Welcome, Guest. Please login or register for free.
Did you miss your activation email?
Thursday 04 December 08 21:58 GMT (UK)
Welcome Home Help Shop Search Calendar Login Register
Search Images 

Online
 
  First Name(s)

Last Name

 
News: Ad:

+  RootsChat.Com
|-+  England (Counties as in 1851-1901)
| |-+  England - General
| | |-+  Lancashire (Moderator: RootsChat)
| | | |-+  One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« previous next »
Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 17 Print
Author Topic: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2  (Read 6283 times)
MancsMan
RootsChat Aristocrat
******
Offline Offline

Posts: 1747


Was he right or was he wrong


WWW
One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« on: Tuesday 11 March 08 13:16 GMT (UK) »

Ya right Annie  Cheesy Wink Grin

Part 1 can be found here

http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php/topic,286323.0.html First Page

http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php/topic,286323.270.html Last Page

Ken
Logged

Hilton - Wiltshire,Prestwich Manchester
Millington-Manchester, Birmingham
Harris - Manchester, Salford, Southern Rhodesia, Aston Manor Birmingham, Temple Balsall, Knowle.
Jones-Higher Broughton, Cheetham Hill, Denbighshire
Lawton - Prestwich, Manchester
Smith-Manchester
Carey - Manchester
Cotterell - Lambeth, London
Fletcher-Middleton, Manchester
Capper - Manchester

Census info is Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #1 on: Tuesday 11 March 08 19:08 GMT (UK) »



Well Mr Ken .... it doesn't take much to make me happy !!  Grin ..... but I am so excited !!

I've spent some time at the Western History library today and I've found out a lot !! .....

I have to go back tomorrow ... when I can spend a bit more time ... ( I think I'd better pack a lunch !!  Grin Grin Grin Grin ) but just for starters to whet your appetite here's a picture and I'll try and write the other stuff up tonight !!




* sutherland_.jpg (97.25 KB, 344x500 - viewed 568 times.)
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #2 on: Tuesday 11 March 08 21:28 GMT (UK) »


I've found out that the reason I couldn't find his grave at Mount Olivet is because - the grave  was reopened - the casket removed and reburied in another cemetery in 1909 !! ( this was done at the insistence of a daughter for religious reasons ) .............

( Also - the picture is as it was in the original newspaper - a bit dark I'm afraid ! )

"Taps" the "lights out" of the soldier was sounded this morning over the grave of Alexander Sutherland the bugler of the Light Brigade who gave the signal for the immortal charge at the Battle of Balaklava. With military honours the remains of the venerable soldier and musician was laid to rest in Mount Olivet cemetery

Funeral services were held at the church of the Sacred Heart at 10.30am The procession from the church to the cemetery was an imposing sight . In the lead was a band and behind the hearse followed a riderless horse fully equipped with military saddle and bridle
The body was guarded by a detachment of militia in full uniform
At the cemetery after the final words had been spoken there was a volley of musketry and "taps" was sounded as the earth fell upon the casket
The bugle which Mr Alexander carried in the Crimean was buried with him. The casket was draped in American flags and was covered with a profusion of flowers
Old friends of the musician who had known him since the early days of Denver acted as pall bearers

http://www.archden.org/component/option,com_parish/taskpar,showparish/p,133/Itemid,757/


* funeral_a.jpg (129.12 KB, 500x295 - viewed 578 times.)
« Last Edit: Wednesday 12 March 08 01:19 GMT (UK) by liverpool annie » Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
forester
RootsChat Aristocrat
******
Offline Offline

Posts: 1117



Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #3 on: Tuesday 11 March 08 23:22 GMT (UK) »

It's looking a bit empty here Annie.  Grin Grin Grin

I've been a bit distracted by English geography the last couple of days.  Cheesy

A rather graphic account of the first to fall: Captain Louis Nolan, 15th Hussars
Originally from Cecil Woodham-Smith in "The Reason Why" and para-phrased by Edward J Dodson in "The Light Brigade, England's Charge Borne on Ireland's Back"
http://www.cooperativeindividualism.org/dodson_england_and_ireland_and_crimean_war.html

"Before the Light Brigade had advanced fifty yards......the Russian guns crashed out and great clouds of smoke rose at the end of the valley..... The advance was proceeding at a steady trot when suddenly Nolan....urged on his horse and began to gallop diagonally across the front......he crossed in front of Lord Cardigan and, turning in his saddle, shouted and waved his sword as if he would address the Brigade, but the guns were firing with great crashes and not a word could be heard. At that moment a Russian shell burst on the right of Lord Cardigan and a fragment tore it's way into Nolan's breast, exposing his heart. The sword fell from his hand, but his arm was still erect and his body remained rigid in the saddle. His horse wheeled and began to gallop back through the advancing Brigade and then from the body there burst a strange and appalling cry, a shriek so unearthly as to freeze the blood of all who heard him. The terrified horse carried the body, still shrieking, through the 4th Light Dragoons and then at last Nolan fell from the saddle dead."


The obituary of Captain Lewis (sic) Edward Nolan, from the London Illustrated News, 25th November 1854, oblivious at the time of the controversy which would surround him:

http://www.silverwhistle.co.uk/crimea/obituary.html


Phil Smiley
Logged

Sussex: Satcher (Hamsey) and Gatton (East Grinstead)
Leicestershire: Pratt

Census information is Crown Copyright  http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #4 on: Tuesday 11 March 08 23:46 GMT (UK) »



Apparently Nolan had a terrible death ..... ! Undecided

OK here's something else I got today !! ... not sure about my scanning though !!  Roll Eyes


Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #5 on: Tuesday 11 March 08 23:47 GMT (UK) »



Apparently Nolan had a terrible death ..... ! Undecided

OK here's something else I got today !! ... not sure about my scanning though !!  Roll Eyes







* alex_b.jpg (108.59 KB, 336x500 - viewed 560 times.)
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #6 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 00:02 GMT (UK) »



A feature story in the Denver Post on Nov 8th 1904 told of Mr Sutherlands impending death and reviewed the life of "the bugler of the Light Brigade "

At the close of the Crimean War - he came to America with British troops and received his discharge from the army at Quebec ( isn't that Canada ?? ) He went first to New York and in 1869 (? I've seen 1861 too !) came to Denver

He was always devoted to his music and as Colorado grew in population he spent his time principally in giving musical instruction - he was also interested in mining and was successful.

The aged musician is widely known - not only in Denver where he has made his home for almost half a century - but in England. ..........
There he is remembered as a young man and King Edward himself - recently sent a letter informing Mr Sutherland - that a handsome "silver bugle"had been dispatched to him - as a mark of regard because he had played at the Coronation of his mother Queen Victoria .........

Interesting !
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #7 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 00:29 GMT (UK) »



In a published interview uncovered by Edgar C McMechen curator of the Colorado State Museum ... Sutherland was quoted as saying ...

" I sounded the charge but I never blew the retreat ! We were to storm a battery at the far end of the valley - nothing happened until we had covered one half the distance ... then the Russian artillery opened up and the air was filled with arms legs and fragments of men and horses .....
Lord Cardigan signaled for me to sound the retreat - twice I lifted the bugle to my lips and tried to give the signal that would have brought in the pitiful remnants of that brave band - but I was so horrified that I couldn't make a sound .... finally Lord Cardigan shouted to his men " Retreat - save yourselves " (Only 142 survived ... Sutherland escaped without injury (?)

No one who was not in the valley of death will ever know how much horror can be packed into 20 minutes ......
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #8 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 00:39 GMT (UK) »



Historical Society documents showed that Sutherland was the bugler in the "First Volunteers " in 1862 eight years after the scrape with death in the Crimean war

The Denver Times of March 15th 1882 identified Sutherland as the bugler and related that he had been given an almost trackless piece of land in 1863 at 15th and California Streets and had refused $20,000 for it !

His Great Granddaughter recalled family discussions - which included a report that Sutherland got drunk one day and gave away the valuable property .... The Denver Dry Goods Co now stands on the tract !!

( * actually at this time it is the prime real estate downtown ...... !! )
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #9 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 00:47 GMT (UK) »


Now for something completely different .... I'll save the rest of Sutherland for tomorrow !!  Grin

Light Brigade Scandal.

The extraordinary tale of a wayward Irish soldier who survived the Charge of the Light Brigade only to be flogged when he returned to camp has emerged in the sale of his Crimean War decorations.
Private Christopher Fox, who was born in the Dublin parish of St Michael's joined the 4th Light Dragoons in 1847 at the age of 19, but he soon found himself in trouble because of his hot-headedness.
His name was in the defaulter's book 43 times he was court-martialled four times and imprisoned twice.
However in 1854 Fox sailed to the Crimea - where he won his three clasps for the battles of Alma, Balaklava and Sebastopol. They were expected to fetch up to pounds 5,000 at Spink auctioneers in London
On October 25 1854, Fox took part in the Charge of the Light Brigade.
But a fellow soldier Pte James Herbert, later revealed how - far from being commended Fox was flogged 25 times.
Herbert told a journalist: "There was a man of our regiment named Fox. When the order to advance was given, he was on duty at the camp. He rushed to his horse - rode in the charge and came safely back. He was court martialled for leaving his post and sentenced to receive 50 lashes ...... Fox was made an example of by being given 25 strokes with the cat-o'- nine-tails.
At the time -  one man never gave more than 25 lashes -  without someone else being left to wield the whip for the rest.
Fox's Colonel let him off the rest - but the plucky private said: "I don't want to be beholden to you. I'll take the other 25 " .......... The balance was never given !

Despite his dislike of discipline, Fox remained in the army another 18 years, winning four good conduct badges.

* E.J. Boys Archive - Fox        Pte   Christopher   1314   4th LD
                                Herbert   Pte   James   1460   4th LD


Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #10 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 02:45 GMT (UK) »



Here's his Civil War information ! 

Alexander Sutherland
Regiment Name - 1 Colorado Cavalry.
Side - Union
Company-  L
Soldier's Rank - In Bugler
Soldier's Rank - Out Bugler
Film Number - M534 roll 3

Union Colorado Territory Volunteers
1st Regiment Colorado Cavalry

Regiment organized from 1st Colorado Infantry November 1, 1862. Attached to District of Colorado, District of the Upper Arkansas and District of the Plains till November, 1865, operating against Indians and protecting stage routes.
Stationed by detachments at Denver, Camps Collins, Curtis, Fillmore, Robbins, Weld and Canon City and at Forts Lyon and Garland.

Service - Skirmish at Grand Pass, Fort Halleck, Idaho, July 7, 1863 (Detachment). Expedition from Denver to Republican River, Kansas, April 8-23, 1864 (Co. "D"). Skirmish near Fremont Orchard, Colo, April 12 (Cos. "C" and "H"). Expedition from Camp Sanborn to Beaver Creek, Kansas, April 14-18 (Cos. ("C" and "H"). Skirmish at Big Bushes, Smoky Hills, April 16 (Cos. "C" and "H"). Skirmish at Cedar Bluff, Colo. May 3 (Co. "C"). Scout from American Ranch to Cedar Bluff May 9-10. Scout from Fort Sumner August 3-November 4 (Cos. "A," "B" and "G"). Scout from Fort Union, N. Mex., August 4-September 5. Affair near Fort Lyon, Colo. August 7. Skirmish near Sand Creek August 11 (Cos. "D," "G," "K" and "L"). Scout on Fort Union Road, near Fort Garland, August 12-16 (Detachment). Skirmish, Atkins' Ranch, August 22. Skirmish, Walnut Creek, Kansas, September 25 (Cos. "L" and "M"). Skirmish, Fort Lyon, October 9. Affairs near Fort Lyon November 6-16. Pawnee Forks November 25 (1 Co.). Engagement with Indian at Sand Creek, Colo., November 29 (Cos. "C," "D," "E," "G," "H"and "K"). Company "B" at Fort Zarah, Kansas, August to October, 1864, then at Fort Garland. Skirmishes at Valley Station and Julesburg, Colo., January 7, 1865. Operations on Overland Stage Route between Denver and Julesburg January 14-25, 1865 (Co. "C"). Skirmish, Valley Station, Colo., January 14 (Co. "C"). Skirmish, Godfrey's Ranch, January 14 (Detachment). Skirmishes at Morrison's or American Ranch and Wisconsin Ranch January 15. Point of Rocks or Nine- Mile Ridge, near Fort Larned, January 20. Gittrell's Ranch January 25. Moore's Ranch January 26. Lillian Springs Ranch January 27. Near Valley Station January 28 (Co. "C"). Operations against Indians near Fort Collins, Colo., June 4-10 (Co. "D"). Expedition from Denver to Fort Halleck, Dakota, June 17-19 (Co."D"). Operations about Rock Creek Station, Seven-Mile Creek, Dakota, June 24-30 (Cos. "A" and "D").
Mustered out at Leavenworth, Kansas, November 18 1865.

OMG !! .... he was involved in The Sand Creek Massacre ..............  Shocked Shocked Shocked no ... he wasn't !! he was in Co "L" and was in the skirmish in August .... but he wasn't there in November .... phew !!  my heart was in my mouth there for a minute  !!

Another one of those days that will go down in infamy !  Undecided Black Kettle wanted peace with honour !

http://www.lastoftheindependents.com/sandcreek.htm

"All we ask is that we have peace with the whites. We want to hold you by the hand. You are our father. We have been travelling through a cloud. The sky has been dark ever since the war began. These braves who are with me are willing to do what I say. We want to take good tidings home to our people, that they may sleep in peace. I want you to give all these chiefs of the soldiers here to understand that we are for peace, and that we have made peace, that we may not be mistaken by them for enemies. I have not come here with a little wolf bark, but have come to talk plain with you."

Motavato (Black Kettle) speaking to Gov. Evans, Col. Chivington, Maj. Wynkoop & others
in Denver, autumn, 1864




* Black_Kettle_04.jpg (23.29 KB, 264x300 - viewed 511 times.)
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #11 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 04:24 GMT (UK) »



http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B02E4DB143FE533A25751C0A9679D94659FD7CF

George Cathcart British Army Lieutenant General d. 1854
 
During the Crimean War, his reluctance to bring up his infantry division at the Battle of Balaklava was a major factor in bringing about the disaster of the "Charge of the Light Brigade". He was killed 11 days later at the Battle of Inkerman. One of the hills in the 'Valley of Death' was named Cathcart Hill after him and was the site of the major British war cemetery. However this cemetery was extensively destroyed during World War II. In recent time, some remains, including those of General Cathcart, have been gathered into a memorial enclosure.
 
Cathcart Hill Sebastopol (or Sevastopol) Crimean Republic Ukraine

http://www.rootschat.com/links/02ym/


French Cemetery Crimean War. This marker is all that is left to mark the site of the French cemetery where their dead were buried after the Crimean War of the 1850s.

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6198


* george_cathcart.jpg (17.56 KB, 133x205 - viewed 503 times.)
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #12 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 04:29 GMT (UK) »




There were women helping the wounded on the Russian side too. The most famous of these was Dasha Alexandrova who ran a tavern in Sevastopol. When the allied troops were disembarking at Balaklava, she cut off her hair, dressed in mens' clothing, loaded a horse with clean rags and bottles of wine and vinegar for cleaning injuries and set off for the front line. Other women joined her and they worked throughout the siege, often in very dangerous conditions, assisting wartime surgeon Nokolai Pirogov. Dasha was regarded as a heroine by the soldiers she helped, and became known as Dasha Sevastopolska.

Nikolay Ivanovich Pirogov

was a prominent Russian scientist doctor pedagogue public figure, and corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences (1847). He is considered to be the founder of field surgery, and was one of the first surgeons in Europe to use ether as an anaesthetic.
He worked as an army surgeon in the Crimean War From his works in the Crimea, he is considered to be the father of field surgery. He followed work by Louis Seutin in introducing plaster casts for setting broken bones, and developed a new osteoplastic method for amputation of the foot, known as the "Pirogov amputation". He was also the first to use anethesis in the field, particularly during the siege of Sevastopol, and he introduced a system of triage into five categories. He encouraged female volunteers as an organised corps of nurses, the Khrestovozvizhenska community of nurses established by Grand Duchess Yelena Pavlovna, echoing the efforts made by Florence Nightingale for the British.
He last appeared in public on 24 May 1881, and died later that year at Vishnya in Ukraine

Nikolai Ivanovich Pirogov (1810 - 81)
Pirogov is the most famous figure in the history of Russian medicine.
Pirogov's first famous contribution to medicine was as professor of the Medico-Surgical academy of St. Petersburg. Pirogov paved the way in Russia for the scientific use of anesthesia.
At that time anesthesia was unknown for surgery and as a result even minor operations caused patients immeasurable suffering, and even death. Then in 1840 ether was first used in an operation carried out in Boston, USA. Pirogov made many experiments with animals and tested the effect of the ether on himself and on his associates before using it as an anaesthetic in the clinic. It was only after he was convinced that ether anesthesia was absolutely harmless that he began to use it on a wide scale in his operations. Later Pirogov tested and began using another anaesthetic - chloroform. Pirogov was the first surgeon to make a wide of anesthesia in field hospitals. (Caucasus in 1847)
Even before the discovery made by Louis Paster, Pirogov had correctly defined the cause of inflammation and pus formation after an operation. To prevent wound infection Pirogov used substances which are still in use today by surgeons.
Pirogov was the first doctor in Russia to use nurses to care for sick and wounded in the field.
This outstanding surgeon and scientist was also a prominent public figure. He devoted much of his time to the training and education. His ideals and his active methods of teaching were widely appreciated and adopted in Russia and other countries and profoundly influenced the development of the system of medical public education.
While living in Odessa, Pigorov resided at Deribasovskaya 31

http://www.2odessa.com/wiki/index.php?title=Pirogovskaya_Street_%26_Dr._Pirogov_Monument




* surgeonPirogovskaya.jpg (22.58 KB, 200x280 - viewed 502 times.)

* surgeon_Nokolai_Pirogov.jpg (6.22 KB, 180x226 - viewed 495 times.)
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #13 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 05:00 GMT (UK) »



Cornet Grey Neville - b. 15 October 1830 d. 11 November 1854

5th Dragoons GUARDS - wounded at Balaklava, 25th October 1854 Brother of Henry Neville (Grenadier Guards) who was killed at Inkermann, 5th November 1854. Buried at Scutari -
"Sacred to the memory of Honourable Grey Neville 5th Dragoon Guards. Youngest son of Lord Braybrooke. Died at Scutari 11th November 1854 of wounds received from wounds received in action Aged 24 years. Surviving by only six days his brother the Honourable Henry Neville Grenadier Guards Killed at Inkerman 5th November 1854. To the dear memory of those so loved and early lost their sorrowing Family inscribe this stone."

Hon. Grey Neville was born on 15 October 1830. He was the son of Richard Griffin, 3rd Lord Braybrooke, Baron of Braybrooke and Lady Jane Cornwallis.

« Last Edit: Monday 07 April 08 17:36 BST (UK) by liverpool annie » Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
liverpool annie
RootsChat Marquessate
********
Online Online

Posts: 12606


Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk


Re: One for Liverpool Annie Part 2
« Reply #14 on: Wednesday 12 March 08 05:07 GMT (UK) »



Captain George Lockwood - killed at Balaklava - 25th October 1854
Memorial at St. Marys Church, Lambourne, Essex - "To the memory of George Lockwood Captain 8th Hussars, second son of William Joseph Lockwood of Dews Hall. Born June 16th 1818. He fell October 25th 1854 in the memorable cavalry charge of Balaclava while acting as ADC to Major general the Earl of Cardigan. Every effort to recover his remains having been proved ineffectual this monument is erected by his mother as a tribute of love to an affectionate and dutiful son."

* E.J. Boys Archive -  Lockwood   Cpt   George      8th H
Logged

Cooper : Muels : Howarth : Every : Price : King

Be who you are and say what you feel -  because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind ! Dr. Seuss

Erect no gravestone .... let the Rose every year bloom for his sake ! Rilke Sonnets to Orpheus, I:5

"Our fathers did not talk about psychology - they talked about a knowledge of Human Nature. But they had it, and we have not. They knew by instinct all that we have ignored by the help of information." Chesterton
Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 17 Print 
« previous next »


[Copyright] [Free RootsChat Webspace] [Your Surname Interests] [Shrink Link] [About Us] [Terms of Use]
All Census Lookups are Crown Copyright, National Archives for academic and non-commercial research purposes only
RootsChat.com cannot be held responsible directly or indirectly for the messages or content posted by others. Inline images in messages are the copyright of the respective linked sites.
RootsChat.com, Europa House, Bury, Lancashire, BL9 5BT
0.296:22