Ashburnham

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Ashburnham

BT Houses

Ashburnham

Equivalent terms

Ashburnham

Associated terms

Ashburnham

1032 People & Organisations results for Ashburnham

1032 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Hardie, Cecil Claud Alexander, 1883-1957

  • GB-2014-WSA-08649
  • Person
  • 1883-1957

Hardie, Cecil Claud Alexander, son of Alexander Robertson Hardie, of Putney, by Florence, daughter of Roger Bocking Hammerton, of King's Lynn, Norfolk; b. April 28, 1883; adm. April 23, 1896 (A); left Dec. 1900; Univ. Coll. London; a pupil at Swan Hunter and Wigham Richardson's 1903-6; engineer, Dick, Kerr and Co., Ltd., 1907-14, English Electric Co., Ltd., 1919; general manager of Messrs. Crompton Parkinson & Co's Chelmsford works; temp. Lieut. R.E. Nov. 3, 1914; Capt. 122nd Field Co., 36th (Ulster) Div.; Major July 14, 1915; acting Lieut.-Col. July 15, 1918; served on the western front Oct. 1915 - Nov. 1918; mentioned in despatches L. G. Jan. 4 and Dec. 14, 1917; D.S.O. Jan. 1, 1918; m. March 1919 Gladys Mary, daughter of Arthur Renier; d. Feb. 13, 1957.

Hardie, Frank Martin, 1911-1989

  • GB-2014-WSA-08650
  • Person
  • 1911-1989

Hardie, Frank Martin, son of Martin Hardie CBE, Keeper of Prints and Drawings V & A Museum, and Madeline, d. of Adm. John Robert Ebenezer Pattisson RN; b. 14 June 1911; adm. Sept. 1924 (A); left July 1929; Ch. Ch. Oxf., matric. 1929, Pres. of the Union Hilary term 1933, BA 1932 (1st class hons Mod. History), DPhil MA 1937; LSE 193 7-9; Foreign Office in WW2; John Lewis Partnership 1945-52; contested (Lab) Epsom 1950 and 1951; Steel Co. of Wales 1953-6; Brit. Iron & Steel Fedn 1957-64; author of The Political Influence of Queen Victoria 1935, The Abyssinian Crisis 1974; m. 5 Mar. 1957 Gertrude, d. of David Alman of Hampstead; d. 26 Jan. 1989.

Harding, Aubrey Milward, 1889-1972

  • GB-2014-WSA-08652
  • Person
  • 1889-1972

Harding, Aubrey Milward, son of Milward and Beatrice Harding, of St. Marylebone; b. April 30, 1889; adm. Sept. 24, 1903 (A); migrated up Rigaud's; left Easter 1908; Magd. Coll. Camb., matric. Michaelmas 1908; B.A.; served in the R. N. A. S. during Great War I; temp. Flight Sub-Lieut. Jan. 19, 1916; Flight-Lieut. Oct. 1, 1917; m. Feb. 14, 1913, Phyllis Marjorie, daughter of Frank Montague-Smith, of Regent's Park, London; d. 6 Aug. 1972.

Hare, John Edward, 1919-1942

  • GB-2014-WSA-08674
  • Person
  • 1919-1942

Hare, John Edward, son of Lieut.-Col. John Hare OBE RAMC FRCS, ENT specialist, and Kathleen Dora, d. of Edward Rowe of Cape Town; b. 30 Dec. 1919; adm. Sept. 1933 (A); left July 1938; Univ. of London; MN radio officer in WW2; d. 1942 of exposure after his ship was torpedoed.

John Edward Hare was born at Simonstown, South Africa on the 30th of December 1919 the eldest son of Lieutenant Colonel John Hare OBE FRCS, Royal Army Medical Corps, and Kathleen Dora (nee Rowe) Hare of 22, Elm Park Gardens, Chelsea in London, later of “Ormidale”, Clevedon in Somerset. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Ashburnham from September 1933 to July 1938. He was a noted pianist while he was at school. He went on to the University of London.
In March 1941, the 3,767 ton cargo steamer SS Umona, under the command of Master Frederick Arthur Baden Peckham, set sail from Durban bound for London carrying a cargo of 1,549 tons of maize, 50 tons of pulses and 47 tons of jam. She was also carrying 14 passengers, of which 7 were sailors who had survived pervious sinkings. She called at Walvis Bay on the 20th of March before setting sail alone for Freetown in Sierra Leone where she was to join a convoy.
At 11.01pm on the 30th of March 1941, the SS Umona was sailing some 90 nautical miles to the southwest of Freetown when she was struck underneath the aft mast on the port side by a G7e “Gnat” torpedo which had been fired by the U Boat U-124, under the command of Kapitänleutnant Georg-Wilhelm Schultz. She was hit by a second torpedo two minutes later and sank six minutes after that. During that time John Hare, the radio officer on duty at the time, stayed at his post transmitting distress messages before jumping into the sea. Only one lifeboat of the six on board, had managed to launch before she sank. The lifeboat was commanded by Fourth Officer Edwin Clarke who was captured when U-124 surfaced and took him on board before submerging again. He was never seen again. John Hare managed to pull himself on board a small life raft which was also carrying a badly wounded naval gunner, E.G. Elliot RN and a passenger, Frank Brothers. After drifting for four days they spotted a U Boat on the surface which they managed to signal to by using the reflection of a tobacco tin. The submarine came alongside and gave them fresh water before sailing away. The next day the weather worsened and John Hare died from exposure during the afternoon. The two remaining men were picked up by the cargo ship SS Lorca on the 12th of April and were landed at Freetown. Three other survivors had been picked up by the destroyer HMS Foxhound (H69) on the 7th of April but the other 101 passengers and crew had perished when the ship had gone down.
His date of death is given as the date of the sinking of the ship but a number of other sources record that he died on board the life raft a few days later.
He was posthumously awarded the King’s Commendation for Brave Conduct, which was announced by St James’s Palace on the 28th of April 1942.
He is commemorated on the Tower Hill Memorial, Panel 113.

Harris, Owen Francis, 1914-2004

  • GB-2014-WSA-08757
  • Person
  • 1914-2004

Harris, Owen Francis, son of Philip Harris of Bayswater; b. 28 Oct. 1914; adm. Sept. 1928 (A); left Dec. 1929; 2nd Lieut. RA Aug. 1943, transf. Pioneer Corps Aug. 1944; d. June 2004.

Harris, Stanley Shute, 1881-1926

  • GB-2014-WSA-08759
  • Person
  • 1881-1926

Harris, Stanley Shute, son of Sir Charles Alexander Harris, K.C.M.G., sometime Governor of Newfoundland, by Constance Maria, daughter of John Shute, of Clifton, Gloucs; b. July 19, 1881; adm. Jan. 16, 1896 (A); left July 1900; Pembroke Coll. Camb., matric. Michaelmas 1900; B.A. 1903; M.A. 1909; played football (Association) for Cambridge 1902-4 (Capt. 1903-4), for England v. Scotland 1904-6, v. Wales 1905-6, v. Ireland 1905-6, and v. France 1909; translator into French on bahalf of the Foreign Office 1903; Head Master of St. Ronan's School, West Worthing, Sussex; author of The Master and his Boys; the Stanley Harris Student­ ship at Pembroke College, Cambridge tenable by an old boy of St. Ronan's School, by an Old Westminster or by the son of a former member of the College, was founded in his memory by his friends; d. May 4, 1926.

Harris, Walter Bruce, 1888-1957

  • GB-2014-WSA-08762
  • Person
  • 1888-1957

Harris, Walter Bruce, brother of Stanley Shute Harris (q.v.); b. Aug. 21, 1888; adm. Sept. 25, 1902 (A); left July 1908; Pembroke Coll. Camb., matric. Michaelmas 1908; B.A. 1911; played football (Association) for Cambridge 1908-11, and for England v. Wales (A. F. A.) 1910; an asst. master at Lancing Coll. 1911; left Lancing in 1926 on the death of his brother Stanley Shute Harris (q.v.) to take over the headmastership of St. Ronan's School then at Worthing, Sussex and moved during Great War II to Hawkhurst, Kent, and was one of the most successful preparatory school masters of his day; d. Aug. 8, 1957; unm.

Harrison, Alfred Tuke Priestman, 1921-1995

  • GB-2014-WSA-08773
  • Person
  • 1921-1995

Harrison, Alfred Tuke Priestman, brother of John Graham Harrison (qv); b. 8 May 1921; adm. Sept. 1933 (A, non-res. KS); left July 1939; Ch. Ch. Oxf., matric. 1939, BA 1943, MA 194 7; RA 1941-5 (Capt.), despatches Feb. 1944; ord. deacon 1949, priest 1950 (Bath & Wells); Curate St Andrew Taunton 1949; priest-in-charge St Peter Lyngford, Taunton, 1955; Vicar of La Brea, Trinidad, 1959, Cartagena, Colombia, 1966; Dean of Trinidad 1969; Vicar of St Thomas Leesfield, Oldham, 1973-; d. 3 Aug. 1995.

Harrison, John Graham, 1910-1979

  • GB-2014-WSA-08789
  • Person
  • 1910-1979

Harrison, John Graham, son of Engineer Rear-Adm. Jesse Hope Harrison RN of Norwood, and Mary, d. of Peter Graham RA, of Edinburgh; b. 5 Aug. 1910; adm. Sept. 1923 (A); left Apr. 1929; a chartered accountant, ACA 1935, FCA 1960; practised in London; m. Mary Wood, d. of David Haddon Vickery MD, of Briton Ferry, Glam.; d. 1 Sept. 1979.

Harrison, Keith, 1934-2015

  • GB-2014-WSA-08793
  • Person
  • 1934-2015

Harrison, Keith, son of Cyril Harrison, higher exec. officer War Office, and Lucy, d. of Frank Higgart; b. 20 Apr. 1934; adm. Sept. 1947 (A); left July 1952; ACII 1960, FCII 1967; claims man. Sun Alliance and London Insurance Group 1955-83; retd. 1983; man. Westside Lawn Tennis Club, Wimbledon 1986-98; m. 12 Sept. 1959 Jean, d. of George Henry Harold Richards, solicitor; d. 31 Jan. 2015.

Results 431 to 440 of 1032