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Topic: William Howley


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In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
  BIOGRAPHIES
William Bracken, farmer, P. Thebes, was born December 2, 1853 in Alexander County, Ill. He is a son of William and Martha (Witt) Bracken, natives of South Carolina, and early settlers in this county.
William G. Sandusky, Captain of the Iron Mountain Railway Transfer (Julius Morgan), is a native of Fayette County, Penn. He is the oldest of a family of seven children of Albert G. Sandusky and Martha McClain, and was born August 4, 1846.
William G., when a mere child, manifested a strong inclination for a life on the water, which was as strongly discouraged by his father, resulting as is often the case, in a radical move on the part of the boy.
genealogytrails.com /ill/alexander/biograph.htm   (14274 words)

  
 No. 1999: Mary Anne's Book
Howley was born around 1806, she married the eighth baronet of Beaumont, and died at the age of 28.
Lady Beaumont has suffered "a violent relapse of the prevailing Epidemic." That was a year before her death, and five years after she gave birth to the ninth baronet.
Mary Anne Howley was an eldest daughter born after Bishop Howley's mar-riage in 1805.
www.uh.edu /engines/epi1999.htm   (691 words)

  
 William Francis Butler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lieutenant-General Sir William Francis Butler GCB PC ADC (31 October 1838–7 June 1910) was a 19th Century soldier, writer, and adventurer.
In 1898 he succeeded General William Howley Goodenough as commander-in-chief in South Africa, with the local rank of lieutenant-general.
Sir William Butler was promoted to lieutenant-general in 1900 and continued to serve, finally leaving the King's service in 1905.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/William_Francis_Butler   (435 words)

  
 The Armagh Guardian - Abstracts - 4 Mar 1845
William Curran, for stealing a waistcoat and two brushes, on the 5th Feb., the property of Mr.
William Wilson, for stealing a sheep, on the 1st of Feb., the property of John Quin, of Ballynock.
William Hartigan, John Boyse, John Watson Mahony, Thomas Jervis, Edward Bernard, Charles Wye Williams, William Hunt, Martin Honan, James Bannatyne, William Gabbett, Patrick A. Shannon, John Vanderkiete, Thomas Wallnutt, Daniel Harold, Thomas Worrall, and James Harvey, Esqrs.
www.irelandoldnews.com /Armagh/1845/18450304.html   (6625 words)

  
 Wildings & Thurleys, Cantophers & McConnells - Person Page 3
She married James Albert McConnell, son of William McConnell and Mary Anne Bancroft, on 24 April 1868 at the Church of St Martin in the Fields, Liverpool, Lancashire.
She married Rt Rev William Howley, son of Sir William Howley and Mary Gauntlett, on 20 August 1805.
William Benson was born in 1863 at Liverpool, Lancashire.
website.lineone.net /~hstjw/p3.htm   (4140 words)

  
 The High Church Tradition
On November 5th 1688 William of Orange landed in Torbay and within six weeks James II had fled and the throne was declared vacant.
William was a Calvinist and appointed several bishops sympathetic to attempts to reintegrate Presbyterians into the Church of England, whilst Scotland he rewarded the Covenanter Lords by disestablishing the Scottish Episcopal Church, and establishing Presbyterianism in its place.
Three successive Archbishops of Canterbury were High Churchmen: John Moore (1783-1805), Charles Manners-Sutton (1805-28), and William Howley (1828-48); whilst York was held by a couple of colourless Tories: William Markham (1777-1807) and Edward Vernon Venables Harcourt (1807-47).
www.angelfire.com /ca7/ttac/OHC1.html   (1791 words)

  
 HTBCeiling
For William Howley, Archbishop of Canterbury 1828-1848, formerly Bishop of London 1813-1828.
For Sir William Feilden baronet of Feniscowles, third son of Joseph Feilden of Blackburn and Margaret daughter of William Leyland of Blackburn, born in 1772 and baptized 3rd April he married Mary Haughton eldest daughter of Edmund Jackson esq.
William Feilden continued in office until the election of 1847 before which he retired, he was given a baronetcy on 26th June 1846 and died 17th May 1850 and was buried at the parish church.
members.aol.com /htblackburn/htbceiling.htm   (8645 words)

  
 THE HISTORY OF OUR FAMILY
Upon the invasion of England by William the Conqueror in 1066 and with the ultimate establishment of Norman rule, Godinot’s descendants changed their surname to Goodinhough, Goodinhaugh and Goodinhow, depending on the different districts in which they lived and the varying dialects used in those districts.
Sir William, however, was not the first person in the Goodenough family to have a royal investiture bestowed upon him.
General Sir William Howley Goodenough married Countess Anna Kinsky, daughter of the famous Count, Eugene Kinsky, of Moravia (Now known as Croatia).
www.goodenough.com.au /history.htm   (1748 words)

  
 Archbishop of Canterbury: Definition and Links by Encyclopedian.com
Since Henry VIII broke with Rome, archbishops of Canterbury have been selected by the English (latterly British) monarch; at present, the choice is made in his or her name, but by the prime minister, from a shortlist of two selected by a committee of clergy and laity.
The current Archbishop of Canterbury, the 104th, is Dr Rowan Douglas Williams, previously Archbishop of Wales[?].
The first Archbishop of Canterbury was Saint Augustine of Canterbury, who arrived in Kent in 597, all Archbishops of Canterbury since have been referred to as occupying the Chair of St Augustine.
www.encyclopedian.com /ar/Archbishop-of-Canterbury.html   (242 words)

  
 Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
He further advised the SPG that he had written William Howley, the bishop of London, requesting an appointment to one of five vacant missions in Bermuda.
The governor of Bermuda, Sir William Lumley, nominated him rector of Smiths and Hamilton in February 1822 and appointed him to his council.
In Lambeth Palace chapel on 4 August he was consecrated by William Howley, by this time archbishop of Canterbury, Bishops Charles James Blomfield of London, William Otter of Chichester, and John Inglis of Nova Scotia.
www.biographi.ca /EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=39397   (690 words)

  
 Wildings & Thurleys, Cantophers & McConnells - Person Page 15
     Harriet Elizabeth Howley was the daughter of Rt Rev William Howley and Mary Frances Belli.
Rt Rev William Howley was born on 12 February 1766 at Ropley, Hampshire.
Sir William Howley married Mary Gauntlett, daughter of John Gauntlett and Mary Prior.
website.lineone.net /~hstjw/p15.htm   (4790 words)

  
 Heimlich 2
He was selected for the Berlin job and did a splendid job during the difficult days of the blockade.
Howley's technique with his Soviet opposite, General Kutokov, was largely the Commandant of that period, a handsome, very dignified Soviet officer by the way.
Howley would take issue with the Soviet position and his statement would be something like this: 'Well of course I don't expect you to tell me the truth, you lie.
www.gwu.edu /~nsarchiv/coldwar/interviews/episode-4/heimlich2.html   (1224 words)

  
 Genealogy 2
William White, rector of Christ Church, Philadelphia, writes "The Case of the Episcopal Churches in the United States Considered", suggesting clergy and laity elect some bishops and not bother about apostolic succession yet.
William White and Samuel Provost made bishops by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
William Stevens Perry, D.D., LL.D., D.C.L., consecrated September 10, 1876.
www.christepiscopal.org /geneology2.htm   (1275 words)

  
 Accessions of printed books: Howley portrait   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
William Howley is most often remembered as the Archbishop who woke the young Princess Victoria to announce that she was Queen of England.
It was Howley who commissioned Edward Blore to remodel Lambeth Palace in an imposing neo-gothic style.
Howley is shown seated in a simple chair, wearing sober clerical dress and a wig.
www.lambethpalacelibrary.org /news/Annualreport2003/accessions_printed_howleyportrait.html   (198 words)

  
 Archbishop of Canterbury - OrthodoxWiki   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
The current Archbishop of Canterbury is the Right Honorable and Most Reverend Rowan Williams, 104th successor to the Chair of St. Augustine of Canterbury.
Rowan Douglas Williams was born in Wales on June 14, 1950.
In 2002 he was elevated to the throne of St. Augustine.
orthodoxwiki.org /Archbishop_of_Canterbury   (587 words)

  
 Howley Family Genealogy Forum (25 Latest Messages)
Re: Howley in Mayo - Sue Thistlethwaite 8/06/05
Howley / Heaney in St. Paul / Olivia, MN area - Shawn P. Re: Joseph F. Howley upstate NY obit info - peggy boyle 8/15/03
Re: Howley in Mayo - peggy boyle 11/14/02
genforum.genealogy.com /cgi-bin/latest.cgi?howley   (177 words)

  
 Queen Victoria
Victoria was born the 24 th May 1819, in Kensington palace.She was the only child of Edward,duke of Kent, and Princess Victoria of Saxe-Cobourg.
She was crowned in 1837 by William Howley,the Archibosp of Canterbury,at the age of 18 when her uncle, William IV died.
Three years later, on 10-February-1840, she married her cousin Prince Albert of Saxe Cobourg- Gotha.Together they bore nine childrens (fouir sons and five daughters) who were to become importants figures in the major monarchialstates of the 20th Century.
html.rincondelvago.com /queen-victoria.html   (312 words)

  
 Will of William Howley
I William Howley of St. John’s Newfoundland, gentleman being of sound mind, hereby revoking all former wills, do make this my last will and testament and I appoint James F. Parker Esq.
The residue and remainder is to be disposed of in charities, or in any benevolent manner my executor may see fit.
I certify the foregoing to be a correct copy of the last will and codicil of William Howley.
www.rootsweb.com /~cannf/as_wills_williamhowley.htm   (514 words)

  
 England   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Odo was the half-brother of William the Conqueror, and the man who commissioned the famous Bayeaux Tapestry, which depicts the conquest of England by the Normans.
The Bigod family were Normans known for their carousing and binge-drinking, but they were favorites of William the Conqueror and his successors granted them vast estates in eastern England, eventually culminating with their acquisition of the earldom of Norfolk.
Northumbria began to become broken up; much of the south going to the Prince-Bishops Palatine of Durham, while the north was divided up among a myriad of feudal baronies and lordships, the most important being the earldom of Northumberland and the earldom (later Duchy) of York.
www.hostkingdom.net /engl.html   (4134 words)

  
 Antique Sheffield Silverplated Wine Coolers, c. 1828
They bear the arms of Howley impaled by the See of Canterbury, as born by His Grace William Howley, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1828-48.
1820-40, but it is almost certain they were part of a large service ordered by Howley upon his investiture in 1828.
Today, Howley is remembered as the archbishop who crowned King William IV and Queen Victoria, and who rebuilt the dilapidated Lambeth Palace, official London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
www.spencermarks.com /html/i339.html   (194 words)

  
 FREDERICK W. HILLES MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION (MS VAULT HILLES)
Justice Hyde, and Sir William Jones 1787 Nov 19 7 p., with endorsement by Chambers Accompanied by: 1) "Fees of the Keeper of the Records in the Tower...": manuscript document (in the hand of an amanuensis) 3 p.
Hoare, William ALS (with initials) to James Northcote 1800 Jul 28 1 p., with address Pasted to: Hoare, William ALS to James Northcote [n.d.] Tuesday 1 p., with address Hoare, William ALS to [Mary Northcote?] [n.d.] Saturday night 2 p.
Newcome, William, Bishop of Waterford ALS to Thomas Percy 1783 Mar 29, Waterford 3 p., with address Newcome, William, Bishop of Waterford ALS to Thomas Percy 1782 Jul 29, Dublin 4 p., including address Newcome, William, Bishop of Waterford ALS to [Thomas Percy] 1787 Jun 24, Waterford 4 p.
webtext.library.yale.edu /beinflat/general.HILLES.HTM   (10058 words)

  
 VERMONT STATE POLICE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
On 09-28-06 at approximately 2026 hours Trooper Eric Howley and Trooper William Deveneau were dispatched to Lot#24 in the Alta Garden Trailer Park in Pownal in reference to a family fight at that location.
As Trooper Howley entered the Alta Garden TP he located this vehicle as it turned north onto Chickadee from Post Dr. The vehicle was stopped at which time Trooper Howley smelled the strong odor of alcoholic beverages emitting from or about the driver's person.
As a result Trooper Howley had probable cause to believe that Watkins' had been driving while under the influence, and had Watkins' to exit his
www.dps.state.vt.us /vtsp/press_06/press_092806_shaftsbury.htm   (285 words)

  
 POUND MSS. II
There are a few early letters from T.S. Eliot, Viola (Baxter) Jordan, James Laughlin, and one from William Carlos Williams, but the greater number of all of their letters date during the St. Elizabeths period.
Most of the early items are addressed to Dorothy Pound and include medical bills and receipts, some banking and passport application records, and letters from the head mistress of the school in England that Pound's son Omar attended as a child.
The St. Elizabeths correspondence is characterized by its diversity in writer and content, and by its bulk.
www.indiana.edu /~liblilly/lilly/mss/html/pound2.html   (716 words)

  
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www.raveis.com   (282 words)

  
 The HOWLEY family of Gloucester, Ontario, Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
+Margaret O'Grady Descendants of John Howley 1 John Howley 1791 - 1864.......
2 Timothy Howley 1823 - Buried St.Brigid's #87 See E-mail from Richard Darby Seeking info on Margaret HOWLEY, who was born about 1820 in Ireland.
She was the daughter of John HOWLEY and Mary Unknown.
www.bytown.net /howley.htm   (125 words)

  
 GoIreland.com - Genealogy surname search   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
In modern times Wholey has been used as a synonym of Howley and this may give a clue to the equation of Howley and Wylie in east Clare.
John Howley, an officer in Butler's infantry regiment of King James 11's Irish army, was presumably from Co. Kilkenny or Co. Tipperary, and Henry Howley (c.
Some have been distinguished churchmen: Robert Howley was abbot of Mothel, Co. Waterford, in 1440, and William Howley, P.P. of Fetlhard, Co. Tipperary, was vicar-general of the archdiocese of Cashel as is known from a sworn anti-papist information of 1744.
www.goireland.com /Genealogy/scripts/Family.asp?FamilyID=1361   (331 words)

  
 The Church of the Transfiguration
John Keble was born in 1792, the son of a parish priest who raised young Keble in the high Anglican tradition.
In his early Christian formation Keble became familiar with the Seventeenth century Anglican divines and with the devotions of the Non-Jurors, those high-churchmen who had left the Church of England after the revolution in 1688, when William and Mary succeeded James II, rather than betray their oath of allegiance to James.
Born a poet, and steeped in all that was noblest in Greek and Roman literature, with keen sympathy for the new Romanticism which the poet Wordsworth represented, Keble had found poetry a means of expression for feeling stirred by the many aspects of human life.
www.littlechurch.org /oxford.html   (3858 words)

  
 Accessions of printed books: Collection of THomas Russell sonnets, edited by Howley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
The Library’s collection of works by the Archbishops of Canterbury is almost comprehensive, but the Friends have been able to add an unusual work edited by William Howley in the early part of his career.
It is an edition of the sonnets of Thomas Russell, whom Howley must have known not only as a fellow clergyman but as a contemporary at Winchester and New College Oxford.
Howley’s edition, published at Oxford in the following year, brought his work to popular attention.
www.lambethpalacelibrary.org /news/Annualreport2004/accessions_printed_russellsonnets.html   (161 words)

  
 [No title]
The numerous letters from the correspondence of Lord James Blyth (1841-1925) are not separately organized but are dispersed throughout the Drake collection.
The two scrapbooks assembled by Florence Evans Ebeling comprise, in the main, mounted letters and autographs from the correspondence of her father William T. Evans (1843-1918), a noted New York art collector.
Also found in these scrapbooks are letters addressed to William Budd Bodine (1841-1907), Episcopal cleric and author.
www.lib.utexas.edu /taro/uthrc/00205.xml   (2404 words)

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