Showing 20375 results

People & Organisations
GB-2014-WSA-08810 · Person · ca. 1740-?

HARRISON, WILLIAM; b.; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1750/1 (Gibson's); in school list 1754.

GB-2014-WSA-08811 · Person · 1947-2013

Harrisson, Michael Arthur Damer, son of Peter Damer Harrisson, farmer, of Broxted, Essex, and Elizabeth Ann, d. of Algernon Winter Rose, architect, of Quendon Hall, Essex; b. 12 Jan. 1947; adm. Sept. 1960 (B); left July 1965; a teacher; project man., Education Leeds, Yorks; m.; killed in traffic accident in Spain 4 May 2013.

GB-2014-WSA-08812 · Person · 1940-2013

Harrod, Dominick Roy, son of Sir Henry Roy Forbes Harrod (qv); b. 21 Aug. 1940; adm. Sept. 1953 (B); left July 1958; Ch. Ch. Oxf., matric. 1959, BA 1963, MA 1967; a financial journalist, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph 1962-71, Washington DC correspondent 1966-8; BBC economics correspondent 1971-8; dir. information, Dunlop Ltd. 1978-9; economics ed., BBC Radio 1979-93; city ed. Yorkshire Post 1993-4; programme dir., St George’s House, Windsor 1994-8; pres., Inst. of Journalists 1994-5; author, books on economic topics; m. 1974 Christina Gavrelle Hobhouse, sec., d. of Christopher Bernard Hobhouse, barrister and writer; d. 4 Aug. 2013.

GB-2014-WSA-08813 · Person · 1900-1978

Harrod, Sir Henry Roy Forbes, son of Henry Dawes Harrod, of Kensington, by Frances Marie Desiree, daughter of John Forbes-Robertson; b. Feb. 13, 1900; adm. as non-resident K.S. Sept. 25, 1913 (A); Captain of the School 1918; left (with Triplett exhibition) July 1918; enlisted Sept. 1918; 2nd Lieut. R.G.A. : New Coll. Oxon., scholar (History), matric. Hilary 1919; 1st class Literae Humaniores 1921, 1st class Modern History 1922; B.A. 1921, M.A. 1925; Lecturer in Modern History and Economics at Christ Church, Oxon., 1922, Student 1924; Member of the Hebdomadal Council 1929-35, University Lecturer in Economics; joint sec. of the Royal Economic Society 1938; one of the original Fellows of Nuffield Coll. Oxon. 1939; Nuffield Reader in International Economics since 1953; Sir George Watson Lecturer on American History 1953; Faculty Fellow of Nuffield Coll. 1954-58, Honorary Fellow 1958; President, Royal Economic Society, 1962; served on statistical staff of the Admiralty and in the Prime Minister's Office 1940-5; author of International Economics (1933) and other works; knighted 1959; a governor of the school 1946-61; m. 1938 Wilhelmine, daughter of Capt. F. J. Cresswell, Norfolk Regt.; d. 8 Mar. 1978

Harrop, John, 1914-1979
GB-2014-WSA-08814 · Person · 1914-1979

Harrop, John, son of George Harrop, woollen manufacturer, of Wakefield, Yorks, and Madge, d. of Abraham Weffendin of Netherton, Yorks; b. 22 Aug. 1914; adm. Jan. 1928 (G); left July 1933; an agriculturalist and hotelier in Lincolnshire; m. 24 Dec. 1935 Audrey, d. of Albert Thomas Rawding of Nottingham; d. 8 Oct. 1979.

Harrye, ---, fl. 1569
GB-2014-WSA-08815 · Person · fl. 1569

HARRYE, ---; b.; at school in 1569, chorister (Chapter Muniments 54019); a pensioner at Widow Perryn’s.

GB-2014-WSA-08816 · Person · 1920-1943

Harston, Michael George Sirdefield, son of Maj. Sir Ernest Sirdefield Harston CBE, Chairman Brit. Commonwealth Ex-Service League, and Ruth Barbara, d. of Sir George Shirtcliffe KBE, of Wellington, NZ; b. l 2Jan. 1920; adm. Sept. 1932 (A); left July 1938; Peterhouse, Camb., matric. 1938; RNVR 1940-3 (Lieut.), lost in HMS Beverley (Atlantic) 11 Apr. 1943.

Michael George Sirdefield Harston was born at Wellington, New Zealand on the 12th of January 1920 the only son of Major Ernest Sirdefield Harston CBE, Chairman of the British and Commonwealth Ex Service League, and Ruth Barbara (nee Shirtcliffe) Harston of 12, Wyndham Place in London W1. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Ashburnham from September 1932 to July 1938 and was a distinguished athlete while he was at the school. He was a member of the Officer Training Corps where he achieved Certificate A in November 1936 and was promoted to Corporal in September 1937. He matriculated for Peterhouse College, Cambridge in 1938 but did not graduate as he left the College for military service.
Following the outbreak of war he enlisted in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and was commissioned as a Sub Lieutenant on the 12th of January 1940. He was promoted to Lieutenant on the 12th of July 1942. He was posted to the destroyer HMS Beverley (D64), under the command of Lieutenant Commander Rodney Athelstan Price RN.
On the 4th of February 1943, HMS Beverley and the destroyer HMS Vimy (D33) were escorting Convoy SC118 on route to Londonderry, when they attacked the U Boat U-187, under the command of Oberleutnant zur See Ralph Münnich. They sank her with depth charges and t The U Boat sank with the loss of nine men from her crew of fifty four; her Captain was among the dead.
At 6pm on the 1st of April 1943, HMS Beverley was sailing off Rankin Island, County Antrim when she joined the convoy ON-176, which consisted of forty one merchant ships. She was to act as one of its escorts on its journey to Canada and on to the United States. At 10.10pm on the 9th of April, she was seriously damaged in a collision with the British steam merchant SS Cairnvalona while in fog. She was holed in the forward starboard side and took station at the rear of the convoy while the damage was being repaired.
At 5.49am on the morning of the 11th of April 1943, the German submarine U-188, under the command of Korvettenkapitän Siegfried Ludden, fired a torpedo at the convoy, which was to the southwest of Iceland at the time. He observed a hit on a tanker after 1 minute 34 seconds, which finally sank 45 minutes later with a broken back. At 5.50am, two more torpedoes were fired at the convoy and after 1 minute 58 seconds and 2 minutes 11 seconds hits on two ships were heard. At 5.52am two more torpedoes were fired which, after 1 minute 58 seconds, hit a fourth ship which began to settle by the bow. However, Allied records later indicated that only HMS Beverley was actually hit, between the forward and aft boiler rooms. The explosion on board the destroyer was followed by a complete power failure and a severe lurch to port, after which the ship sank by the stern about a minute later at the position of 52º19'N, 40º28'W. As she slipped beneath the surface there was a large underwater explosion. She was lost with one hundred and fifty one of her crew from a ship's complement of one hundred and fifty five officers and men. Michael Harston was among the dead. Although seven of her crew were picked up over the next hour, three of these were either already dead, or died a short time later.
He is commemorated on the war memorial at Peterhouse College, Cambridge.
He is commemorated on the Portsmouth naval Memorial Panel 81, Column 1.

Hart, ---, fl. 1743
GB-2014-WSA-20775 · Person · fl. 1743

Russell Barker and Stenning record that she kept a boarding house in Dean’s Yard c.1743-53; first of twelve recorded boarders adm. Jun 1743, last recorded boarder adm. May 1752, but the boarding house may well have remained in existence for a period after the available boarding house data ceases at the beginning of 1753. She can be identified as Mrs Elizabeth Hart, dau. of Mrs.Mary Bainbrigg, Dame of a boarding house in Dean’s Yard to her death in Apr 1743, and, if so, she presumably took over her mother’s house.

Hart, ---, fl. 1764
GB-2014-WSA-08817 · Person · fl. 1764

HART, ---; in school list Jun 1764.