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            1548 Registo de autoridade resultados para Grant's

            Mansel-Jones, Herbert Meredyth, 1866-1928
            GB-2014-WSA-11778 · Pessoa singular · 1866-1928

            MANSEL-JONES, HERBERT MEREDYTH, eldest son of His Hon. Herbert Riversdale Mansel-Jones, Chase Cliffe, Whatstandwell, Derbyshire, County Court Judge, and Emilia, dau. of John Davis, Cranbrook Park, Ilford, Essex; b. 27 Mar 1866; adm. 25 Sep 1879 (G), exhibitioner 1880; QS 1881; left Easter 1884; London Univ.; Principal, Seafield Park Coll., Crofton on the Solent, Hampshire; served in 1914-8 war; temp. Capt., General Staff Officer 3rd grade 1 Aug 1915; Head Censor, Rouen; mentioned for valuable services; m. 2 Jun 1908 Mary Catharine, eldest dau. of William Henry Deverell, Stockbridge, Hampshire; d. 14 Apr 1928.

            Marryat, Ernest Lindsay, 1840-1916
            GB-2014-WSA-11842 · Pessoa singular · 1840-1916

            MARRYAT, ERNEST LINDSAY, brother of Arthur Marryat (qv); b. 15 Feb 1840; adm. 29 Jan 1852 (G); left 1854; Addiscombe Coll. 1857-9; Cadet, EICS Bombay 1859; 1st Lieut., Bombay Engineers 10 Jun 1859; Capt., 14 Dec 1870; Maj., Royal Engineers 31 Dec 1878; retd. with rank Lieut. -Col., 10 Jun 1886; served in many positions in Indian Public Works Dept.; Manager, Punjab Northern State Railway Nov 1880; m. 10 Mar 1866 Elizabeth, dau. of Maj. -Gen. Edward Patrick Lynch, Bombay Army, formerly EICS Bombay; d. 3 Apr 1916.

            Marsh, Matthew Henry, 1810-1881
            GB-2014-WSA-11853 · Pessoa singular · 1810-1881

            MARSH, MATTHEW HENRY, eldest son of Rev. Matthew Marsh, Canon Residentiary of Salisbury, and Margaret, dau. of Rev. Peter Bellinger Brodie, Rector of Winterslow, Wilts.; b. 12 Sep 1810; adm. 3 Jun 1822 (G); KS 1824; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1828, matr. 16 May 1828, Westminster Student, subsequently Faculty Student; BA 1833; MA 1835; adm. Inner Temple 25 Jan 1833, called to bar 29 Apr 1836; KC Duchy of Lancaster Dec 1837 – Jan 1840; emigrated to Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, 1840, where he made a large fortune and was a member of the Legislative Council 1851-5; returned to England 1855; MP (Liberal) Salisbury 1857-68; DL JP Wiltshire; m. 25 Jul 1844 Eliza Mary Anne, sister of Sir William Lockyer Merewether (qv); d. 26 Jan 1881.

            Martindale, Andrew Henry Robert, 1932-1995
            GB-2014-WSA-11919 · Pessoa singular · 1932-1995

            Martindale, Andrew Henry Robert, son of Rev. Henry Martindale, Rector of Ashwell, Herts, sometime Archdeacon of Bombay, India, and Augusta Celia, d. of Very Rev. Andrew Ewbank Burn, Dean of Salisbury; b. 19 Dec. 1932; adm. Sept. 1946 (G); left July 1951; New Coll. Oxf., matric. 1953, BA 1956, MA 1960; Univ. of Lond., Dip. Hist. of Art 1958; asst. lecturer Courtauld Inst. 1959-65; sen. lecturer, History of Art, Univ. of East Anglia 1965-74, Prof. of Visual Arts 1974-95; FSA 1968; author of Gothic Art 1967, The Rise of the Artist in the Middle Ages and Early Renaissance 1972, Simone Martini 1988; m. 19 June 1959 Jane Primrose, d. of Malcolm Anthony Brooke of Ightham, Kent; d. 29 May 1995.

            Martin-Leake, William, 1865-1947
            GB-2014-WSA-11925 · Pessoa singular · 1865-1947

            MARTIN-LEAKE, WILLIAM, second son of Stephen Martin-Leake, Ware, Hertfordshire, barrister, and Isabel, dau. of William Plunkett, Lincoln’s Inn, barrister; b. 24 Jun 1865; adm. 27 May 1880 (G); left Dec 1881; 2nd Lieut., Cheshire Regt., 4 may 1887; Lieut., 11 Nov 1890; Capt., 17 Aug 1899; retd. 29 May 1907; re-employed as Maj., 25 Aug 1914; Staff Capt., War Office 1 Apr 1915 – 7 May 1917; DAAG, War Office 8 May 1917 – Sep 1919; Brevet Lieut. -Col., 1 Jan 1918; served in Burmese expedition 1886-9, Chin-Lushai expedition 1889-90, South African War 1901-2 and in France and Flanders 1 Dec 1914 – 5 Feb 1915, invalided; d. 8 Feb 1947.

            Maule, John Blosset, 1817-1889
            GB-2014-WSA-12018 · Pessoa singular · 1817-1889

            MAULE, SIR JOHN BLOSSET, second son of George Maule (qv); b. 29 May 1817; adm. 17 Jun 1829 (G); left 1831; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 4 Jun 1835; BA 1839; MA 1846; adm. Inner Temple 13 Jan 1844, called to bar 29 Jan 1847, Bencher 16 Nov 1866, Treasurer 1882; North-Eastern Circuit; Recorder of Leeds 19 Apr 1861-80; QC 5 Jul 1866; Director of Public Prosecutions 1880-4; knighted by Queen Victoria 7 Dec 1882, on occasion of opening of new Law Courts; d. unm. 20 Oct 1889.

            Maxwell, Gerald Speirs, 1858-1915
            GB-2014-WSA-12040 · Pessoa singular · 1858-1915

            MAXWELL, GERALD SPEIRS, seventh son of Charles Francis Maxwell (qv); b. 14 Feb 1858; adm. 22 Jan 1874 (G); left May 1877; Oriel Coll. Oxford, matr. 15 Oct 1877; BA 1880; MA 1885; Cuddesdon Theol. Coll.; ordained deacon 1881, priest 1882 (both Oxford); Curate, Wantage, Berks., 1881-94; Chaplain, St. Mary’s Home, Wantage 1888-94, Sub-Warden 1894-6; Superior-Gen., Society of St. John the Evangelist, Cowley, Oxford, from 1907; d. 4 Dec 1915.

            May, John Seaburne, 1896-1945
            GB-2014-WSA-12056 · Pessoa singular · 1896-1945

            May, John Seaburne, son of John May, of Kensington by Lucy Mary, daughter of John Hey­wood, of Manchester; b. Feb. 26, 1896; adm. Sept. 22, 1910 (G); left Easter 1911; served in Great War I; Lieut. R.F.A. March 14, 1914; resigned his commission on account of ill health Jan. 29, 1916; secretary of Phyllis Court Club, Henley-on-Thames; served in Great War II as Lieut, R.N.V.R., in command of a trawler; wounded; acting Lieut.-Cdr. (Admn.) Dover; invalided for a disability contracted in Great War I; m. June 8, 1944, Evelyn Betty, daughter of Henry Chapman, of Wetherby Mansions, South Kensington; d. of disabilities contracted on active service Dec. 15, 1945.

            John Seaburne May was born at 8, Kensington Court Place, Kensington, London on the 26th of February 1896 the son of John William Freckleton May, a gentleman, and Lucy Mary (nee Heywood) May of 8, Kensington Court Place, Kensington, later of 59, West Cromwell Road, Kensington. He was educated at Wykeham House School, Worthing and at Westminster School where he was up Grant’s from the 22nd of September 1910 to Easter 1911. He went on to Bloxham School where he served as a Private in the Officer Training Corps until the 24th of December 1912. On leaving school he went to work as an apprentice engineer at the Vickers Ltd Works at Erith.
            He applied for a commission in the 4th Home Counties (Howitzer) Brigade, Royal Field Artillery on the 13th of November 1913, in an application which recorded that he was 5 feet 10 inches tall and that he weighed 140lbs. He was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery on the 14th of March 1914. He was mobilised on the outbreak of war and was promoted to Lieutenant on the 17th of October 1914. In December 1914 he was posted to the 5th Kent Howitzer Battery based at Sheerness. On the 7th of December 1914 he applied for a transfer to the Royal Flying Corps but, receiving no response, he wrote again on the 7th of March 1915. He was attached to the Royal Flying Corps and was posted to South Harrow on the 5th of May 1915. He obtained a Royal Aero Club Certificate (No. 23699) at the Military School, Ruislip on the 8th of July 1915 while flying a Maurice Farman biplane. He was involved in an aircraft accident the following month in which he sprained his right wrist. A Medical Board, which sat at Caxton Hall reported that he had undergone an examination at Ruislip on the 30th of July 1915 which had revealed that he had a very enlarged heart and a double murmur which had been aggravated by his service in the Royal Flying Corps.
            He was released from the Royal Flying Corps on the 14th of August 1915 and returned to his unit as it was considered that he would not make a suitable pilot on account of his health.
            A Medical Board, which sat at Sevenoaks on the 15th of December 1915, reported that he had been examined at Woolwich Hospital on the 11th of August 1915 and had been diagnosed with hypertrophy and that he had a pulse rate of 120. He was also suffering from anaemia and they concluded that he was “totally unfit for service at home or abroad.” He resigned his commission in the Royal Artillery on the grounds of ill health on the 29th of January 1916.
            He was commissioned as a Flight Sub Lieutenant the Royal Naval Air Service on the 18th of June 1916. He was attached to HMS President II on the 8th of July 1916 and was posted for flight training to Chingford on the same date. His appointment was terminated on the 9th of October 1916 as he had lost his nerve for flying and he left HMS President II the following day. He applied to be reinstated but this was declined on the 30th of October 1916.
            He applied for a regular commission in the Royal Garrison Artillery on the 11th of November 1916. He was commissioned in the Royal Garrison Artillery on the 5th of December 1916 and was seconded for service with the Tank Corps in June 1917. He served as a workshop officer at Woolwich in October 1917 and with J Battalion at Bovington Camp in November 1917. He embarked for service in France at Portsmouth on the 24th of December 1917, landing at Rouen on the 26th of December where he joined the 10th Battalion, Tank Corps in the field. He was based at Bapaume when he was taken ill on the 7th of April 1918 suffering from chronic endocarditus.
            He left his unit on the 8th of April and was evacuated back to England from Calais on the 12th of April, landing at Dover later the same day. He was admitted to Kitchener’s Military Hospital at Brighton the following day where a Medical Board sat on the 11th of June 1918 to report on his case: - “Began with severe diarrhoea – followed by constipation, headache, pains in limbs, no joint involvement. Also shortness of breath. Admitted KMH April 13th 1918. No fever or diarrhoea since. Heart enlarged to left fingers breadth one beyond left nipple line. Evidence of sortie incompetence with possibly mild grade of stendosis as well, also at apex – a soft blowing systolic transmitted to axills. Patient kept at rest for some weeks iv Digitalia and symptoms subsided.”
            A later Medical Board, which sat on the 14th of August 1918, found him to be fit for military service and was released from hospital on the 20th of August. On leaving the army he returned to work as an engineer and later became a salesman.
            He was married at Preston Parish Church, Sussex on the 15th of March 1919 to Helen Olga (nee Morris) of Hove and they lived at 4, Lyndhurst Corner, Hove and later at Grenville Cottage, Keymer in Sussex. They had a son, Ivan Heywood, born on the 4th of December 1921. They lived together until September 1926 when he left the marital home on the grounds that she was converting to Roman Catholicism. She later moved to Villa Botticelli, Via Cortivallo, Lugano Baso from where she filed for divorce on the 25th of May 1928 on the grounds of his regular cohabitation with Hilda Hahn at 79, King’s Head Road, Brighton and at the Peacehaven Hotel, Peacehaven between June 1927 and February 1928. She was granted a Decree Nisi on the 19th of November 1928 and a Decree Absolute on the 4th of June 1929. He had paid no maintenance or child support to her since he had left and she was awarded a sum of £200 per annum by the court on the 13th of November 1929; he was employed by Frigidaire Ltd of King’s Road, Brighton at the time.
            He was re-married at Steyning Registry Office on the 18th of June 1929 to Hilda Theresa (nee Hahn) of Brighton. They lived at 56a, Ship Street, Brighton and had a daughter Mary Ann, born on the 17th of July 1930. By 1935 he was workings as a commission salesman for Louis J. Ford Ltd, builders merchants, of 69, Church Road, Hove.
            On the 13th of May 1937, his wife filed for divorce on the grounds of his adultery with an unknown woman at the Hotel Victoria, Westminster on the 26th of February 1937. The divorce was granted later that year. He was married once again, on the 8th of June 1944, to Evelyn Betty “Boo” (nee Chapman) and they had son, John Derek Seaburne, born on the 28th of May 1945.
            He was recalled for service on the outbreak of the Second World War and was commissioned as a Sub Lieutenant in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. He was placed in command of a Trawler and was wounded in action. He was appointed as an Acting Lieutenant Commander in administration at Dover but was invalided out of the service by a disability contracted during the Great War.
            He died at in a train corridor at Cambridge and was cremated at Cambridge on the 19th of December 1945.
            His death is not recognised by the Commonwealth War Grave Commission as he had left military service at the time of his death.

            Mccance, Henry Moutray Jones, 1867-1937
            GB-2014-WSA-12097 · Pessoa singular · 1867-1937

            MCCANCE, HENRY MOUTRAY JONES, youngest son of James Law McCance, Kingstown, co. Dublin, Resident Magistrate of Newry, and Jeanette, eldest dau. of Frederic William Macaulay, Belfast; b. 11 Mar 1867; adm. 22 Sep 1881 (G); left Aug 1883; 2nd Lieut., 1st bn . Royal Scots 8 May 1888; Lieut., 13 Sep 1891; retd. 1894; Capt., Reserve of Officers 2 May 1900-2; attached to General Staff, War Office 1914-9; Military Intelligence Directorate; OBE 3 Jun 1919; served Zululand 1888; author, Regimental Records of the Royal Scots, 1st or Royal Regiment of Foot, 1916; m. 1st, 8 Feb 1893 Jean Isabella Erskine, elder dau. of Joseph Bell MD FRCS (Ed), Melville Crescent, Edinburgh; m. 2nd, 1 Dec 1924 Amy, younger dau. of Rev. Richard Bower, Canon of Carlisle; d. 26 Aug 1937.

            Mchardy, Alexander Anderson, 1868-1958
            GB-2014-WSA-12118 · Pessoa singular · 1868-1958

            MCHARDY, ALEXANDER ANDERSON, only son of Lieut. -Col. Sir Alexander Burness McHardy KCB, Royal Engineers, chairman Prison Commission for Scotland, and Elsie Norie, only dau. of Sir John Anderson LLD, The Mount, St. Leonard’s on Sea, Sussex; b. 9 Nov 1868; adm. 22 Sep 1881 (G); left Dec 1885; RMA Woolwich 1886; 2nd Lieut., Royal Artillery 17 Feb 1888; Lieut., 17 Feb 1891; Capt., 17 Aug 1898; Maj., 9 Jun 1908; Brevet Lieut. -Col., 3 Jun 1915; Lieut. -Col., 9 Dec 1915; Brevet Col., 1 Jan 1917; Col., 10 Aug 1920; Maj. -Gen., 2 Jun 1924; DAQMG Dec 1914 – Jun 1915; AA and QMG Jun 1915 – Aug 1916; Maj. -Gen. in charge of administration in Turkey 1922-3; Director of Movements and Quarterings, War Office 1 May 1923; served on North-West Frontier, India 1897-8 and in South Africa 1899-1902, despatches LG 8 Feb 1901, 29 Jul 1902; served in East Africa 1902-3, despatches LG 2 Sep 1904; served in First World War 1914-9, despatches LG 22 Jun 1915, 15 Jun 1916, 4 Jan, 15 May and 11 Dec 1917; DSO 29 Nov 1900; CMG 3 Jun 1916; CB 1 Jan 1918; Croix de Guerre avec Palmes (France); Officier de l’Ordre de Leopold (Belgium); m. 21 Jun 1904 Lilian Amy Byde, younger dau. of Capt. Coghlan McLean McHardy, Grenville Place, South Kensington, Director of Naval Stores; d. 11 Nov 1958.