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Page 12 of 47 of 563 Records
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod outside the St. Columba High Church, Bank Street, Inverness, now the CityLife Church.
Reference: 44644i
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod out...
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod outside the St. Columba High Church, Bank Street, Inverness, now the CityLife Church.
Reference: 44644h
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod out...
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod outside the St. Columba High Church, Bank Street, Inverness, now the CityLife Church.
Reference: 44644g
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod out...
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod outside the St. Columba High Church, Bank Street, Inverness, now the CityLife Church.
Reference: 44644f
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod out...
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod outside the St. Columba High Church, Bank Street, Inverness, now the CityLife Church.
Reference: 44644e
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod out...
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod outside the St. Columba High Church, Bank Street, Inverness, now the CityLife Church.
Reference: 44644d
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod out...
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod outside the St. Columba High Church, Bank Street, Inverness, now the CityLife Church.
Reference: 44644c
Mr & Mrs Angus MacLeod out...
The Inverness Royal Academy War Memorial Hostel, June 1924. The hostel opened in 1922, with accommodation for about 60 girls. In the centre of the second-front row is the first matron, Miss Isabella Paterson. The hostel was partly funded by contributions from the Old Boys' Club, led by Evan Barron, a well-known former pupil. The building first used was the former Inverness Collegiate School building in Ardross Street, which is now the oldest part of the Highland Council Headquarters buildings. The hostel was moved to Hedgefield House in Culduthel Road in 1934. (Courtesy Inverness Royal Academy Archive IRAA_058).
Reference: IRAA
The Inverness Royal Academy Wa...
The Duchess of Sutherland (1867-1955) walking down Academy Street, Inverness in 1936. Millicent Sutherland-Leveson-Gower was a British society hostess, social reformer, author, editor, journalist and playwright, often using the pen name Erskine Gower. Her first husband was Cromartie Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 4th Duke of Sutherland. By her two later marriages, she was known as Lady Millicent Fitzgerald and Lady Millicent Hawes, the latter of which was the name she used at the time of her death. She lived mostly in France through the 1920s and 1930s, and also travelled. She was living near Angers in 1940, and was captured after the German occupation of France. She escaped via Spain and Portugal to the United States, and returned to Paris in 1945. She died in Orriule in south-west France and was cremated in Paris, her ashes being interred at the Sutherland private cemetery at Dunrobin Castle. She was survived by her eldest son, George Granville Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 5th Duke of Sutherland.
Reference: H-0229
The Duchess of Sutherland (186...
Miss Margaret Wilkinson, 'Glenard,' 101 Kenneth Street, Inverness.
Reference: 44819n
Miss Margaret Wilkinson, '...
Miss Margaret Wilkinson, 'Glenard,' 101 Kenneth Street, Inverness.
Reference: 44819m
Miss Margaret Wilkinson, '...
Miss Margaret Wilkinson, 'Glenard,' 101 Kenneth Street, Inverness.
Reference: 44819l
Miss Margaret Wilkinson, '...