Shopping Cart
Total : £0.00
Items : 0


View cart
Enter a surname, town name or other keyword to search the database. Remember to allow for the different spellings of 'Mc' and 'Mac.' Good luck!
{Search tips: Use single word search terms for more results}

 

Page 15 of 15 of 177 Records
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage actors in costume posing for publicity shots. See also 31334a to 31334c. Man wearing hat is believed to be Henry Christie Landon Sorrell, involved in local amateur dramatics, and manager of the Inverness Repertory Company in 1937 and of the Little Theatre in Inverness, taking over from Ronald Macdonald Douglas in August 1938. (Born 1911 in Endon).
Reference: 31335b
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage ac...
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage actors in costume posing for publicity shots. See also 31334a to 31334c. Man wearing hat is believed to be Henry Christie Landon Sorrell, involved in local amateur dramatics, and manager of the Inverness Repertory Company in 1937 and of the Little Theatre in Inverness, taking over from Ronald Macdonald Douglas in August 1938. (Born 1911 in Endon).
Reference: 31335a
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage ac...
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage actors in costume posing for publicity shots. See also 31335a to 31335d. Believed to be Henry Christie Landon Sorrell, involved in local amateur dramatics, and manager of the Inverness Repertory Company in 1937 and of the Little Theatre in Inverness, taking over from Ronald Macdonald Douglas in August 1938. (Born 1911 in Endon).
Reference: 31334b
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage ac...
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage actors in costume posing for publicity shots. See also 31335a to 31335d. Believed to be Henry Christie Landon Sorrell, involved in local amateur dramatics, and manager of the Inverness Repertory Company in 1937 and of the Little Theatre in Inverness, taking over from Ronald Macdonald Douglas in August 1938. (Born 1911 in Endon).
Reference: 31334a
Sorrell vs MacKinnon. Stage ac...
Sir John Barbirolli, born as Giovanni Battista Barbirolli in London (1899-1970) was a conductor and cellist. Earlier in his career he was Arturo Toscanini's successor as music director of the New York Philharmonic, serving there from 1936 to 1943. He was also chief conductor of the Houston Symphony from 1961 to 1967. In March 1937 the Scottish Orchestra under Barbirolli played in the Empire Theatre in Inverness. The hall was packed. Beethoven and Mozart figured in the presentation and it was reported Barbirolli was delighted with the response of the Inverness audience.
Reference: 31208
Sir John Barbirolli, born as G...
Building and construction of Caledonia House, now the Penta Hotel in Academy Street, Inverness. Originally the site of the Empire Theatre which was demolished in 1971, Caledonia House first appears in the Valuation Rolls of 1973-74. DE Shoes occupied the corner site for many years, next to the rear car park entrance of the Cummings Hotel (which is now the Hush Lounge Bar). The double decker bus is parked outside the building once occupied by Teddy Mountain.*
Reference: H-0072b
Building and construction of C...
Building and construction of Caledonia House, now the Penta Hotel in Academy Street, Inverness. Originally the site of the Empire Theatre which was demolished in 1971, Caledonia House first appears in the Valuation Rolls of 1973-74. DE Shoes occupied the corner site for many years, next to the rear car park entrance of the Cummings Hotel (which is now the Hush Lounge Bar). The double decker bus is parked outside the building once occupied by Teddy Mountain.*
Reference: H-0072a
Building and construction of C...
Bank Street, Inverness. The central building was used as the headquarters of Inverness District Scouts from 1931 to 1935, being then known as the Maud Lawson Hall, after Lady Maud Lawson of Dochfour, who had been a keen supporter of Scouting. The building was opened on 23rd June 1931 by the Prince of Wales, but was sold due to structural problems only four year later. Before 1931 the building was known as the Royal Halls. The Theatre Royal, on the far right,  burned down in 1934, causing a stir in Inverness at the time as people thought it had been predicted by the Brahan Seer who said that when a theatre in Inverness was built between two churches, it would be destroyed by fire. The theatre was situated on the riverside between the Free North Church and the St Columba Church. The building on the far left now houses the Riverside Gallery, and the central building is where CYC is located. Moray House now occupies the site where the Theatre Royal stood.*
Reference: 28831b
Bank Street, Inverness. The ce...
Bank Street, Inverness. The central building was used as the headquarters of Inverness District Scouts from 1931 to 1935, being then known as the Maud Lawson Hall, after Lady Maud Lawson of Dochfour, who had been a keen supporter of Scouting. The building was opened on 23rd June 1931 by the Prince of Wales, but was sold due to structural problems only four year later. Before 1931 the building was known as the Royal Halls. The Theatre Royal, on the far right,  burned down in 1934, causing a stir in Inverness at the time as people thought it had been predicted by the Brahan Seer who said that when a theatre in Inverness was built between two churches, it would be destroyed by fire. The theatre was situated on the riverside between the Free North Church and the St Columba Church. The building on the far left now houses the Riverside Gallery, and the central building is where CYC is located. Moray House now occupies the site where the Theatre Royal stood.*
Reference: 28831
Bank Street, Inverness. The ce...