of Ghazni 23 Jul 1839; employed with Outram’s force against the Ghilzis, and explored the country between Ghazni and Dera Ismail Khan Oct - Nov 1839; killed in action at Parwandarah, near Kabul, Afghanistan, 2 Nov 1840.

GB-2014-WSA-03829 · Person · 1810-1841

BROADFOOT, WILLIAM, son of Rev. William Broadfoot, Stafford Place, Pimlico, London, Scottish Presbyterian minister, and Helen, dau. of James Sutherland; b. 10 Jul 1810; adm. 12 Jan 1824; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1826; Ensign, unattached, 8 Feb 1827; 1st Bengal European Regt., 19 Jun 1827; Lieut., 2 Jul 1833; served in First Afghan War; wounded in assault of Ghazni 23 Jul 1839; employed in raising a corps of Hazara Pioneers (“Broadfoot’s Sappers”) 1840; Political Assistant to British Resident at Kabul; killed at Kabul, together with Sir Alexander Burnes and other British officers, 2 Nov 1841.

Broadhead, Parry, 1680-?
GB-2014-WSA-03830 · Person · 1680-?

BROADHEAD, PARRY, son of Parry Broadhead, and Elizabeth --- (IGI); bapt. St. Andrew, Holborn 30 May 1680 (IGI, sic); adm.; KS 1696; left 1701.

GB-2014-WSA-03831 · Person · 1943-2018

Broadhurst, Charles Jeremy, son of Michael Broadhurst (qv); b. 20 Feb. 1943; adm. Sept. 1956 (A); left July 1961; City of Lond. Univ.; ACII 1972, FCIA 1981; man. Provident Mutual Life Assurance Assn. 1965-1995; broker Advisory & Brokerage Services 1995-2005; founder and dir. Cranfield Financial Services 2005-12; retd. 2012; m. 6 Sept. 1969 Maria Luisa Revilla Secades, solicitor, d. of Constantino Revilla; d. 25 Feb. 2018

GB-2014-WSA-03832 · Person · 1912-2004

Broadhurst, Michael, son of Edgar Charles Broadhurst, musician, of Harrow, and Ethel Web­ster, d. of John Slade, chemist, of Tenbury, Worcs.; b. 6 Dec. 1912; adm. Jan. 1927 (A); left July 1931; Unilever Ltd 1931-51; 4th Bombay Grenadiers IA 1940-5 (Maj.); Wood Harris & Co. 1951 to retirement; m. 12 Sept. 1941 Irene Laura, d. of Walter Alfred Higgins, exec. officer to Maharajah of Patiala; d. 24 Feb. 2004

GB-2014-WSA-03833 · Person · 1909-1995

Broadie-Griffith, Raymond, son of Robert Broadie-Griffith of Holyhead, Anglesey, and Clara Jane, d. of Rev. Daniel Marriott; b. 9 May 1909; adm. Apr. 1923 (R); left Dec. 1926; Bank of England 1927; RAFVR in WW2 (FO); m. 9 Oct. 1936 Stella, d. of John Charles Harcourt MB, of Stratford, London; d. 26 Apr. 1995.

GB-2014-WSA-00020 · Person · 1922-1980

Brock, Denison Saumarez, brother of Donald Alastair Carey Brock (qv); b. 27 Apr. 1922; adm. Sept. 1935 (A), (B) Sept. 1939; left July 1940; Trin. Coll. Camb., matric. 1940, BA 1948, MA 1953; RM 1941-5 (Capt.); asst master at the school 1949-78, housemaster Ashburnham 1953-63, Grant's 1963-9, Sen. Master 1972-8, retd 1978; a substantial benefactor to the school; d. 3 Nov. 1980.

GB-2014-WSA-03834 · Person · 1919-1941

Brock, Donald Alastair Carey, son of Capt. Donald Carey Brock CBE RN, of Guernsey, and his first wife Jocelyn Florence, d. of Admiral John Denison DSO RN, of Alverstoke, Hants; b. 7 Aug. 1919; adm. Sept. 1932 (A); left Dec. 1936; Cadet RN Jan. 1937, Sub.-Lieut. Apr. 1939, Lieut. July 1940; lost in HMS Bonaventure March 1941.

Donald Alastair Carey Brock was born at Alverstoke, Hampshire on the 7th of August 1919 the elder son of Captain Donald Carey Brock CBE RN and Jocelyn Florence (nee Denison) Brock of “Alvermead”, Alverstoke, Gosport, Hampshire and of 32, Troy Court, Kensington in London. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Ashburnham from September 1932 to December 1936. During his youth he was a regular visitor to Canada, where his maternal grandparents lived; he spent his summers at Muskoka and was regarded as an expert swimmer.
He joined the Royal Navy as a Cadet on a special entry cadetship in January 1937 and was appointed as a Midshipman on the 1st of January 1938. He was commissioned as a Sub Lieutenant in April 1939 and was promoted to Lieutenant on the 16th of July 1940. He was posted to the crew of the light cruiser HMS Bonaventure (31).
Convoy GA-8 set sail from Piraeus in Greece on the night of the 29th of March 1941 bound for Alexandria. The convoy was made up of the transports HMS Breconshire and HMS Cameronia, escorted by three destroyers as part of Operation Lustre, the movement of Allied troops and supplies to reinforce Greece. HMS Bonaventure, under the command of Captain Henry Jack Egerton RN, joined the convoy at the dawn on the following day. At 8.37pm that night two torpedoes were fired at HMS Bonaventure by the Italian submarine Dagabur, under the command of Captain Domenico Romano, which missed her and exploded in open water.
At 3am on the morning of the 31st of March 1941 she was sailing in a south easterly direction midway between Crete and Alexandria, some 100 nautical miles to the south-south-east of Crete, when she was hit amidships by two torpedoes fired by the Italian submarine Ambra, under the command of Captain Mario Arillo. The explosion caused extensive flooding in both engine rooms and she sank in less than six minutes. The enemy submarine was heavily depth charged during seven attacks by the escort destroyer HMAS Stuart and after the second attack the submarine broke surface before crash diving. HMAS Stuart experienced a near miss from a torpedo which exploded in the water fifty yards off her stern as she ran in for one of her attacks.
Twenty three officers and one hundred and fifteen ratings had been killed in the attack with three hundred and ten men being rescued from the sea by HMAS Stuart and the escort destroyer HMS Hereward. The convoy reached Alexandria during the late afternoon without further incident.
He is commemorated on a memorial plaque at the Cathedral Church of St James, Toronto and on the war memorial at St John’s Cemetery on the Humber, Toronto.
He is commemorated on the Plymouth Naval Memorial Panel 44, Column 2.