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Inscribed 6 (2).Pdf
Inscribed6 CONTENTS 1 1. AVIATION 33 2. MILITARY 59 3. NAVAL 67 4. ROYALTY, POLITICIANS, AND OTHER PUBLIC FIGURES 180 5. SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 195 6. HIGH LATITUDES, INCLUDING THE POLES 206 7. MOUNTAINEERING 211 8. SPACE EXPLORATION 214 9. GENERAL TRAVEL SECTION 1. AVIATION including books from the libraries of Douglas Bader and “Laddie” Lucas. 1. [AITKEN (Group Captain Sir Max)]. LARIOS (Captain José, Duke of Lerma). Combat over Spain. Memoirs of a Nationalist Fighter Pilot 1936–1939. Portrait frontispiece, illustrations. First edition. 8vo., cloth, pictorial dust jacket. London, Neville Spearman. nd (1966). £80 A presentation copy, inscribed on the half title page ‘To Group Captain Sir Max AitkenDFC. DSO. Let us pray that the high ideals we fought for, with such fervent enthusiasm and sacrifice, may never be allowed to perish or be forgotten. With my warmest regards. Pepito Lerma. May 1968’. From the dust jacket: ‘“Combat over Spain” is one of the few first-hand accounts of the Spanish Civil War, and is the only one published in England to be written from the Nationalist point of view’. Lerma was a bomber and fighter pilot for the duration of the war, flying 278 missions. Aitken, the son of Lord Beaverbrook, joined the RAFVR in 1935, and flew Blenheims and Hurricanes, shooting down 14 enemy aircraft. Dust jacket just creased at the head and tail of the spine. A formidable Vic formation – Bader, Deere, Malan. 2. [BADER (Group Captain Douglas)]. DEERE (Group Captain Alan C.) DOWDING Air Chief Marshal, Lord), foreword. Nine Lives. Portrait frontispiece, illustrations. First edition. -
Barry Lawrence Ruderman Antique Maps Inc
Barry Lawrence Ruderman Antique Maps Inc. 7407 La Jolla Boulevard www.raremaps.com (858) 551-8500 La Jolla, CA 92037 [email protected] (Guatemala-Belize Border Survey) Mapa De Una Parte de la Frontera Entre Guatemala y Honduras-Britanica senalada en el Convenio de 30 de Abril 1861 y Medida por los Comisionados Nombrados Segun dicho Convenio Desde el 4 de Dicieme 1860 al 21 de Abril 1861 Stock#: 69095 Map Maker: Clayton / Baron Brun Date: 1861 Place: Guatemala City Color: Pen & Ink with Wash Color Condition: Good Size: 26 x 38 inches Price: SOLD Description: One of the Most Important Maps in the History of Guatemala and Belize. Impressive manuscript map of the border between Guatemala and British Honduras (Belize), copied by Baron Brun in Guatemala shortly after the original was produced by Lieutenant V.G. Clayton for Henry Wray the official surveyor of the border. Drawer Ref: Stock#: 69095 Page 1 of 3 Barry Lawrence Ruderman Antique Maps Inc. 7407 La Jolla Boulevard www.raremaps.com (858) 551-8500 La Jolla, CA 92037 [email protected] (Guatemala-Belize Border Survey) Mapa De Una Parte de la Frontera Entre Guatemala y Honduras-Britanica senalada en el Convenio de 30 de Abril 1861 y Medida por los Comisionados Nombrados Segun dicho Convenio Desde el 4 de Dicieme 1860 al 21 de Abril 1861 This example would appear to be one of the official manuscripts produced for the Guatemalan government following the completion of the survey. The map focuses on British Honduras, showing its coastline in the Gulf of Honduras and its border with Guatemala, as well as a considerable amount of information on the Belize River. -
Information Technologies for the Control of Money Laundering
Information Technologies for the Control of Money Laundering September 1995 OTA-ITC-630 GPO stock #052-003-01436-0 Recommended Citation: U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, Information Technologies for Control of Money Laundering, OTA-ITC-630 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, September 1995). oreword he key to control of international crime may depend on cutting off the flow of illegal profits to criminal organizations. It is esti- mated that $300 billion of “dirty money” may be laundered each year, its origin and ownership obscured as it passes through fi- nancial institutions and across national boundaries in an effort to hide and protect it from law enforcement authorities. Criminal organizations, like legitimate businesses, enjoy a swift and nearly risk-free conduit for moving money between countries—wire transfer systems. Illicit wire transfers are easily hidden among the 700,000 mostly legitimate wire transfers that occur daily in the United States, moving well over $2 trillion. OTA was asked by the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs to assess the proposed use of techniques derived from artificial intelligence research to monitor wire transfer traffic and recognize suspicious transfers. Fully automated computer screening of wire transfers was found to be virtually impossi- ble for technical reasons. However, OTA analysts developed and eval- uated a number of alternative configurations of technology that, com- bined with certain legal and institutional innovations, could greatly enhance the capability of law enforcement agencies to detect and prose- cute money launders seeking to exploit U.S. financial institutions and wire transfer systems. -
The Toodyay Convict Hiring Depot
The Toodyay Convict Hiring Depot By Alison Cromb, Guest Writer The Toodyay Convict Hiring Depot was one of a number of convict hiring depots set up in 1851 after the unexpected arrival of a large number of convicts to the Swan River Colony. The Pyrenees anchored off Fremantle on 28 June 1851. On board were 293 convicts, all of whom would be granted their ticket- of-leave after disembarking. Three convicts had died during the voyage. Governor Fitzgerald acted quickly. In July he announced the introduction of convict hiring depots to Western Australia. The newly arrived men would be divided into two groups, the first of which would enable convict hiring depots to be set up at North Fremantle and at the Perth Steam Mill located at the foot of Mt Eliza. The remaining group of 120 men were going to be sent, in equal numbers, to the rural towns of York, Toodyay and Bunbury where convict hiring depots would be set up using their labour. Temporary accommodation was hastily arranged – the purchase of a cottage and land at ‘old’ Toodyay, rental accommodation in York and the purchase of an unfinished house in Bunbury. Enrolled Pensioner Guards would also be sent to each depot site. The building of the convict hiring depots would be assisted by the 20th Company of Royal Sappers and Miners who would act as Instructing Warders. OLD TOODYAY (now known as WEST TOODYAY) The party of 40 ticket-of-leave holders heading for Toodyay was held up in Guildford by heavy rain and flooding. Escorted by Pensioner Guard James Stanford, the men finally arrived at the Toodyay Barracks on Wednesday, 20 August. -
Whole Day Download the Hansard
Wednesday Volume 612 29 June 2016 No. 17 HOUSE OF COMMONS OFFICIAL REPORT PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES (HANSARD) Wednesday 29 June 2016 © Parliamentary Copyright House of Commons 2016 This publication may be reproduced under the terms of the Open Parliament licence, which is published at www.parliament.uk/site-information/copyright/. 281 29 JUNE 2016 282 global fund, something which the global fund has House of Commons specifically asked us to contemplate and which several other countries are doing? Might she also take the Wednesday 29 June 2016 opportunity to make a speech on the continuing worldwide HIV and AIDS crisis? The House met at half-past Eleven o’clock Justine Greening: That is an important question. PRAYERS Following the announcement of the multilateral aid review, which is coming out shortly, we are looking at [MR SPEAKER in the Chair] how we approach the forthcoming replenishment. The key thing is to ensure that we lobby other countries and players to provide support alongside the UK, but, as Oral Answers to Questions the hon. Gentleman says, it is important that we show leadership ourselves. INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT Dr Philippa Whitford (Central Ayrshire) (SNP): Before I ask my question, may I express our solidarity with the The Secretary of State was asked— people who were involved in the bombing in Istanbul last night? Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria The cap is a bizarre self-limitation. If Britain wants 1. Oliver Colvile (Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport) to give £1.2 billion to the global fund, why do we set a (Con): What her policy is on the investment case for the cap that prevents us from doing so? replenishment of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. -
HENDERSON FAMILY Papers, 1852-97 Reel M2254
AUSTRALIAN JOINT COPYING PROJECT HENDERSON FAMILY Papers, 1852-97 Reel M2254 Sir Edmund Neville Sloley Old Hall Sloley Norfolk National Library of Australia State Library of New South Wales Filmed: 1976 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES George Henderson (1785-1864), the son of a naval officer, joined the Royal Navy in 1794. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1804. He served under Sir Alexander Cochrane and Sir Samuel Hood. He was appointed a captain in 1810 and took part in the capture of Mauritius. At the end of the Napoleonic Wars, he went on the retired list. He was made a vice-admiral in 1855 and an admiral in 1860. Henderson married Frances Walcott in 1817 and they had six children. The eldest son, William G. Henderson (1819-1905) was dean of Carlisle Cathedral and the third son, Samuel Hood Henderson (1823-1882) was an admiral. Sir Edmund Yeamans Walcott Henderson (1821-1896) was the second son of George Henderson. He was born near Christchurch, Hampshire, and educated at King Edward’s School, Bruton, Somerset, and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal Engineers in 1838. He served in Canada from 1839 to 1848, apart from a year spent at Portsmouth, and carried out a detailed survey of the western half of New Brunswick to determine the possibility of establishing a railway between Halifax and Quebec. In 1847 he was promoted to captain and in 1848 he married Mary Murphy. In 1850 Henderson was appointed comptroller of convicts in Western Australia and arrived in Perth with the first party of convicts and a guard of sappers. -
The Registry Books Are Approximately
THETHE REGISTRYREGISTRY BOOKSBOOKS Page 2 Clifton Street Cemetery One of the most historically interesting facets of any burying ground are, without doubt, its registry books. Although the New Burying Ground was opened in 1797, it was not until 1831 that the Belfast Charitable Society began to keep a registry of all interments. It is unknown why they did not keep a registry from the beginning, but one reason may be that they were more interested in making money to finance the poor-house through the selling of the graves, than to worry about recording who was being buried in them. However at a meeting held in the poor-house on the 18th of December 1830 it was: Resolved -that a registry of all the interments in the Burying Ground of the Charitable Society be kept from the commencement of the next year, and that the Rev. Messrs Macartney and Hicks be requested to have a suitable book prepared for the purpose. The first burial recorded was on the 4th of January, 1831. However, the exact number of people buried in the burying ground before that will never be known. At a rough estimate it could be guessed that around 3,600 burials could have taken place before 1831. That is if up to 100 people had been buried per year, which was below the average amount of burials taking place throughout the 1830s. The figures shown in the three volumes of the registry books are approximately: Volume 1 1831-1841, 2,640 Volume 2 1841-1864, 5,489 Volume 3 1865-1984, 3,109 Add on the pre-1831 figures and the number of those buried in the New Burying Ground could be as high as 14,000. -
Convict Biographies: Joseph Lucas Horrocks 2
FREMANTLE PRISON Before The Convicts 1 The Typical Convict 1 Convict Biographies: Joseph Lucas Horrocks 2 Moondyne Joe 3 James Walsh 4 Thomas Bushell 5 Thomas ‘Satan’ Browne 6 Patrick Gibbons 7 John Boyle O’Reilly 8 Convict Administrators: Edmund Henderson 9 Superintendent Thomas Dixon 10 Captain Henry Wray 11 Surgeon George Attfield 13 Pensioner Guards 14 © Government of Western Australia 2009 Published by Fremantle Prison, Department of Treasury and Finance – Building Management and Works, Government of Western Australia The Terrace, Fremantle, Western Australia, 6160, Australia All rights reserved. This publication is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, classroom teaching, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any other information storage and retrieval system, without prior written permission from the publisher. No image in this publication may be reproduced without the permission of the copyright owners. Fremantle Prison’s Key to Knowledge resources have been produced by Fremantle Prison for general classroom use. Teachers may duplicate the resources for education purposes only. Research and Text: Luke Donegan Design: Axiom Design Partners Text editing: Maia Frewer, Oonagh Quigley Acknowledgements: Fremantle Prison would like to thank the following organisations and individuals who have made significant contributions -
Irish Descendants of Sir Wm of Cheshire 2020
Irish Descendants of Sir William Brereton, Lord Brereton of Leighin, Ireland and Cheshire, England One Irish Brereton Crest - a demi-unicorn, collared By Faye Brereton-Goodwin, Canada Researched and written by Faye Brereton-Goodwin – [email protected] March 2020 update Irish Descendants of Sir William Brereton, Lord Leighlin of Ireland and Cheshire England pg. 2 of 137 Author: Faye Brereton-Goodwin, Ontario, Canada INTRODUCTION I was born in Canada, daughter of Albert (Bert) Lionel Brereton and Mabel Doak. Dad’s paternal grandparents, James Westropp Brereton and Ursula Harnett (along with four children) arrived in Canada from Listowel, Ireland in 1878, after the Captain had been appointed a Dominion Commissioner of Police by Queen Victoria. Dad’s maternal grandparents were Dan Martin of Northern Ireland and Julia Crowley, identified as of the Province of Munster, Ireland. My mother’s great grandparents, both the Willis and Doak families, also immigrated to Canada from Northern Ireland. So, it is little wonder that I went in search of my Irish ancestors. As my great-grandfather Captain James W. Brereton kept a diary and there were family tales and newspaper clippings of Brereton and Handford Halls, I became intrigued with my Irish Brereton ancestors at an early age. I began my journey with the Breretons of Cheshire and I continue to be fascinated with this family who travelled the world, were knighted and held positions of power. Also, as with many Landed Gentry families, their sons went into the clergy (some rising to senior positions), became involved in local politics and certainly there were many in the military throughout the centuries. -
The Convict Era in Western Australia: Its Economic, Social and Political Consequences
The Convict Era in Western Australia: Its Economic, Social and Political Consequences by William J. Edgar History School of Arts, Murdoch University A dissertation submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2 Declaration Except where I have indicated, I declare that this dissertation is my own work and is an account of my research that has not been submitted for assessment for a degree at a University or other Tertiary Institution. (Signed) William J. Edgar 3 Copyright Acknowledgment I acknowledge that a copy of this dissertation will be held at Murdoch University Library. I understand that, under the provisions of s51.2 of the Copyright Act 1968, all or part of this dissertation may be copied without infringement of copyright where such a reproduction is for the purposes of study and research. This statement does not signal any transfer of copyright away from the author. (Signed) William J. Edgar Full Name of Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Dissertation Title: The Convict Era in Western Australia: Its Economic, Social and Political Consequences. Author: William J. Edgar Year: 2014 4 Acknowledgements I acknowledge Professor Michael Sturma’s research guidance, his professional mentoring approach and his expert editing skills in the preparation and refining processes of this dissertation. I further acknowledge Mrs Annette Roberts, great-granddaughter of Henry Maxwell Lefroy, for allowing me to quote from her ancestor’s private letters. Acknowledge is also due to Michael and Isabel Kilkenny, psychologists, for their insightful comments on the likely influences of environment on the behaviour of the convict fraternity after arrival in Western Australia. -
The Academical the MAGAZINE for ACADEMICALS ACROSS the GLOBE | 2020
The Academical THE MAGAZINE FOR ACADEMICALS ACROSS THE GLOBE | 2020 In this edition: DR ALISTAIR MCCONNELL TAKES US ON HIS JOURNEY FROM IRON MAN TO SPACEMAN AND BEYOND… PROFESSOR MICHAEL COOK Also… EXPLAINS WHY HE IS IN SEARCH PROFESSOR FIONA DENISON OF TRUTH, NOT GLORY AND DR EMILY MCCALL SMITH COMPARE MEDICAL NOTES IN DAVID PROSSER TAKE 2 ACADEMICALS AND NAOMI HOWARD TALK ART AND INSPIRATION NIALL CAMPBELL REVEALS WHY THE IN DRAWING COMPARISONS BIRDING MUST GO ON! New regular features include: MICHAEL LAIRD OUR LITERARY LEGACY & SHARES HIS OUTDOOR NEWS FROM THE ARCHIVE ADVENTURES IN GOING SOLO EDITOR’S WELCOME Dear Accies ONE UNIQUE LOCATION MANY MEMORABLE EVENTS WEDDINGS l CONFERENCES l PERFORMANCES l CELEBRATIONS DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE TO ALL ACCIES [email protected] WWW.EDINBURGHACADEMY.ORG.UK/VENUE-HIRE EA’S CAREERS GET INVOLVED! Every year, as Edinburgh Academy pupils prepare for life beyond the Academy, they benefit greatly from the professional knowledge and expertise of parents, Academicals and friends of the School. From presentations about career paths or particular fields of work to taking part in our mock interview process each October or offering work experience and shadowing opportunities, there are a number of ways that we invite involvement. Can you help to support and inspire our pupils to make informed decisions about their futures? If so, we’d love to hear from you! Please contact [email protected] EDITOR’S WELCOME Dear Accies elcome to the latest edition Summer Term 2019 saw Mike Gregson of The Academical, in which we (EA 1960 –70) retire as Chair of the Court of follow the theme of pathways. -
2015 Annual Review
CONTENTS 40 Buckingham Palace Trustees and Operational Staff 2 Road · London · SW1W 0RE Chairman’s Message 4 Telephone: 020 7828 2468 Chief Executive’s Message 5 Freephone: 0800 012 68 67 Patron’s Message 8 Facsimile: 020 7630 6784 Public Eye 10 The Journey Back 12 E-mail: [email protected] A Week In The Life... 14 Web: www.veterans-aid.net New Belvedere House 16 Registered charity: 1095308 Where It All Began 18 Charitable Company Limited NBH - The Future 20 by guarantee no. 4544532 The Royal Hospital Chelsea 22 Milestones & Memories 24 Supporters Showcase 26 “Action this day” is the stamp Europe FEANTSA 28 that Winston Churchill would Foreign & Commonwealth Veterans 30 attach to documents in order BFBS The Big Salute 31 to strongly communicate A Death In The Family 32 that he wanted something Who Has Helped Us This Year 34 done without delay. Financial Summary 36 Every effort has been made to ensure that the information in this Annual Review is correct but neither ChapmanCreative nor Veterans Aid can be held responsible for the accuracy of information provided by third parties or expressed as the views of individuals. We apologise for any inadvertent errors and would like to thank the many contributing photographers and the IWM for use of their imagery. CARING FOR VETERANS IN CRISIS... NOW! TRUSTEES AND OPERATIONAL STAFF Patron Media & Communications Manager – Ms Glyn Strong The Dowager Viscountess Rothermere MA, PGCE, MCIPR, MCIJ Deputy Media Manager – Ms Viola Dabrowska BA Honorary Life President Events & Development – Major Delia