Houses

10437 People & Organisations results for Houses

2 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
Butley, John, ca. 1722-?
GB-2014-WSA-04259 · Person · ca. 1722-?

BUTLEY, JOHN, son of John Butley, Westminster; b.; in school lists 1731 (surname misread by Russell Barker & Stenning as Bulkley), 1733; Min. Can. (aged 13) 1734; KS 1735; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1739, matr. 22 Jun 1739, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1739 - 23 Jun 1749, void; BA 1743; ordained; Chaplain, Royal Navy 1746; resident in Greenwich, Kent; living 1754; author, The Holy Bible illustrated and explained in a complete measure for every Christian, 5th edn., 1762; m. 2 Feb 1748 Catherine Stonestreet (IGI). [Note will of Catherine Butley, East Greenwich, Kent, widow, proved PCC 8 May 1775]

GB-2014-WSA-018962 · Person · 1869-?

BUTSON, WILLIAM EDWARDS STRANGE, son of Lieut. -Col. W. Strange Butson, Upper Gloucester Place, Dorset Square, London; b. 7 Aug 1869; adm. (H) 31 May 1883; left Aug 1885; an estate agent in North Wales; served during 1914-18 war in Forage Department; temp. Lieut. , RASC 1 Dec 1915.

Butt, George, 1741-1795
GB-2014-WSA-00375 · Person · 1741-1795

BUTT, GEORGE, second son of Carey Butt, Lichfield, Staffs., surgeon, and Elizabeth, dau. of John Marten, Lichfield, Staffs., apothecary; b. 26 Dec 1741; in school list 1754; KS 1756; his acting as Demea in the Adelphi in 1759 was so successful that “he was, as he declared, for the only time in his life, overflowing with money forced upon him by the liberality of his audience” (Life and Times of Mrs Sherwood, 1910, 4); Capt. of the School 1760; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1761, matr. 21 May 1761, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1761 - void 8 Oct 1772, expiry year of grace as R. Stanford and V. Clifton; BA 1765; MA 1768; BD and DD 1793; ordained deacon 2 Jun 1765, priest 20 Sep 1767 (both Oxford); Curate of Leigh, Staffs.; had leave of absence from Ch. Ch. to act as tutor in private family (Winnington of Stanford Court), 17 Dec 1765; Rector of Stanford on Teme, Worcs., from 31 Aug 1771; Vicar of Clifton, Worcs., Aug 1771 - res Mar 1787; Vicar of Newchurch, Isle of Wight, 1778-83; Rector of Notgrove, Gloucs., 1783; Chaplain in Ordinary to George III 1783 (still 1793); Vicar of Kidderminster, Worcs., from 23 Feb 1787; one of the circle of minor poets and literary ladies who gathered round Anna Seward, the “Swan” of Lichfield; author, Isaiah Versified, 1784, and other poems; in his Poems, 1793, ii, 107, he refers to his “partialities for Westminster School”; m. 26 Apr 1773 Mary Martha, dau. of Henry Sherwood, Coventry, Warwicks., a London silk merchant; d. 30 Sep 1795. DNB.

Butt, John Marten, 1774-1846
GB-2014-WSA-04263 · Person · 1774-1846

BUTT, JOHN MARTEN, only son of George Butt (qv); b. 10 Mar 1774; adm. 18 Jan 1788; Min. Can. 1788; KS 1789; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1792, matr. 6 Jun 1792, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1792 - void 21 Sep 1807, expiry year of grace as R. Oddingley; BA 1796; MA 1799; ordained; Curate, Great Witley, Worcs., 1798; Rector of Oddingley, Worcs., from 11 Aug 1806; Vicar of East Garston, Berks., from 28 Aug 1806; author, The Last Vision of Daniel, 1808, and other works; m. 1st, 4 Nov 1806 Mary Anne Congreve; m. 2nd, 27 Dec 1821 (IGI) Jemima Hubball; d. 4 Mar 1846.

GB-2014-WSA-04264 · Person · 1902-1942

Buttar, Charles Philip, son of Charles Buttar (q.v.); b. Jan. 26, 1902; adm. April 29, 1915 (G); left Dec. 1918; Midshipman R. N. Jan. 8, 1922; Sub-Lieut. Dec. 15, 1923; Lieut. (E) Feb. 15, 1926; Eng.-Lieut.-Cdr. Feb. 15, 1934; Commander June 30, 1938; m. July 17, 1930, Margaret Elaine, daughter of Major William Stanford; lost in the sinking of H. M. S. Dorsetshire by Japanese aircraft in the Bay of Bengal, April 5, 1942.

Charles Philip Buttar was born at Bayswater, London on the 26th of January 1902 the son of Dr Charles Buttar MD OW and Georgianna Isabel (nee Syrett) Buttar of 10, Kensington Square Gardens in London. He was christened at Bayswater on the 7th of April 1902. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Grant’s from the 29th of April 1915 to December 1918.
He entered the Royal Navy on a Special Entry Cadetship on the 8th of September 1920 and was appointed as a Midshipman on the 8th of January 1922. He joined the battleship HMS Valiant for engineering training on the 15th of January 1922 and went on to the Royal Naval Engineering College, Keyham for further engineering training on the 4th of May 1922. He was commissioned as a Sub Lieutenant on the 15th of December 1923. He was promoted to Acting Lieutenant (E) on the 15th of February 1926 and to Engineer Lieutenant Commander on the 15th of February 1934.
He was married at St Philip’s Church, Kensington on the 17th of July 1930 to Margaret Elaine (Goodfellow, nee Stanford) and they lived at 131, Banbury Road, Oxford. They had a daughter, Susannah, born on the 15th of August 1933. He was serving on board HMS Coventry at the time and was later posted to the heavy cruiser HMS Dorsetshire (40). He was promoted to Commander (E) on the 30th of June 1938.
At the beginning of April 1942, HMS Dorsetshire, under the command of Captain Augustus Willington Shelton Agar VC, DSO RN, was undergoing a refit at Colombo, Ceylon, in order to increase her anti aircraft armament, when she was ordered to put to sea as British Intelligence had warned her that a Japanese battle fleet was approaching Ceylon from the east.
At 10pm on the evening of the 4th of April 1942, HMS Dorsetshire, and the heavy cruiser HMS Cornwall (56) set sail from Colombo and headed towards the Maldives where they were to rendezvous with other ships at 4pm the following day. At dawn on the 5th of April 1942 they were sailing in waters some 300 miles to the south west of Ceylon when action stations were sounded.
At 1pm a Japanese reconnaissance aircraft was spotted which was followed a short time later by 53 Japanese “Val” dive bombers which had been launched from enemy aircraft carriers and began to attack the ship from out of the sun at 1.40pm. In spite of fierce resistance from the crew, HMS Dorsetshire was struck ten times by 250lbs and 500lbs bombs and had several near missies. Her magazine was struck during the attack and she sank in just eight minutes. HMS Cornwall was also sunk. Captain Agar survived the sinking but Charles Buttar was one of two hundred and twenty-seven of his crew who did not. The survivors of both ships were in the water for some thirty hours before being picked up by the cruiser HMS Enterprise and the destroyers HMS Paladin and HMS Panther.
He is commemorated on the Plymouth Naval Memorial Panel 63, Column 1.

Buttar, Charles, 1867-1930
GB-2014-WSA-04265 · Person · 1867-1930

BUTTAR, CHARLES, son of Charles Buttar, Elgin Crescent, Notting Hill, London, banker, and Emily, dau. of James Lovett, Cricklade, Wilts.; b. 12 Jun 1867; adm. (A), 22 Jan 1880; left Nov 1884; Pembroke Coll. Cambridge, adm. 1 Oct 1885, matr. Mich. 1885; BA 1889; MA 1893; MB, BCh 1892; MD 1896; DPH 1895; St. Bartholomew’s Hospital; MRCS, LRCP 1892; practised in London; Pres., Harveian Society; Chairman, Exec. Committee, Central Medical War Committee, 1915; m. 10 Dec 1898 Georgiana Isabel, dau. of Ernest Syrett, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey; d. 31 Aug 1930.

GB-2014-WSA-04266 · Person · 1869-1886

BUTTAR, SIDNEY GEORGE, brother of Charles Buttar (qv); b. 12 Mar 1869; adm. (H) 23 Sep 1880; left 1884; RMA Woolwich 1886; d. from the effects of a fall while sliding at Woolwich, 20 Dec 1886.

GB-2014-WSA-04267 · Person · 1893-?

Butterfield, Douglas Alexander, son of Frank Alfred Butterfield, of Denmark Hill, Surrey, by Elizabeth, daughter of George William Jordan, of Maida Vale; b. Feb. 28, 1893; adm. Jan. 16, 1908 (A); left July 1909; served first in the City of London Yeomanry and afterwards in the R. F. A. (Spec. Res.); Lieut. R. F. A. July 3, 1917; an incorporated insurance broker; m. Nov. 11, 1922, Alice Rita, eldest daughter of James Mellor, of Cricklewood, solicitor.

Butts, Robert, ca. 1723-1768
GB-2014-WSA-04272 · Person · ca. 1723-1768

BUTTS, ROBERT, son of Right Rev. Robert Butts DD, Bishop of Ely, and his first wife Elizabeth, sister of Robert Eyton, Shropshire; b.; adm. (aged 13) Jan 1736/7 (Preston's); left 1740; Trinity Coll. Cambridge, adm. 28 Jan 1740/1, scholar 10 Apr 1741; BA 1745; MA 1747; ordained deacon 28 Oct 1746, priest 2 Nov 1746 (both Ely); Rector of Bluntisham, Hunts, from 1746; Vicar of Glemsford, Suffolk, 1746 (dispensation to hold with Bluntisham, 1746/7); m. 20 Apr 1747 Jane, dau. of Ven. Reuben Clerke DD, Archdeacon of Essex; d. 30 Nov 1768.

Byam Shaw, George, 1900-1940
GB-2014-WSA-04275 · Person · 1900-1940

Byam Shaw, George, eldest son of John Byam Liston Shaw, of Kensington, artist, by Caroline Evelyn Eunice, daughter of John Nott Pyke-Nott, of Bydown House, North Devon; b. Oct. 6, 1900; adm. April 30, 1914 (H); left July 1917; R. M.C. Sandhurst 1919; 2nd Lieut. Royal Scots Dec. 23, 1921; Lieut. Dec. 23, 1923; Capt. Nov. 9, 1934; Major, Dec. 23, 1938; killed in action in France May 1940; unm.

George Byam-Shaw was born at Kensington, London on the 6th of October 1900 the eldest son of John Byam Liston Shaw, an artist, and Evelyn Caroline Eunice (nee Pyke-Nott) Byam Shaw, an artist, of 62, Addison Road, Kensington. He was christened at St Barnabus’ Church, Kensington on the 1st of November 1900.
He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Homeboarders from the 30th of April 1914 to July 1917. He went on to the Royal Military College, Sandhurst where he boxed for the College at featherweight against Woolwich in 1921. He was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Scots (Royal Regiment) on the 23rd of December 1921. He was promoted to Lieutenant on the 23rd of December 1923 and to Captain on the 9th of November 1934. He was promoted to Major on the 23rd of December 1938.
Following the outbreak of war the 1st Battalion, Royal Scots deployed to France on the 21st of September 1939. On the 10th of May 1940 the Germans invaded France and the Low Countries. That morning the Battalion was at Lecelles and, as a number of officers were away on leave, George Byam-Shaw was appointed as the second in command of the Battalion. The day was spent packing to leave and the bulk of the Battalion departed for Overysche at 9.15pm with George Byam-Shaw leading the remainder of the men away at 11.10pm that night.
By the 20th of May, the Battalion was at Froidmont when it received orders to make a reconnaissance of the banks of the River Escaut near Calonne, to the south of Tournai where they were to relieve the 8th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment that night. The handover was made at around midnight and was carried out under shell and mortar fire with several casualties being suffered. On the 21st of May 1940, the Battalion was heavily shelled and mortared throughout the morning by the end of which their flank was exposed. D Company carried out several counterattacks which eased the situation but the shelling continued through the afternoon. George Byam-Shaw was killed outright while pausing to have a cigarette during the fighting. By the end of the day the Battalion had suffered 150 casualties but had held their ground. The Padre buried some of dead during the night and buried George Byam-Shaw the next morning.
Only a handful of men from the Battalion were eventually evacuated from Dunkirk.
He is buried at Bruyelle War Cemetery Plot II, Row A Grave 1.