Showing 21086 results

People & Organisations

Balfour, Reginald, 1875-1907

  • GB-2014-WSA-02562
  • Person
  • 1875-1907

Balfour, Reginald, fourth son of Archibald Balfour (q.v.); b. Feb. 4, 1875; adm. Sept. 25, 1888; Q.S. Jan. 1889; left July 1893; King's Coll. Camb., matric. Michaelmas 1894; scholar June 1897; First Winchester Reading Prize 1897; 1st class (div. 3) Classical Trip., part 1, 1897; 1st class, part 2, 1898; B.A. 1897; M.A. 1901; Fellow of King's 1900; one of the Examiners of the Board of Education May 1900; seconded to the Education Department of the Transvaal (Refugee Camps) June 1901 - Dec. 1902; Secretary of Education for the Co. of Gloucester March - April 1903; retired from the Education Department; became a journalist and wrote for the Morning Post; author and sub-editor of The Month and of the Dublin Review; joined the Roman Church; m. July 10, 1900, Charlotte Warre, daughter of Francis Warre Cornish, Vice-Provost of Eton College; d. July 19, 1907.

Balfour, Robert Drummond, 1844-1915

  • GB-2014-WSA-02563
  • Person
  • 1844-1915

BALFOUR, ROBERT DRUMMOND, brother of Edward Balfour (qv); b. 1 Mar 1844; adm. from Bradfield Coll. (G) 27 Jan 1857; QS 1858; left 1859; Magdalene Coll. Cambridge, adm. pens. 22 Apr 1863, scholar 1863, matr. Easter 1863; played cricket for Cambridge against Oxford 1863-6 and for Gentlemen v. Players 1866; a member of the London Stock Exchange, firm Capel & Co., to retirement 1910; m. 9 Feb 1876 Catherine Eliza, youngest dau. of John Donaldson, Cheswardine, Shropshire; d. 7 May 1915.

Balfour, Ronald Egerton, 1896-1941

  • GB-2014-WSA-02564
  • Person
  • 1896-1941

Balfour, Ronald Egerton, son of Brig.-Gen. Sir Alfred Granville Balfour, K.B.E., C.B., of Chelsea, by Frances Elizabeth, only daughter of Surgeon-General Sir Benjamin Simpson, K.C.I.E.; b. Aug. 24, 1896; adm. Jan. 19, 1911 (A); left Easter 1914; served in Great War I; temp. Sub-Lieut. R.N.V.R. Sept. 1, 1916; Lieut. Aug. 24, 1918; hydrophone officer; Lieut. ­ Cdr.; d. after a motor accident April 17, 1941.

Ronald Egerton Balfour was born at Hamilton, Lanarkshire on the 24th of August 1896 the youngest son of Brigadier General Sir Alfred Granville Balfour KBE and Agnes Frances Elizabeth (nee Simpson) Balfour of 7, Durham Place, Smith Street, Chelsea. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Ashburnham from 1911 to 1914.
He enlisted as an Able Seaman in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve on the 6th of May 1915 for the duration of hostilities. He was appointed as a Midshipman on the 21st of July 1915 and was posted to the depot ship HMS Vivid for service with Rear Admiral Grant at Pembroke Dockyard. He was recommended for promotion in May 1916 when he was described as “A very talented young officer”, but this was not approved as he had not reached the required age of 20. It was also noted by a superior that: - “He is of great assistance to me, clear headed, keen on his work, but not very strong physically. Has had no training in seamanship or any experience afloat but is of great use in this office.”
He was promoted to Sub Lieutenant on the 1st of September 1916 and was posted to HMS President at Southampton as a Coding Officer on the 21st of June 1917. On the 13th of April 1918 he was posted to the battleship HMS Venerable for hydrophone duties and he transferred to Gibraltar on the 25th of June 1918 where he served on the Staff as a Hydrophone Officer on special duties.
He was demobilised from the Navy on the 20th of February 1919 and went to work as an artist and illustrator, being known too as a dress and costume designer.
In 1920, the publishers Constable & Company produced the “The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam” which was illustrated by Ronald Balfour and met with great critical acclaim. The Sphere magazine edition of the 20th of November 1920 carried the following: - “Mr Ronald Balfour, who has given us the newest edition of The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, is, I am told, a cousin of Mr Arthur Balfour. What is of more importance, he is a very brilliant artist. In some of his pictures one suspects the influence of Beardsley, but then I am informed he had never seen Beardsley’s work when he made them. They are altogether a very charming interpretation of Edward FitzGerald’s great poem.”
The Scotsman edition of the 25th of November 1920 wrote: - “Mr Balfour’s designs are fancifully Oriental in character, touched with a considerable suggestion of Aubrey Beardsley, and it is possible that his rather lank divinities might not have entirely appealed to the imagination of the Persian poet. The designs, however, display a remarkable lightness and grace of line, and some of the little line drawings, printed upon the brown paper which is also employed for the letterpress, are extremely dainty, while the more elaborate designs in black and white, or in colour, printed on plate paper, are quite brilliantly executed.”
The Illustrated London News of the 27th of November 1920 wrote: - “Some of Mr Balfour’s illustrations to Omar Khayyam were done when he was little more than seventeen. Those most resembling the Aubrey Beardsley style were done before he had ever seen any of Beardsley’s”
The Times of the 9th of December 1920 wrote: - “The Rubaiyat” can be had with new illustrations by Mr Ronald Balfour (Constable, 21s. net), who, in spite of the influence of Beardsley on his drawing, gives us in a few colour plates and in many black and white drawings (some of them just touched with colour) a vision of the poem which is original and sincere if at times surprising. Even the audacity of showing us in one place a young man and woman in modern evening dress is carried off without shocking us too deeply, because it is what Mr Balfour honestly sees.” In 1928 and 1929 he participated in an expedition to the Himalayas which was chronicled in the book “Thin Air” by Constance Bridges published by Brewer and Webster of New York in 1930, and was illustrated by Ronald Balfour.
He was married at Westminster Cathedral on the 24th of April 1930 to Deirdre Phyllis Ulrica (nee Hart-Davis, later Wolfers, Brand and Inman); they lived at 24, Wellington Square, Chelsea and at Gadds Meadow, West Chiltington, Pulborough in Sussex. They had two daughters, Susan Mary, born in 1931, and Annabel Clare, born on the 20th of October 1935.
In 1934 he was appointed as the Art Director of Fox British Productions at Wembley and designed at least one costume for the actress Anna May Wong for the 1934 production “Java Head”.
On the outbreak of war he was recalled to the service with the rank of Acting Lieutenant Commander and he worked in the Map Room at the Admiralty.
His wife and daughters sailed from Liverpool to New York on board the SS Britannic on the 21st of July 1940.
On the night of the 16th/17th of April 1941 he was driving to his home in Sussex after a long day at the Admiralty. While he was driving on the Kingston bypass at Surbiton, Surrey he is thought to have fallen asleep at the wheel and was killed when his car left the road and crashed.
His brother, Major James Alfred Balfour, 1st Battalion, Highland Light Infantry, was killed in action on the 11th of January 1917.
He is not currently commemorated on the war memorial at Westminster School.
He is buried at St Mary’s Church, West Chiltington.

Balguy, Corbin, 1893-?

  • GB-2014-WSA-02565
  • Person
  • 1893-?

Balguy, Corbin, b. Nov. 8, 1893; adm. Sept. 24, 1908 (R); left Dec. 1909.

Ball, Abraham, 1828-?

  • GB-2014-WSA-02566
  • Person
  • 1828-?

BALL, ABRAHAM; b. 2 Nov 1828; adm. 26 Mar 1839; chorister. [Presumably Abraham Newland Ball, son of Abraham Newland Ball, and Mary Parr, bapt. St. Saviour, Southwark 26 Nov 1828 (IGI)]

Ball, Andrew Edward Campbell, 1940-1971

  • GB-2014-WSA-02567
  • Person
  • 1940-1971

Ball, Andrew Edward Campbell, brother of Robert Patrick James Ball (qv); b. 1 Dec. 1940; adm. Sept. 1955 (G); left Apr. 1958; called to the Bar, Lincoln’s Inn, July 1963; practised on Midland Circuit; m. 21 Aug. 1965 Veronica Eve Reti-Forbat; d. 30 June 1971.

Ball, Edmund Hugo, 1912-1992

  • GB-2014-WSA-02568
  • Person
  • 1912-1992

Ball, Edmund Hugo, son of Sir Edmund Lancaster Ball, Auditor of lndian Home Accounts, and Harriet Estelle, d. of Capt. Hugo Beaumont Burnaby RN; b. 20 May 1912; adm. April 1926 (H); left July 1929; LSE 1930-2; Bank of England 1932-9; RAF 1940-5; adm. a solicitor Feb. 1947; Hampstead Met. Bor. Council 1945-53; exec. committee Hampstead & Camden Council of Social Services 1948-61; advisory committee Jeffrye Museum 1953-85; m. 30 Aug. 1958 Theodora Mimi Lipsey, d. of David Caplan, estate agent, of Southport, Lancs.; d. 29 Nov. 1992

Ball, Humfrey Burnaby, 1916-?

  • GB-2014-WSA-02569
  • Person
  • 1916-?

Ball, Humfrey Burnaby, brother of Edmund Hugo Ball (qv); b. 1 Oct. 1916; adm. Sept. 1929 (G), KS 1931; left July 1935; Trin. Coll. Oxf., matric. 1935, BA 1938, MA 1945; Roy. Tank Regt 1939-46 (Lieut.); p.o.w. Italy, escaped to Switzerland 1943; called to the Bar (Middle Temple) 1948; Iraq Educational Dept 1947-9; advocate and solicitor Supreme Court of Malaysia 1951-.

Ball, Ian George, 1922-1991

  • GB-2014-WSA-02570
  • Person
  • 1922-1991

Ball, Ian George, son of Sir George Joseph Ball KBE, barrister-at-law, and his second wife Mary Caroline, d. of John Penkorwood of Bideford, Devon; b. 15 Mar. 1922; adm. Jan. 1936 (A), from Jan. 1937 (G); left Apr. 1938; RNVR 1944-5 (Lieut.); Lond. Stock Exchange 1946-59; later sole stockbroking agent in Sark; m. 6 Oct. 1948 Joy Elsa, widow of Flt Lieut. E. C. Ball RNZAF; d. 1991

Ball, Robert Edward, 1911-1990

  • GB-2014-WSA-02571
  • Person
  • 1911-1990

Ball, Robert Edward, son of James Ball, solicitor, of Purley, Surrey, and Mabel Louise, d. of Wil­liam Laver of Beckenham; b. 8 Mar. 1911; adm. May 1924 (R); left Dec. 1927; Lycée de Vendôme, France, 1928-9; Univ. of Lond. (Law Society's Prize Studentship) 1929-32, LLB (1st class hons); adm. a solicitor 1933; practised in London and Chester; The Queen's Royal Regt 1940-5 (Lieut.-Col.); served in France and India; MBE Jan. 1946; a Master of the Supreme Court, Chancery Divn, 1954-68, Chief Chancery Master 1969-79; CB Jan. 1977; m. 15 June 1935 Edith Margaret Barbara, d. of Patrick Edward Campbell MB, of Caterham, Surrey; d. 7 Feb. 1990.

Results 901 to 910 of 21086