Houses

10546 People & Organisations results for Houses

2 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
Osborn, William, ca. 1722-?
GB-2014-WSA-13286 · Person · ca. 1722-?

OSBORN, WILLIAM; b.; adm. (aged 13) Jan 1735/6 (Wynniate's); left 1738. [Perhaps brother or close kin to Henry Osborne (sic), adm. same month, left same year]

Osborne, Charles, ca. 1675-?
GB-2014-WSA-13287 · Person · ca. 1675-?

OSBORNE, CHARLES, son of Edward Osborne, Seething, Norfolk, and Blanche, dau. of Robert Suckloing, Barsham, Suffolk; b.; adm.; KS 1688; elected to Trinity Coll. Cambridge 1692, adm. pens. 23 Jun 1692, aged 17, scholar 28 Apr 1693; BA 1695/6; MA 1699; ordained deacon (Norwich) Jun 1699; Rector of Langhale, Norfolk 1701-28; Rector of Siseland, Norfolk 1713-28.

GB-2014-WSA-13288 · Person · 1903-1990

Osborne, Douglas John, son of John Osborne, of Wanstead, Essex; b. Dec. 15, 1903; adm. Sept. 26, 1918 (G); left Easter 1921; d. Aug. 1990.

GB-2014-WSA-13290 · Person · 1913-1979

Osborne, Eric Nathan, son of Frederic Louis Osborne of Ealmg and Irene Eulalie Augustine, d. of Arthur van Humbeck of St Helier, Jersey; b. 16 Nov. 1913; adm. Sept. 1927 (R); left Dec. 1930; RAFVR in WW2 (Flt Lieut.), despatches Jan. 1945; an insurance broker, ACII FCIB; m. 25 Mar. 1937 Peggy, d. of Walter le Seelleur of St Helier; d. 27 Feb. 1979

GB-2014-WSA-13296 · Person · ca. 1724-?

OSBORNE, NICHOLAS, son of Sir John Osborne, Bart., MP (I), and Editha, dau. of William Proby, EICS Madras; b. co. Tipperary; adm. (aged 12) Feb 1736/7 (Wynniate's); KS 1738; left 1742; Trinity Coll. Dublin, adm. pens. 28 Jan 1740/1; BA 1745; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 28 Dec 1749. [perhaps of Kensington, Middlesex, will PCC 13 Jun 1786]

Osborne, Thomas, 1747-1761
GB-2014-WSA-13298 · Person · 1747-1761

OSBORNE, THOMAS, MARQUIS OF CARMARTHEN, elder son of Thomas Osborne, 4th Duke of Leeds (qv); b. 5 Oct 1747; adm. (Morel's); at school under Markham (Bentham, Works x, 31); a friend and contemporary of Jeremy Bentham (qv), who greeted his recovery from illness with a copy of fourteen Latin couplets (Elizabethan xiv, 29); d. at school of smallpox 15 Aug 1761.

Osgood, Hamilton, 1907-1997
GB-2014-WSA-13300 · Person · 1907-1997

Osgood, Hamilton, son of George L. Osgood of Cambridge, Mass., USA, and June, d. of Horace O. Bright of Cambridge, Mass.; b. 4 Sept. 1907; adm. Apr. 1921 (R); left Apr. 1925; New Coll. Oxf., matric. 1925; man. dir. Raleigh Industries of America; Maj. USAF in WW2, liaison officer with French Air Force; m. 12 July 1928 Helga Diana, d. of Edward Francis Gray, HM Consul­ General Boston, Mass.; d. 1 July 1997.

GB-2014-WSA-13301 · Person · 1898-1975

Ostorog, Stanislaus John, son of Count S. J. Ostorog, of Chelsea; b. April 2, 1898; adm Sept. 26, 1912 (A); left July 1914; joined the Inns of Court O.T.C. May 1915; 2nd Lieut. R.G.A. (Spec. Res.) July 22, 1915; resigned on account of ill health May 25, 1916; enlisted as Gunner R.H.A. Sept. 11, 1916; 2nd Lieut. R.G.A. May 26, 1917; resigned on account of ill health Aug. 9, 1917; 2nd Lieut. Pioneer Corps Aug. 26, 1940; relinquished commission Dec. 28, 1940; Pilot Officer (A. and S.D.) R.A.F.V.R. June 27, 1941; m. Aug. 7, 1931, Betty, daughter of Philip Van Geuxs; d. 1975.

GB-2014-WSA-13303 · Person · 1919-2012

Ostrer, Vivian Kay, son of Isidore Ostrer, pres. Brit. Gaumont Picture Corpn, and Helène Dorothy. d. of Anthony Howard Spear-Morgan of Cambridge; b. 20 Oct. 1919; adm. Sept. 1933 (B); left July 1934; a farmer; m. 1938 Pauline, d. of Paul Spink of New York; d. 2012.

GB-2014-WSA-13304 · Person · 1919-1944

O'Sullivan, Cornelius Dion, son of Curtis Dion O'Sullivan (qv); b. 27 Apr. 1919; adm. May 1935 (A); left July 1935; Univ. of California; Lieut. USN (submarines); m. 12 May 1942 Katharine, d. of John Black of San Francisco; lost on active service in US submarine Triton (Pacific) 15 Mar 1944.

Cornelius Dion “Sully” O’Sullivan was born at San Francisco, California on the 27th of April 1919 the elder son of Colonel Curtis Dion O’Sullivan OW, United States Army, later Adjutant General of the State of California, and Helen (nee Hooper) O’Sullivan of 2717, Hearst Avenue, San Francisco. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Ashburnham from May to July 1935. He was admitted to US Naval Academy as a Midshipman Second Class on the 17th of June 1938.
He attended the University of California, Berkeley on a Lexington Scholarship in the Class of 1942, where he rowed for the University and was later appointed as Captain of Rowing. He was a member of the Phi Delta Theta Fraternity and was a member of the orchestra.
His class had been due to graduate in February 1942 but instead graduated on the 19th of December 1941, due to the United States declaration of war on Japan on the 7th of December. He was promoted to Midshipman First Class in 1941and to Ensign on the 19th of December 1941. He was posted to the coastal and harbour defence submarine R-20 on the 31st of May 1942.
He was married at the United States Naval Academy Chapel, Annapolis on the 19th of May 1942 to Kathryn (nee Black) of San Francisco.
He was later promoted to Lieutenant, Junior Grade and was posted to the submarine USS Triton as 2nd Navigator.
The USS Triton (SS-201), under the command of Lieutenant Commander George Kenneth Mackenzie Jr. USN, set sail from Brisbane, Australia on the 16th of February 1943 for what was to be her sixth patrol. She was to operate against enemy shipping in the area between Rabaul, the Shortlands Basin.
On the 6th of March the USS Triton attacked a Japanese convoy consisting of five merchant vessels escorted by a destroyer. During the attack she sank the cargo ship Kiriha Maru and damaged one other ship. Two nights later she attacked another enemy convoy and claimed that five of the eight torpedoes she had fired scored hits. She was unable to confirm this due to gunfire from the escorting destroyers which forced her to submerge.
On the 11th of March the USS Triton reported that she was stalking two convoys, each made up of five or more ships. She contacted the submarine USS Trigger (SS-237) which was operating in an adjacent area. She was ordered to remain to the south of the equator and to continue her pursuit. Two days later she received a warning from her base that three enemy destroyers were in the area and that they were either looking for convoys to attack or were hunting American submarines.
On the 15th of March 1943, USS Triton was off the Admiralty Islands to the north of New Guinea when she reported that she had attacked an enemy convoy and that she was under a depth charge attack by three Japanese destroyers. Nothing further was heard from the submarine, but post war Japanese records indicate that they had sunk a submarine that day in an area slightly to the north west of the USS Triton’s last reported position. One of the Japanese crews reported observing an oil slick, debris and items carrying American markings. The entire crew was lost in the attack. USS Trigger had also attacked the convoy and came under depth charge attack which eventually stopped. They reported afterwards that they heard continued depth charging some distance away which lasted about an hour.
The University of California wrote of him: - “Sully began college life at the University of California and has had little trouble standing at the top of the class. Sully climaxed four years of crew by becoming the Academy's No. 1 oarsman and captain. His unruly hair has been a problem, but he manages to divert attention with his contagious smile.”
He is commemorated on the Tablets of the Missing at Manila American Cemetery.