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Page 15 of 20 of 234 Records
Nursing Sister Miss F.I. MacPherson, Q.A.R.N.N.S. of the Royal Naval Hospital, Gosport. December 1953.
Reference: 44446h
Nursing Sister Miss F.I. MacPh...
Nursing Sister Miss F.I. MacPherson, Q.A.R.N.N.S. of the Royal Naval Hospital, Gosport. December 1953.
Reference: 44446g
Nursing Sister Miss F.I. MacPh...
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inverness. December 1953. This is Captain James MacPherson who worked in R.S. MacDonald. He was a Scoutmaster in the 21st Inverness Old High Scouts when they met in the Scout Hut on Strothers Lane in the 1950s. It's believed he was an officer in the Gordon Highlanders and always wore tartan trews for evening dress instead of a kilt since he had an artificial leg. He left Inverness in 1955.  His dancing partner is Nursing Sister  F.I. MacPherson, Q.A.R.N.N.S. of the Royal Naval Hospital, Gosport.  Identification and information submitted by Duncan Chisholm.
Reference: 44446f
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inve...
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inverness. December 1953. This is Captain James MacPherson who worked in R.S. MacDonald. He was a Scoutmaster in the 21st Inverness Old High Scouts when they met in the Scout Hut on Strothers Lane in the 1950s. It's believed he was an officer in the Gordon Highlanders and always wore tartan trews for evening dress instead of a kilt since he had an artificial leg. He left Inverness in 1955.  His dancing partner is Nursing Sister  F.I. MacPherson, Q.A.R.N.N.S. of the Royal Naval Hospital, Gosport.  Identification and information submitted by Duncan Chisholm.
Reference: 44446e
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inve...
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inverness. December 1953. This is Captain James MacPherson who worked in R.S. MacDonald. He was a Scoutmaster in the 21st Inverness Old High Scouts when they met in the Scout Hut on Strothers Lane in the 1950s. It's believed he was an officer in the Gordon Highlanders and always wore tartan trews for evening dress instead of a kilt since he had an artificial leg. He left Inverness in 1955.  His dancing partner is Nursing Sister  F.I. MacPherson, Q.A.R.N.N.S. of the Royal Naval Hospital, Gosport.  Identification and information submitted by Duncan Chisholm.
Reference: 44446d
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inve...
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inverness. December 1953. This is Captain James MacPherson who worked in R.S. MacDonald. He was a Scoutmaster in the 21st Inverness Old High Scouts when they met in the Scout Hut on Strothers Lane in the 1950s. It's believed he was an officer in the Gordon Highlanders and always wore tartan trews for evening dress instead of a kilt since he had an artificial leg. He left Inverness in 1955.  His dancing partner is Nursing Sister  F.I. MacPherson, Q.A.R.N.N.S. of the Royal Naval Hospital, Gosport.  Identification and information submitted by Duncan Chisholm.
Reference: 44446c
R.S. MacDonald, Eastgate, Inve...
Sir Alexander Malcolm MacEwen, Provost of Inverness 1925-1931. Photo c1933. Born in Calcutta on 10th January 1875. His father was Robert Sutherland Taylor MacEwen, barrister and Recorder of Rangoon. MacEwen was educated at Clifton College, Bristol and Edinburgh University, qualifying as a solicitor in 1901. He joined the firm of Stewart Rule & Co. in Inverness and went on to be its senior partner for more than 30 years. He entered the Town Council in 1908 and although he later retired he was persuaded to return after World War I. He was elected provost in 1925, a post he held until 1931. During his period in office Provost MacEwen promoted schemes for the improvement of public health and housing. He was a member of the Inverness-shire Education Committee and for nine years Chairman of the Directors of the Royal Northern Infirmary. He was knighted in 1932. After he retired from the Town Council MacEwen was elected County Councillor for Benbecula. He supported Scottish self-government and was the leader of the Scottish National Party from 1934-36. Macewen Drive in Inverness is named after him. He died on 29th June 1941.
Reference: 29684b
Sir Alexander Malcolm MacEwen,...
Sir Alexander Malcolm MacEwen, Provost of Inverness 1925-1931. Photo c1933. Born in Calcutta on 10th January 1875. His father was Robert Sutherland Taylor MacEwen, barrister and Recorder of Rangoon. MacEwen was educated at Clifton College, Bristol and Edinburgh University, qualifying as a solicitor in 1901. He joined the firm of Stewart Rule & Co. in Inverness and went on to be its senior partner for more than 30 years. He entered the Town Council in 1908 and although he later retired he was persuaded to return after World War I. He was elected provost in 1925, a post he held until 1931. During his period in office Provost MacEwen promoted schemes for the improvement of public health and housing. He was a member of the Inverness-shire Education Committee and for nine years Chairman of the Directors of the Royal Northern Infirmary. He was knighted in 1932. After he retired from the Town Council MacEwen was elected County Councillor for Benbecula. He supported Scottish self-government and was the leader of the Scottish National Party from 1934-36. Macewen Drive in Inverness is named after him. He died on 29th June 1941.
Reference: 29684a
Sir Alexander Malcolm MacEwen,...
Mr James Murray, Broadstone Park, Inverness. Wearing Prefect badge and Inverness Royal Academy uniform. See also 45828c/d.
Reference: 45662
Mr James Murray, Broadstone Pa...
Hat band denotes HMS Armadale Castle. The SS Armadale Castle was a passenger steamship built in 1903 at Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering, Govan, Scotland. She was requisitioned from the Union Castle Line as an armed merchant cruiser in the Royal Navy in August 1914 and was used as a supply, transport and patrol vessel. She was returned to commercial service in 1919 and laid up at Netley in 1935, reprieved for one voyage, then scrapped in 1936 at Blyth. #
Reference: H-0204a
Hat band denotes HMS Armadale ...
Matheson Lang was born in Montreal, Canada, the son of Rev. Gavin Lang of Inverness, Scotland on 15th May 1879. (One of Gavin Lang's grandchildren, Cosmo Lang, became Archbishop of Canterbury). He was educated at Inverness College and the University of St Andrews and made his stage debut in 1897, becoming known for his Shakespearean roles in such plays as 'Hamlet,' 'Macbeth,' and 'Romeo and Juliet.' He also appeared in plays by Ibsen and Shaw and performed in the theatrical companies of Sir Frank Benson, Lillie Langtry and Ellen Terry. In 1903 he married actress Nellie Hutin Britton (1876-1965) in London. In 1906 he played Tristram in 'Tristram and Iseult' at the Adelphi Theatre, with Lily Brayton as Iseult and Oscar Asche as King Mark; Lang's wife played Arganthael.  Lang and his wife subsequently formed their own company, which toured India, South Africa, and Australia from 1910-13 performing Shakespeare. In 1913, Lang returned to England and created one of his most memorable roles, the title character in 'Mr. Wu.' He reprised this part in a 1919 silent film, and became so identified with the role that he titled his 1940 memoirs 'Mr. Wu Looks Back.' In 1914, he and Britton successfully produced 'The Taming of the Shrew,' 'The Merchant of Venice,' and 'Hamlet' at the Old Vic. In 1916, Lang became one of the first major theatre stars to act in a silent film, as Shylock in 'The Merchant of Venice,' with his wife as Portia. He went on to appear in over 30 films and was one of Britain's leading movie stars of the 1920s. Among his memorable roles were Guy Fawkes (1923), Matthias in 'The Wandering Jew' (1923) (which also featured his wife as Judith), Henry IV in 'Henry, King of Navarre' (1924), and Henry V in 'Royal Cavalcade' (1935).  Lang also wrote the plays 'Carnival' (1919) and 'The Purple Mask' (1920), both of which were produced on Broadway and made into films. In 1940 the Langs were staying with their old friend Dornford Yates and his wife at their house near Pau in France when France surrendered, and they had to escape from the advancing Germans through Spain to Portugal. Matheson Lang died in Bridgetown, Barbados on 11th April 1948 at age 68. These promotional shots of Lang and Britton were probably taken for the Inverness performance of 'The Wandering Jew' in October 1936, which played to a packed house for several days at the Empire Theatre. Matheson Lang received a rapturous welcome and at the end of the performance he was recalled time and again, and he said it had been a most memorable night for him.
Reference: 29108f
Matheson Lang was born in Mont...
Matheson Lang was born in Montreal, Canada, the son of Rev. Gavin Lang of Inverness, Scotland on 15th May 1879. (One of Gavin Lang's grandchildren, Cosmo Lang, became Archbishop of Canterbury). He was educated at Inverness College and the University of St Andrews and made his stage debut in 1897, becoming known for his Shakespearean roles in such plays as 'Hamlet,' 'Macbeth,' and 'Romeo and Juliet.' He also appeared in plays by Ibsen and Shaw and performed in the theatrical companies of Sir Frank Benson, Lillie Langtry and Ellen Terry. In 1903 he married actress Nellie Hutin Britton (1876-1965) in London. In 1906 he played Tristram in 'Tristram and Iseult' at the Adelphi Theatre, with Lily Brayton as Iseult and Oscar Asche as King Mark; Lang's wife played Arganthael.  Lang and his wife subsequently formed their own company, which toured India, South Africa, and Australia from 1910-13 performing Shakespeare. In 1913, Lang returned to England and created one of his most memorable roles, the title character in 'Mr. Wu.' He reprised this part in a 1919 silent film, and became so identified with the role that he titled his 1940 memoirs 'Mr. Wu Looks Back.' In 1914, he and Britton successfully produced 'The Taming of the Shrew,' 'The Merchant of Venice,' and 'Hamlet' at the Old Vic. In 1916, Lang became one of the first major theatre stars to act in a silent film, as Shylock in 'The Merchant of Venice,' with his wife as Portia. He went on to appear in over 30 films and was one of Britain's leading movie stars of the 1920s. Among his memorable roles were Guy Fawkes (1923), Matthias in 'The Wandering Jew' (1923) (which also featured his wife as Judith), Henry IV in 'Henry, King of Navarre' (1924), and Henry V in 'Royal Cavalcade' (1935).  Lang also wrote the plays 'Carnival' (1919) and 'The Purple Mask' (1920), both of which were produced on Broadway and made into films. In 1940 the Langs were staying with their old friend Dornford Yates and his wife at their house near Pau in France when France surrendered, and they had to escape from the advancing Germans through Spain to Portugal. Matheson Lang died in Bridgetown, Barbados on 11th April 1948 at age 68. These promotional shots of Lang and Britton were probably taken for the Inverness performance of 'The Wandering Jew' in October 1936, which played to a packed house for several days at the Empire Theatre. Matheson Lang received a rapturous welcome and at the end of the performance he was recalled time and again, and he said it had been a most memorable night for him.
Reference: 29108e
Matheson Lang was born in Mont...