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Topic: Charles Thomson Ritchie


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In the News (Thu 31 May 12)

  
  Ritchie - ritg04.htm - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Ernest Ritchie was born on 19 Jan 1881 in Dunedin.
Isabella Thomson Ritchie was born on 2 Apr 1890 in Dunedin.
Edith Rubina Swinton Ritchie was born on 24 Jun 1891 in Dunedin.
homepages.paradise.net.nz /djgriff/ritg04.htm   (274 words)

  
 Thomson Family - pafg09.htm - Generated by Personal Ancestral File   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Janet THOMSON was born on 15 Mar 1866.
John Charles THOMSON was born on 26 Jun 1882.
Flora or Sarah RITCHIE was born in 1866.
www.cults.freeserve.co.uk /ancestry/thomsfam/pafg09.htm   (1341 words)

  
 RITCHIE, CHARLES THOMS... - Online Information article about RITCHIE, CHARLES THOMS...
Search over 40,000 articles from the original, classic Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th Edition.
December 1905 he was created a peer, but he was in See also:
End of Article: RITCHIE, CHARLES THOMSON RITCHIE, 1ST BARON (1838-1906)
encyclopedia.jrank.org /RHY_RON/RITCHIE_CHARLES_THOMSON_RITCHIE.html   (451 words)

  
 Charles Thomson Ritchie, 1st Baron Ritchie: biography and encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The updated page can be found at: charles thomson ritchie 1st baron ritchie
Charles Thomson Ritchie, 1st Baron Ritchie (1838-1906), was an British (British: The people of Great Britain) politician.
In December 1905 he was created a peer as Baron Ritchie, but he was in ill-health, and he died at Biarritz (Biarritz: biarritz is a town and commune which lies on the bay of biscay, on south-west coast of...
www.absoluteastronomy.com /reference/charles_thomson_ritchie_1st_baron_ritchie   (418 words)

  
 British Realists, Simenon and Matsumoto
Thomson's tale reminds one of Anna Katherine Green's "Room No. 3", which takes place in a country inn in Ohio.
Here the mother is found dead outside the hotel; but just as in the Thomson and Carr tales, everyone in the hotel claims not to have seen her.
Thomson was a real life member of Scotland Yard, and most of his books are now considered to be early police procedural works.
members.aol.com /MG4273/coles.htm   (16617 words)

  
 Walter Hume Long, 1st Viscount Long -   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
In 1880, Long was elected to parliament as a Conservative, serving in the Commons with a few breaks until he was raised to the peerage as Viscount Long in 1921.
Long entered government for the first time in the second Salisbury administration as Parliamentary Secretary to the Local Government Board, serving under Charles Thomson Ritchie, and became one of the architects of the Local Government Act 1888, which established elected county councils.
After the Conservative defeat in 1892, Ritchie's defeat made Long the chief opposition spokesman on local government, and when the Tories returned to power in 1895, he entered the cabinet as President of the Board of Agriculture.
psychcentral.com /psypsych/Walter_Hume_Long   (627 words)

  
 Arthur James Balfour Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The disclosures before the Parnell Commission, the O'Shea divorce proceedings, the downfall of Charles Stewart Parnell and the disruption of the Irish party assisted him in reducing crime in Ireland to a vanishing point.
As events proved, it was the budget that was to provide a cause of dissension, bringing a new political movement into being, and an issue overriding all the legislative interest of the session.
Ritchie's remission of the shilling import-duty on corn led to Chamberlain's crusade in favor of tariff reform and colonial preference, and as the session preceded the rift grew in the unionist ranks.
www.biographybase.com /biography/Balfour_Arthur_James.html   (1721 words)

  
 OLD CATHOLIC CHURCH OF CANADA - Burlington,ON
Robert Ritchie (Chancellor of the Diocese of Hamilton), and the Rev. Fr.
Presiding Bishop Ritchie served until 9 October 1988 when on that date he was one of the consecrators of his successor, the Most Rev. David Charles Thomson (born 1937).
On Bishop Thomson's retirement in June 2001, Bishop Keating was elected as the Third Presiding Bishop of the Old Catholic Church of Canada.
netministries.org /see/churches/ch05841   (1881 words)

  
 Details of Dundee   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Dundee was also noted for its jam, produced from 1797 by the Keiller family, and its journalism which came to be dominated in the 20th century by D.C. Thomson and Company publishers of, amongst others, the Courier and Advertiser, Sunday Post, People's Friend, Scots Magazine, together with the Beano and Dandy children's comics.
Today, D.C. Thomson is one of the largest employers in Dundee and the only major magazine and newspaper house in Scotland to be controlled by Scots in Scotland.
McKean, Charles and David Walker (1984) Dundee: An Illustrated Introduction.
www.geo.ed.ac.uk:81 /scotgaz/towns/towndetails399.html   (663 words)

  
 Writings - Arthur Balfour
Charles Vane-Tempest-Stewart, 6th Marquess of Londonderry - Lord Privy Seal and President of the Board of Education
September-October 1903 - Charles Vane-Tempest-Stewart, 6th Marquess of Londonderry succeeds the Spencer Compton Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire as Lord President, while remaining also President of the Board of Education.
Austen Chamberlain succeeds Charles Thomson Rictchie at the Exchequer.
mywebpage.netscape.com /Aberdonia3436/arthur-balfour-writings.html   (510 words)

  
 Allen History
The meeting requested "Charles Jones, Paul Moone, Thomas Bayly and Benjamin Coole to inspect their condition "and wherein they want advice to give it to them and to inform the Weomen’s Meeting that their farther necessity may be suplyed." On 5 6
Charles Allen, son of Joseph and Jane (Casdorp) Allen was born 14 4
Charles’ second wife was Rebecca S. Jackson, daughter of Isaac and Hannah Jackson, whom he married in Pine Street Friends meeting 3 10
www.geocities.com /jleago/Allenhistory.html   (9180 words)

  
 [No title]
Charles Lennox, 1st Duke of Richmond and Lennox
Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond and Lennox
Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond and Lennox
www.knowledgefun.com /book/c/ch   (133 words)

  
 Articles index started with ch
Charles Amédée de Savoie, 6th Duc de Nemours
Charles de Beauharnois de la Boische, Marquis de Beauharnois
Charles Emmanuel de Savoie, 3rd Duc de Nemours
www.kiwipedia.com /ch-index.html   (170 words)

  
 UK peerage creations: Chronological list 1901–1950
Ritchie of Dundee of Welders in the parish of Chalfont St Giles in the County of Buckingham – Charles Thomson Ritchie (died 9 Jan 1906)
Buxton of Newtimber in the County of Sussex – Sydney Charles Buxton (extinct(1) 15 Oct 1934)
Thomson of Cardington in the County of Bedford – Christopher Birdwood Thomson (extinct(1) 5 Oct 1930)
website.lineone.net /~david.beamish/peerages2.htm   (11966 words)

  
 Index
Randolph, J. Thornton, pseudonym of Charles Jacobs Peterson, 93.
Rice, Charles S. The Amish Year, by Rice and Steinmetz, rev., 81.
Charles Willson Peale and His World, with Hindle and Miller, rev., 108.
www.hsp.org /files/pmhbr.htm   (3686 words)

  
 Untitled Document
As a lawyer, Asquith was junior counsel for Charles Stewart PARNELL [q.v.] in the Commission to investigate The Times' libellous accusations that Parnell was involved in criminal activity in Ireland.
His friend DISRAELI [q.v.] wrote a biography of him in 1852; more recent studies are Robert Stewart's The Politics of Protection (Cambridge, 1971) and the late Angus Macintyre's essay, "Lord George Bentinck and the Protectionist Case; a lost cause?" Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., xxxix (1989), pp.
See also the revealing portrait Charles Greville (his sometime racing partner) painted of Bentinck.
www.dur.ac.uk /alan.heesom/people.htm   (9727 words)

  
 Index_Intro
The publication of the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin initiated what is here referred to as the Darwinian Period.
Balss (1910); Fisher (1874); Hubrecht (1885); Kumano (1937); Moroff (1902b); Nutting (1912); Okutani (1969); Stearns (1883); Stimpson (1855); J.A. Thomson and Rennet (1927); Utinomi (1956a, 1958, 1961, 1964).
Acuña and Zamponi (1992); Branch and Williams (1993); Kükenthal (1912a); May (1900); Pasternak (1961b, 1962); J.A. Thomson and Rennet (1931); Zamponi and Perez (1995a, 1995b).
www.calacademy.org /research/izg/index_intro.htm   (3745 words)

  
 DAVID GEORGE RITCHIE - LoveToKnow Article on DAVID GEORGE RITCHIE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
DAVID GEORGE RITCHIE - LoveToKnow Article on DAVID GEORGE RITCHIE
(185319O3), Scottish philosopher, was born at Jedburgh, son of the Rev. George Ritchie, D.D. He had a distinguished university career at Edinburgh, and Balliol College, Oxford, and after being fellow of Jesus and tutor of Balliol was elected professor of logic and metaphysics at St Andrews.
To properly cite this DAVID GEORGE RITCHIE article in your work, copy the complete reference below:
89.1911encyclopedia.org /R/RI/RITCHIE_DAVID_GEORGE.htm   (135 words)

  
 [No title]
42: 1 and 2 (2000):13-35, 2001 Charles Thompson Prize (4th 1 of 2).
Ritchie, Donald A. Press Gallery: Congress and the Washington Correspondents.
Ritchie, Donald A. "The Loyalty of the Senate": Washington Correspondents in the Progressive Era.
www.shfg.org /awardlst.html   (2332 words)

  
 British ministries, political parties, etc.
1730) May 1704 - Dec 1706 Sir Charles Hedges (s.a.) 1706 - 1710 Charles Spencer, Earl of Sunderland (s.a.) 1710 - 1713 William Legge, Baron Dartmouth (from 1711, William Legge, Earl of Dartmouth) (b.
1786) 1786 - 1803 Charles Jenkinson, Baron Hawkesbury (from 1796, Charles Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool) (b.
1800) Aug 1786 - Jun 1804 Charles Jenkinson, Baron Hawkesbury (from 1796, Charles Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool) (b.
www.rulers.org /ukgovt.html   (14648 words)

  
 UK peerage creations: Chronological list 1801–2006
Tenterden of Hendon in the County of Middlesex – Charles Abbott (died 4 Nov 1832, extinct(4) 16 Sep 1939)
Amesbury of Kintbury, Amesbury and of Barton Bourt in the County of Berks and of Aston Hall in the County of Flint – Charles Dundas (extinct(1) 30 June 1832)
Eversley of Heckfield in the County of Southampton – Charles Shaw Lefevre (extinct(1) 28 Dec 1888)
website.lineone.net /~david.beamish/peerages.htm   (13447 words)

  
 The National Archives | National Register of Archives | Browse the combined corporate and business indexes
Ritchie, Anne Isabella (1837-1919) nee Thackeray, Novelist and Biographer (18)
Ritchie, Charles Thomson (1838-1906) 1st Baron Ritchie, statesman (6)
Ritchie, Douglas Ernest (1905-1967) Journalist and Broadcaster (2)
www.nationalarchives.gov.uk /nra/browser/person/page/person_RI.htm   (1892 words)

  
 [No title]
His wife most eager for news of her cousin, Charles Carroll, from whom she has not heard for nine years.
Charles Hill of Bristol, who has helped many Americans in England; he is going to Bilbao on business, and being English born, he will need a passport from the Spanish Ambassador; begs Franklin's interest in obtaining this favor; such services instrumental in encouraging a humane attitude towards American prisoners in England.
His letters to his son [Henry Dieudonné Drouart] in Philadelphia seem to miscarry; begs that they may be sent under cover to Franklin's son-in-law [Richard Bache], to whom his son is known.
www.amphilsoc.org /library/mole/f/franklin/hays6.xml   (7271 words)

  
 Fakes and Secretarials
Fox, Charles James (1749-1806), FS 1782, 1783, 1806.
Mordaunt, Charles (1658-1735, 3rd Earl of Peterborough, later 1st Earl of Monmouth -2nd cr.), LT 1689-90
Ritchie, Charles Thomson (1838-1906, 1st Baron Ritchie), CH 1902-03
www.joergs-british-autographs.de /whob2.html   (1600 words)

  
 George Justice, On Dustin Griffin, _Patriotism and Politics in Eighteenth-Century Britain_ and David Morse, _The Age of ...
James Thomson: "to mix the Patriot's with the Poet's Flame"
Some readers may rush through the pages of these books looking for a central argument, but the absence of artificially unifying theses emerges, finally, as a strength rather than a weakness.
Griffin situates his study in the context of post-9/11 America, but his poets' engagement with their nation and its times is far more subtle than the packaged and produced patriotism that has turned tragedy into a marketing opportunity in the past two years.
www.rc.umd.edu /reviews/back/griffinmorse.html   (1251 words)

  
 Philosophical Dictionary: Relativism-Ryle
Ritchie is usually remembered for his political thought, and primarily for his analysis of natural rights and for his criticisms of the positions of Herbert Spencer and J.S. Mill on the nature and role of the state in
Ritchie is also known for his attempts to reconcile Darwinism and idealist thought in
As a follower of Descartes, Rohault argued that animal behavior can be explained in purely mechanistic terms.
www.philosophypages.com /dy/r9.htm   (1311 words)

  
 PANLOG: All about all   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
RICHMOND Charles Lennox, 3rd duke of, 3rd Duke of Lennox, duc d'Aubigny, Earl of March, Earl of Darnley, Baron of Settrington, Lord of Torboulton
RITCHIE of Dundel Charles Thomson Ritchie, 1st Baron 1838-1906
RITCHIE Thomas 1778-1854 USA newspaper editor Democratic party activist
panlog.com /cgi-bin/find.cgi?c=ri   (206 words)

  
 Robert Frew Ltd - Prints/ Statesmen
BERESFORD, Charles William De La Poer, Admiral Lord.
DE FREYCINET, Charles Louis de Saulces, M. “French Warfare”.
ELLICOTT, Charles John, The Right Reverend, Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol.
www.robertfrew.com /prints/vanity_statesmen.html   (552 words)

  
 Articles - Chancellor of the Exchequer   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
*Charles Montagu (May 10, 1694 - June 2, 1699)
*Charles Abbott, 1st Baron Tenterden (August 8, 1827 - September 3, 1827)
*Charles Thomson Ritchie (August 11, 1902 - October 9, 1903)
www.worldhammock.com /articles/Chancellor_of_the_Exchequer   (2001 words)

  
 IrishPatriots
Other signers of Irish descent were Charles Carroll, Thomas Lynch, Thomas McKean, George Read and Edward Rutledge.
The Secretary of the Congress was Charles Thomson, an Irishman.
Two of General George Washington’s staff officers were native Irishmen.
www.motherbedford.com /IrishPatriots.htm   (2799 words)

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