976 Supplement to the London Gazette, November 26, 1886

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

976 Supplement to the London Gazette, November 26, 1886 £976 SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, NOVEMBER 26, 1886. Captain and Brevet Major Reginald Adams War Office, Pall Pall, Marriott, Royal Marine Artillery. 26th November, 1886. Captain Horace Lockwood Smith-Dorrien, the THE Queen has been graciously pleased to Sherwood Foresters (Derbyshire Regiment). approve of the following Promotions being con- Captain Andrew Charles Parker Haggard, the ferred upon the undermentioned Officers, in King's Own Borderers. recognition of their services during the operations Captain Elmhirst Rhodes, Princess Charlotte of in the Soudan, 1885-6. Dated 2nd January, Wales's (Royal Berkshire Regiment). 1886 :— Captain James Archibald Ferrier, Royal Engi- To be Colonels. neers. Major and Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Edward Captain Edward Kaye Daubeney, the 'South Colvile, C.B., Grenadier Guards. Staffordshire Regiment. Lieutenant-Colonel William Stanley Hebbert, Captain Frederick Ronald Borrow, the Loyal Royal Artillery. North Lancashire Regiment. Lieutenant Frederick William Romilly, Scots BREVET. Guards. To be Lieutenant-Colonel. Lieutenant John Grenfell Maxwell, the Black Captain and Brevet Major Josceline Heneage Watch (Royal Highlanders). Wodehouse, Royal Artillery. Lieutenant Henry De Beauvoir De Lisle, the To be Major. Durham Light Infantry. Captain Edward James Montagu-Stuart-Wortley, Lieutenant William Richard Norton Annesley, C.M.G., the King's Royal Rifle Corps. Dated the Queen's Own (Royal West Kent Regiment). 2nd March, 1886. Captain Page, Canadian Militia. The Queen has been graciously pleased to Major Hassan Radwan, Egyptian Artillery. approve of the following Promotions being con- Lieutenant Said Radwan, Egyptian Camel Corps. ferred upon the undermentioned Officers, in recog- The late Honorary Major-General Alfred George nition of their services during the operations in Huyshe, C.B., whould have been recommended Burmah. Dated 17th May, 1886 :— for this distinction had he survived. To be Colonels. Lieutenant-Colonel Montague Prptheroe, C.S.T., Madras Staff Corps.' For Operations in Burmah. Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Frederick Williamson, the Royal Welsh Fusiliers. Captain Bernard Channer, Bengal Staff Corps. BREVET. Captain William Aldworth, the Bedfordshire To be Lieutenant-Colonels. Regiment. Major Vincent Came Fisher, Royal Artillery. Cdptain Arthur Robert Ford Dorward, Royal Major Henry Patten Law, the Royal Scots Engineers. Fusiliers. Captain Ernest Charles Wace, Royal Artillery. Major Josiah Erskine Collins, the Hampshire Captain Owen Stuart Smyth, Royal Artillery. Regiment. Captain Thomas Plunket Gather, Royal Engineers. Major William Bannatyne Warner, Madras Captain Lawrence Charles Dundas, the King's Cavalry. (Liverpool Regiment). Major William Penn Symons, the South Wales' Captain Richard Louis Milne, the King's (Liver- Borderers. pool Regiment). Major Geoige Simpson, Madras Staff Corps. Captain Richard Lloyd Payne, the Prince Albert's Major Rowland Henry Thomas Hill, Madras (Somersetshire Light Infantry). Infantry. - Captain Jenico Edward Preston, Madras Staff MEDICAL STAFF. Corps. Surgeon - Major Henry William Alexander Lieutenant William Knox Downes, Bengal Staff Mackinnon to be Brigade Surgeon. Corps. INDIAN MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. Surgeon-Major Charles Sibthorpe to be Brigade Surgeon. Printed and Published by THOMAS HABBISON and JAMES WILLIAM HARBISON, Printers, at their Office, «No. 45, St. Martin's Lane, in the Parish of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, in the County of Middlesex. J Friday, November 26, 1886. Price Four Pence..
Recommended publications
  • The London Gazette, November 25, 1887
    6376 THE LONDON GAZETTE, NOVEMBER 25, 1887. Admiralty, 22nd November, 1887. Captain and Brevet Major Ian Standish Monteith, THE undermentioned Sub-Lieutenants have Hamilton, the Gordon Highlanders, Aide-de- been promoted to the rank of Lieutenant in Her Camp to the Commander-in-Chief, East Indies. Majesty's Fleet:— Captain and Brevet Major Neville Francis Fitz- Arthur Trevor Dawson. Dated 20th November, Gerald Chamberlain, Bengal Staff Corps. 1,887. Major Ralph Arthur Penrhyn Clements, the Philip Walter. Dated 21st November, 1887. South Wales Borderers. Major Stuart Erskine Rolland, Madras Staff Corps,, Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers. Deputy Assistant Adjutant-General, Madras. ^ London Brigade. Sir Edgar, Vincent, K.C.M.G., to be Honorary To be Majors. Lieutenant. Dated 22nd November, 1887. Captain Charles Arthur Ross Sage, Bengal Staff Corps. Captain Henry FitzGerald Stevens, Bengal Staff Corps. War Office, Pall Mall, Captain James Ramsay Hobday, Bengal Staff 25th November, 1887. Corps. THE Queen has been pleased to approve of Captain Charles Edgeworth Gubbins, Bengal Staff the following Promotions being conferred on the Corps. undermentioned Officers, in recognition of their Captain William Bernard Wilson, Bengal Staff services during the recent operations in Burma. Corps., Deputy Assistant Adjutant-General, Dated 1st July, 1887:— Bengal. To be Major- General (for Distinguished Service Captain Arthur Robert Ford Dorward, D.S.O., in the Field}. Royal Engineers, Commanding Royal Engi- Lieutenant-Colonel and Colonel (Local Major- neer, Burma Expeditionary Force. General) Sir George Stewart White, KC.B., Captain Vernon Ansdell Schalch, Bengal Staff V.C., Commanding Burma Expeditionary Corps, Deputy Assistant Adjutant-General, Force. Bengal. BBEVET. Captain Frederick Thomas Nelson Spratt, Royal Engineers.
    [Show full text]
  • Ireland and the South African War, 1899-1902 by Luke Diver, M.A
    Ireland and the South African War, 1899-1902 By Luke Diver, M.A. THESIS FOR THE DEGREE OF PH.D. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND MAYNOOTH Head of Department: Professor Marian Lyons Supervisors of Research: Dr David Murphy Dr Ian Speller 2014 i Table of Contents Page No. Title page i Table of contents ii Acknowledgements iv List of maps and illustrations v List of tables in main text vii Glossary viii Maps ix Personalities of the South African War xx 'A loyal Irish soldier' xxiv Cover page: Ireland and the South African War xxv Introduction 1 Chapter 1: Irish soldiers’ experiences in South Africa (October - December 1899) 19 Chapter 2: Irish soldiers’ experiences in South Africa (January - March 1900) 76 Chapter 3: The ‘Irish’ Imperial Yeomanry and the battle of Lindley 109 Chapter 4: The Home Front 152 Chapter 5: Commemoration 198 Conclusion 227 Appendix 1: List of Irish units 240 Appendix 2: Irish Victoria Cross winners 243 Appendix 3: Men from Irish battalions especially mentioned from General Buller for their conspicuous gallantry in the field throughout the Tugela Operations 247 ii Appendix 4: General White’s commendations of officers and men that were Irish or who were attached to Irish units who served during the period prior and during the siege of Ladysmith 248 Appendix 5: Return of casualties which occurred in Natal, 1899-1902 249 Appendix 6: Return of casualties which occurred in the Cape, Orange River, and Transvaal Colonies, 1899-1902 250 Appendix 7: List of Irish officers and officers who were attached
    [Show full text]
  • The Forgotten Fronts the First World War Battlefield Guide: World War Battlefield First the the Forgotten Fronts Forgotten The
    Ed 1 Nov 2016 1 Nov Ed The First World War Battlefield Guide: Volume 2 The Forgotten Fronts The First Battlefield War World Guide: The Forgotten Fronts Creative Media Design ADR005472 Edition 1 November 2016 THE FORGOTTEN FRONTS | i The First World War Battlefield Guide: Volume 2 The British Army Campaign Guide to the Forgotten Fronts of the First World War 1st Edition November 2016 Acknowledgement The publisher wishes to acknowledge the assistance of the following organisations in providing text, images, multimedia links and sketch maps for this volume: Defence Geographic Centre, Imperial War Museum, Army Historical Branch, Air Historical Branch, Army Records Society,National Portrait Gallery, Tank Museum, National Army Museum, Royal Green Jackets Museum,Shepard Trust, Royal Australian Navy, Australian Defence, Royal Artillery Historical Trust, National Archive, Canadian War Museum, National Archives of Canada, The Times, RAF Museum, Wikimedia Commons, USAF, US Library of Congress. The Cover Images Front Cover: (1) Wounded soldier of the 10th Battalion, Black Watch being carried out of a communication trench on the ‘Birdcage’ Line near Salonika, February 1916 © IWM; (2) The advance through Palestine and the Battle of Megiddo: A sergeant directs orders whilst standing on one of the wooden saddles of the Camel Transport Corps © IWM (3) Soldiers of the Royal Army Service Corps outside a Field Ambulance Station. © IWM Inside Front Cover: Helles Memorial, Gallipoli © Barbara Taylor Back Cover: ‘Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red’ at the Tower of London © Julia Gavin ii | THE FORGOTTEN FRONTS THE FORGOTTEN FRONTS | iii ISBN: 978-1-874346-46-3 First published in November 2016 by Creative Media Designs, Army Headquarters, Andover.
    [Show full text]
  • Channel Islands Great War Study Group
    CHANNEL ISLANDS GREAT WAR STUDY GROUP Lancashire Landing (W Beach) V Beach Ocean Beach, sweeping around towards Suvla Point The Sphinx Ari Burnu (Y Beach) from Walker’s Ridge Brighton Beach and Shell Green Cemetery The Deadly Shores – Gallipoli Today JOURNAL 28 OCTOBER 2009 Please note that Copyright for any articles contained in this Journal rests with the Authors as shown. Please contact them directly if you wish to use their material. 1 Hello All I must confess that for many months up to the time that I boarded my flight took off from Heathrow bound for Istanbul, and to travel from there to the Dardanelles, my feeling was one of considerable apprehension – was I wasting my money, would I learn and see much, would a troublesome knee hold out? Yet, wheezing my way up to Plugge’s Plateau a few days later, that feeling had long since evaporated even though I could now fully understand why the Turkish soldiers had thought that their Australian counterparts worshipped the God “Bastard”! I learnt and saw much, my money was well spent (a common Jersey consideration!), and I made it back safely, albeit in a somewhat worn out and bedraggled state. Gallipoli was a first-rate experience, and I would recommend it and the Holts’ tour company to anyone. Hopefully, I can convey that experience adequately in later pages of this Journal, but trust that I will be forgiven if I don’t, as a few days after my return, my brain is still scrambled and too full of images, impressions and information from the trip to guarantee a decent article.
    [Show full text]
  • Orme) Wilberforce (Albert) Raymond Blackburn (Alexander Bell
    Copyrights sought (Albert) Basil (Orme) Wilberforce (Albert) Raymond Blackburn (Alexander Bell) Filson Young (Alexander) Forbes Hendry (Alexander) Frederick Whyte (Alfred Hubert) Roy Fedden (Alfred) Alistair Cooke (Alfred) Guy Garrod (Alfred) James Hawkey (Archibald) Berkeley Milne (Archibald) David Stirling (Archibald) Havergal Downes-Shaw (Arthur) Berriedale Keith (Arthur) Beverley Baxter (Arthur) Cecil Tyrrell Beck (Arthur) Clive Morrison-Bell (Arthur) Hugh (Elsdale) Molson (Arthur) Mervyn Stockwood (Arthur) Paul Boissier, Harrow Heraldry Committee & Harrow School (Arthur) Trevor Dawson (Arwyn) Lynn Ungoed-Thomas (Basil Arthur) John Peto (Basil) Kingsley Martin (Basil) Kingsley Martin (Basil) Kingsley Martin & New Statesman (Borlasse Elward) Wyndham Childs (Cecil Frederick) Nevil Macready (Cecil George) Graham Hayman (Charles Edward) Howard Vincent (Charles Henry) Collins Baker (Charles) Alexander Harris (Charles) Cyril Clarke (Charles) Edgar Wood (Charles) Edward Troup (Charles) Frederick (Howard) Gough (Charles) Michael Duff (Charles) Philip Fothergill (Charles) Philip Fothergill, Liberal National Organisation, N-E Warwickshire Liberal Association & Rt Hon Charles Albert McCurdy (Charles) Vernon (Oldfield) Bartlett (Charles) Vernon (Oldfield) Bartlett & World Review of Reviews (Claude) Nigel (Byam) Davies (Claude) Nigel (Byam) Davies (Colin) Mark Patrick (Crwfurd) Wilfrid Griffin Eady (Cyril) Berkeley Ormerod (Cyril) Desmond Keeling (Cyril) George Toogood (Cyril) Kenneth Bird (David) Euan Wallace (Davies) Evan Bedford (Denis Duncan)
    [Show full text]
  • 2014 2 Friendly Companion January 2014
    TThhee Friendly Companion Friendly Companion “The L ORD hath made all things for Himself.” (Proverbs 16. 4.) January 2014 2 Friendly Companion January 2014 Editor: Mr. G.D. Buss, “Bethany,” 7 Laines Head, Chippenham, Wiltshire, SN15 1PH. Tel: 01249 656910. Email: [email protected] All correspondence (except that which relates to subscriptions) to be sent to the Editor. Annual Subscriptions inc. postage: U.K. U.S.A. & Canada Australia Europe (Netherlands) £13.50 $36 A$38 €25.00 All correspondence concerning subscriptions should be addressed to Mr. D. Christian, 5, Roundwood Gardens, Harpenden, Herts. AL5 3AJ. Cheques should be made out to Gospel Standard Publications. For United States and Canada, please send to Mr. G. Tenbroeke, 1725 Plainwood Drive, Sheboygan, Wisconsin 53081, USA. Volume 140 January 2014 CONTENTS Our Monthly Message 3 Our Front Cover Picture 4 Good Wishes 5 For The Very Little Ones: Naomi Returns 6 Colouring Text: Ruth 1. 22. 7 Bible Lessons: The Burial Of Jesus 8 Three ‘B’s For 2014 10 A Dark Episode 12 Naaman 17 Sin 17 The Necessity Of Divine Life 18 Editor’s Postbag 18 Fascinating Flowerpots 19 Bible Study For The Older Ones: Light And Darkness (I) 20 Bible Questions: Washing And Making Clean 22 Poetry: A Conversation Between Two Brothers 24 Friendly Companion January 2014 3 OUR MONTHLY MESSAGE Dear Children and Young People, As you pick up the Friendly Companion this month it will be to read the first issue of another year. How quickly, to those of us who are older, do the years fly past! When you are younger, often time seems to drag, and there is a danger that you might wish your time away faster than God intends.
    [Show full text]
  • August 1915 / Août 1915
    World War I Day by Day 1915 – 1918 August 1915 / août 1915 La premiere guerre mondiale De jour en jour 1915 – 1918 Friends of the Canadian War Museum – Les amis du Musée canadien de la guerre https://www.friends-amis.org/ © 2019 FCWM - AMCG 1 août 1915 Le Front Est – La prise de Lublin et Chelm Lublin. 1915. La lancée de Mackensen vers Varsovie: Les forces allemandes ont déjà repoussé les armées russes de Lemberg, en mai. Le 31 juillet 1915, elles entrent dans les villes de Lublin et Chelm (Cholm) sans s’arrêter, dans l’intention de saisir le saillant de Varsovie de la même foulée, dans les prochains jours. Les Russes décrochent comme ils peuvent. Leurs matériel, provisions et munitions sont écoulées. Cruttwell, History of the Great War, (Oxford: Clarendon, 1934, 2nd Ed., 2nd Rpt, 1969), Chap 9 «The Retreat of Russia», p. 171-86. August Mackensen, German field marshal Friends of the Canadian War Museum – Les amis du Musée canadien de la guerre https://www.friends-amis.org/ © 2019 FCWM - AMCG 2 August 1915 Greater Syria under Ottoman authority Jamal Pasha in Syria The Ottoman administration of Jamal Pasha in Greater Syria is marred by the dismal failure of his operations against Egypt, and the draconian decisions to prosecute and execute or deport Syrians and Lebanese for their pre-war connection with France. Jamal Pasha becomes known as the « Blood Shedder» by the locals, unimpressed by his lack of success as a commander and by his injustice as an administrator. Eleven notables known for their pre-war legitimate political activities with the Decentralization Party are hanged in Beirut.
    [Show full text]
  • Rifles Regimental Road
    THE RIFLES CHRONOLOGY 1685-2012 20140117_Rifles_Chronology_1685-2012_Edn2.Docx Copyright 2014 The Rifles Trustees http://riflesmuseum.co.uk/ No reproduction without permission - 2 - CONTENTS 5 Foreword 7 Design 9 The Rifles Representative Battle Honours 13 1685-1756: The Raising of the first Regiments in 1685 to the Reorganisation of the Army 1751-1756 21 1757-1791: The Seven Years War, the American War of Independence and the Affiliation of Regiments to Counties in 1782 31 1792-1815: The French Revolutionary Wars, the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812 51 1816-1881: Imperial Expansion, the First Afghan War, the Crimean War, the Indian Mutiny, the Formation of the Volunteer Force and Childers’ Reforms of 1881 81 1882-1913: Imperial Consolidation, the Second Boer War and Haldane’s Reforms 1906-1912 93 1914-1918: The First World War 129 1919-1938: The Inter-War Years and Mechanisation 133 1939-1945: The Second World War 153 1946-1988: The End of Empire and the Cold War 165 1989-2007: Post Cold War Conflict 171 2007 to Date: The Rifles First Years Annex A: The Rifles Family Tree Annex B: The Timeline Map 20140117_Rifles_Chronology_1685-2012_Edn2.Docx Copyright 2014 The Rifles Trustees http://riflesmuseum.co.uk/ No reproduction without permission - 3 - 20140117_Rifles_Chronology_1685-2012_Edn2.Docx Copyright 2014 The Rifles Trustees http://riflesmuseum.co.uk/ No reproduction without permission - 4 - FOREWORD by The Colonel Commandant Lieutenant General Sir Nick Carter KCB CBE DSO The formation of The Rifles in 2007 brought together the histories of the thirty-five antecedent regiments, the four forming regiments, with those of our territorials.
    [Show full text]
  • Newfoundland's Cultural Memory of the Attack at Beaumont Hamel
    Glorious Tragedy: Newfoundland’s Cultural Memory of the Attack at Beaumont Hamel, 1916-1925 ROBERT J. HARDING THE FIRST OF JULY is a day of dual significance for Newfoundlanders. As Canada Day, it is a celebration of the dominion’s birth and development since 1867. In Newfoundland and Labrador, the day is also commemorated as the anniversary of the Newfoundland Regiment’s costliest engagement during World War I. For those who observe it, Memorial Day is a sombre occasion which recalls this war as a trag- edy for Newfoundland, symbolized by the Regiment’s slaughter at Beaumont Hamel, France, on 1 July 1916. The attack at Beaumont Hamel was depicted differently in the years immedi- ately following the war. Newfoundland was then a dominion, Canada was an impe- rial sister, and politicians, clergymen, and newspaper editors offered Newfoundlanders a cultural memory of the conflict that was built upon a trium- phant image of Beaumont Hamel. Newfoundland’s war myth exhibited selectively romantic tendencies similar to those first noted by Paul Fussell in The Great War and Modern Memory.1 Jonathan Vance has since observed that Canadians also de- veloped a cultural memory which “gave short shrift to the failures and disappoint- ments of the war.”2 Numerous scholars have identified cultural memory as a dynamic social mechanism used by a society to remember an experience common to all its members, and to aid that society in defining and justifying itself.3 Beau- mont Hamel served as such a mechanism between 1916 and 1925. By constructing a triumphant memory based upon selectivity, optimism, and conjured romanticism, local mythmakers hoped to offer grieving and bereaved Newfoundlanders an in- spiring and noble message which rationalized their losses.
    [Show full text]
  • Account and Medal Roll Update 1 David Biggins
    Talana Account and Medal Roll Update 1 By David Biggins 1 Introduction to Update 1 In compiling the Talana book, more information was researched than could be included and this update is comprised of this information and also some recent discoveries of medals with the Talana clasp that have appeared on the market. The intention is to produce regular updates to this book and the other Boer War titles. Within this update can be found the dispatches and evidence given to the Royal Commission by General White and the diary of Governor Hely-Hutchinson. Several eyewitness accounts are also included that give perspectives of the battle itself, the view from Pietermaritzburg and life afterwards. Two accounts by the Town Guard are included and also examples of poetry that was written to commemorate the battle. There is a roll of bronze medals earned by Indian recipients and a short section on the postal commemoration of the battle of Talana. I hope you find the update interesting. For a copy of the book, please contact Token Publishing. This document can be downloaded from the web site, free of charge. Follow the links to the Talana page. www.angloboerwar.com Please use this site to contribute information about Talana, the Boer War or take part in the forum. To provide feedback to the author please use the forum or the email address: [email protected] David Biggins March 2012 2 Contents Introduction to Update 1 ....................................................................................................................................... 2 British Army organisation ...................................................................................................................................... 4 Butler’s report of 14th June 1899 .......................................................................................................................... 7 Martial Law Proclamation, 23rd October 1899 .....................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The London Gazette
    ftantt* 27157. 497 The London Gazette. bp & utJjontg. y • 1 ................ # ■ — ■ ■ ■ ■ — — ■1 FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1900. War Office, January, 26, 1900. Fusiliers, and Mounted Infantry Company j 6th HE following Despatches, with their en­ Veterinary Field Hospital. closures, have been receiredfrom General, With 1 Company, 1st Battalion King’s Royal Tthe Bight Honourable Sir Redvers Boiler, G.C.B.,Rifle Corps at Eshowe, and a detachment of the South Africa : — Umvoti Mounted Rifles at Helpmakaar. 3. The information available regarding the From the General Gommanding-in-Chief the positions occupied by the armies of the two Dutch Forces in South Africa to the Secretary of Republics showed the great bulk of the forces of State for War, War Office, London, S.W. the Orange Free State were massed near the Cape Town, passes of the Drakensberg mountains, west of Sib , November 9, 1899. Ladysmith. The troops of the South African I HAVE the honour to forward herewith a Republic were concentrated at various points west, report from Lieutenant-General Sir George north, and east of the northern angle of Natal. White, V.C., &c., dated 2nd November, on his On 10th October His Excellency the Governor operations in Natal, which was handed to me informed me that Her Majesty’s Government had yesterday by Lieutenant-General French onAngloBoerWar.com his received an ultimatum from that of the South arrival from Durban, It does not seem to call African Republic, and that the outbreak of for any remarks from me. war on the evening of 11th October might be I have, &c., regarded as certain.
    [Show full text]
  • WORLD WAR ONE WAR WORLD Research Guide World War One
    WORLD WAR ONE WAR WORLD Research Guide World War One 1 King’s College London Archives & Special Collections Archives College London King’s Sections of this guide 1. Prelude to war 5 2. High Command & strategy 7 3. Propaganda 9 4. Military & naval campaigns 11 5. Technology of war 18 6. Empire & dominions 22 7. Health & welfare 24 8. Aftermath 27 9. Memorials 30 10. Writing the war 32 Library Services 2014 DESIGN & PRODUCTION Susen Vural Design www.susenvural.com 2 March 2014 Introduction Archives Online resources The Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives www.kcl.ac.uk/archivespec/collections/resources (LCHMA) holds nearly 200 collections These include: relating to World War One. They include The Serving Soldier portal, giving access to orders, reports, diaries, letters, telegrams, log thousands of digital copies of unique diaries, books, memoranda, photographs, memoirs, correspondence, scrapbooks, photographs and maps, posters, press cuttings and memorabilia. other LHCMA archive items, from the late For more information, please see the online 19th century to World War Two, scanned as LHCMA World War One A-Z listing under part of a JISC-funded project. research guides at www.kcl.ac.uk/archivespec King’s College London Archives are Lest We Forget, a website created by King’s among the most extensive and varied higher College London Archives and the University education collections in the UK. They include of the Third Age (U3A), to commemorate the institutional records of King’s since 1828, the 20th century war dead of King’s College records relating to King’s College Hospital and London and the institutions with which it the medical schools of Guy’s and St Thomas’ has merged, including the Medical Schools of Hospitals, and records relating to other Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals.
    [Show full text]