Houses

10548 People & Organisations results for Houses

2 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
Day, George, 1811-1900
GB-2014-WSA-05938 · Person · 1811-1900

DAY, GEORGE, eldest son of George Day (qv); b. 4 Mar 1811; adm. 10 Jan 1825; KS 1825; Capt. of the School 1829; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1830, matr. 28 May 1830, Westminster Student to 1842; BA 1834; MA 1836; ordained deacon 25 May 1834, priest 14 Jun 1835 (both Oxford); Curate, Aston Rowant, Oxfordshire 1834-40; Rector of Brightwell Baldwin, Oxfordshire 1841-90; m. 12 Oct 1841 Isabella Anne, second dau. of William Francis Lowndes-Stone, Brightwell Park, Oxfordshire; d. 4 Jan 1900.

GB-2014-WSA-05939 · Person · 1880-1959

Day, Harold Benjamin, son of the Rev. Benjamin William Day, Rector of St. Peter's, Sandwich, Kent, by Mary Sophia, daughter of Dr. Richard Phillips, of Bayswater; b. Feb. 28, 1880; adm. Sept. 27, 1894 (A); left July 1897; King's Coll. Hospital, where he obtained an entrance scholarship 1897, and five others; L.R.C.P. 1902; M.R.C.P. 1908; F.R.C.P. M.R.C.S. (Eng.) 1902; M.B. and B. S. (Gold Medal) 1904; M. D. (qual. for Gold Medal) 1905; Registrar and Medical Tutor at the Egyptian Government School of Medicine, Cairo, 1906-10; Professor of Clinical Medicine, Cairo Univ. 1910-24 and 1933-6; Lecturer in Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, King's Coll. Hospital, 1925-33; Physician of the Royal Chest Hospital; served in R.A.M.C. (Volunteers) 1897-1901 and in Great War I 1914-9; Lieut. R.A.M.C. Jan. 7, 1915; Capt. Jan. 7, 1916; Major Jan. 29, 1918; mentioned in despatches L. G. Jan. 4, 1917; M.C. Sept. 26, 1917; Order of the Nile, 3rd class; m. 1st 1909, Ruth, daughter of H. H. Witty, of Kew Gardens; 2nd 1920, Winifred Blanche West, daughter of W. J. Hughes, of Sandwich, Kent; d. Nov. 1, 1959.

GB-2014-WSA-20839 · Person · 1927-2022

Day, Herbert John Benjamin, son of Harold Benjamin Day (qv); b. 7 Feb. 1927; adm. Nov. 1940 (B); left July 1944; King

Day, Herbert, 1881-1916
GB-2014-WSA-05940 · Person · 1881-1916

Day, Herbert, brother of Harold Benjamin Day (q.v.); b. Nov. 14, 1881; adm. as exhibitioner Sept. 27, 1894 (A); elected to an exhibition at Ch. Ch. Oxon. (with Triplett) 1900; matric. Michaelmas 1900; B.A. 1905; entered the scholastic profession; enlisted in the Buffs (East Kent Regt.) on the outbreak of Great War I: 2nd Lieut. 11th (Reserve) Batt. the Loyal North Lancs Regt. March 10, 1915; went out to the western front June 1916, and was attached to the 8th Batt. of his Regt.; killed in action at La Boiselle, on the Somme, July 10, 1916; unm.

Day, Maurice, 1891-1915
GB-2014-WSA-05941 · Person · 1891-1915

Day, Maurice, brother of Harold Benjamin Day (q.v.); b. Dec. 21, 1891; adm. Sept. 27, 1906 (A); left July 1909; was articled to an architect, and was just out of his articles when Great War I began; enlisted in the 28th Batt. London Regt. (Artists' Rifles) and went out to the western front in the autumn of 1914; 2nd Lieut. 2nd Batt. Princess Charlotte of Wales's (Royal Berkshire) Regt. March 20, 1915; killed in action in France May 9, 1915; unm.

Day, Ralph, ca. 1616-?
GB-2014-WSA-05942 · Person · ca. 1616-?

DAY, RALPH, son of Thomas Day, Carshalton, Surrey; b.; adm.; Min. Can. (aged 13) 1629; KS 1630; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1634, matr. 1 Sep 1634, Westminster Student to 1646; BA 1638; MA 1641; adm. to practice medicine 2 Nov 1654.

GB-2014-WSA-05943 · Person · 1863-?

DAY, WILLIAM FERDINAND, son of William Day, Queen Street, Mayfair, London, solicitor; b. 29 Dec 1863; adm. (R) 31 May 1877; left Aug 1878.

GB-2014-WSA-05945 · Person · 1918-?

Day-Winter, Alan John, son of Percy Day-Winter, co. chairman, of Brighton, and Nellie, d. of Thomas Felix Davey, mining engineer, of Snaresbrook, Essex; b. 27 May 1918; adm. Sept. 1931 (H), (B) Jan. 1935; left July 1937; Univ. of Maine, USA, 1939-41; RCAF 1941-5 (Flt Lieut.); self­ employed in grocery, later toy trade; Freeman City of London; m. 1st 29 Mar. 1941 Pauline Clarice, d. of Col. Clare James Herbert USAF, of Castine, Maine; 2nd 27 Mar. 1965 Violet May, d. of Alfred Thomas Stephenson.

GB-2014-WSA-05946 · Person · 1905-1941

de Bathe, Sir Christopher Albert, Bart., son of Capt. Patrick Wynne de Bathe, of Westminster, by Violet Lindsay, elder daughter of Nicholas Wood, M. P.; b. Sept. 17, 1905; adm. April 26, 1918 (R); left April 1919; went to Rugby School; 2nd Lieut. Highland Light Inf. 1925; retired 1927; Hon. Attache to the British Embassy at Constantinople 1930, and at Brussels 1931; correspondent for The Times in Persia 1932-3; succeeded his grandfather as 6th baronet Aug. 1940; Pilot Officer (A. and S. D.) R.A.F.V.R. Aug. 19, 1940; m. Jan. 11, 1932, Edna, daughter of Arthur Terrell, of Melbourne, Australia; killed on active service June 3, 1941.

Sir Christopher Albert de Bathe was born in London on the 17th of September 1905 the only son of Captain Patrick Wynne de Bathe Bt., HM Diplomatic Service, and Violet Lindsay (nee Wood later Compton) de Bathe of 121, Rue de la Commerce, Brussels, later of “Blackwater”, Lyndhurst in Hampshire. He was christened at St Paul’s Church, Wilton Place, Knightsbridge on the 17th of October 1905. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Rigaud’s from the 26th of April 1918 to April 1919. He went on to Rugby School where he was in Cotton House from May 1919 to December 1921.
He attended the Royal Military College, Sandhurst from 1923 before being commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Highland Light Infantry on the 29th of January 1925. He resigned his commission on the 19th of March 1927. He served as Hon Attaché in HM Diplomatic Service at Constantinople in 1930 and at Brussels in 1931. He was the Persia correspondent for the Times newspaper from 1932 to 1933.
He was married at St Michael’s Church, Pimlico on the 22nd of January 1932 to Edna Winifred (nee Terrell); they had a daughter, Charlotte Louise, born on the 24th of September 1934.
He succeeded to the Baronetcy on the death of his uncle in August 1940, becoming the 6th Baron de Bathe of Knightstown. He was a member of the Naval and Military Club.
He was commissioned as a Pilot Officer in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve on the 19th of August 1940.
On the 3rd of June 1941 Christopher de Bathe and a group of Royal Air Force officers were gathered on a golf course in Berkshire to watch some twin engined aircraft practicing dive bombing. He and three others were walking across the practice ground when he was struck and decapitated by the propeller of an aircraft which was flying at very low level.
His funeral took place at 3pm on the 10th of June 1941 and a memorial service was held in his memory at 3pm the following day at St Mark’s Church, South Audley Street, London.
He is buried at St Andrew’s Church, West Stoke.

GB-2014-WSA-05948 · Person · fl. 1636

DE BERG, CHARLES BERNARD; b.; adm.; KS; elected to Trinity Coll. Cambridge 1636, adm. pens. 30 May 1636.