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Page 3 of 7 of 74 Records
Lt.Commander Richardson R.N, HMS Courageous.  Courageous was torpedoed and sunk on Sunday 17th September 1939 by the German submarine U29, going down with more than 500 of her crew. The name Richardson doesn't appear on either the official list of casualties or survivors, indicating that by the start of World War II he had been re-assigned or was no longer in the navy. This photo dates from c1938.
Reference: 31686b
Lt.Commander Richardson R.N, H...
Lt.Commander Richardson R.N, HMS Courageous.  Courageous was torpedoed and sunk on Sunday 17th September 1939 by the German submarine U29, going down with more than 500 of her crew. The name Richardson doesn't appear on either the official list of casualties or survivors, indicating that by the start of World War II he had been re-assigned or was no longer in the navy. This photo dates from c1938.
Reference: 31686a
Lt.Commander Richardson R.N, H...
Miss M. Laing.
Reference: 27501f
Miss M. Laing. ...
Miss M. Laing.
Reference: 27501e
Miss M. Laing. ...
Mrs MacLennan, Innes Street, Inverness.
Reference: 914
Mrs MacLennan, Innes Street, I...
Portrait. #
Reference: H-0222
Portrait. #...
Davidson, The Sheiling, Ardrishaig, Lochgilphead, (6 Glenburn Road). Bridal. January 1953. Naval parade along High Street, Inverness.
Reference: 44126c
Davidson, The Sheiling, Ardris...
His Excellency Jan Masaryk, Vice-President of the Czechoslovak Republic. Jan Garrigue Masaryk (14th September 1886-10th March 1948) was a Czech diplomat and politician and Foreign Minister of Czechoslovakia from 1940 to 1948. Born in Prague, he was a son of professor T.G Masaryk (who became the first President of Czechoslovakia in 1918). In 1925 Jan Masaryk was made ambassador to Britain. His father resigned as President in 1935 and died two years later. In September 1938 the Sudetenland was occupied by German forces and Masaryk resigned as ambassador in protest, although he remained in London. When a Czechoslovak Government-in-Exile was established in Britain in 1940, Masaryk was appointed Foreign Minister. During the war he regularly made broadcasts over the BBC to occupied Czechoslovakia. He had a flat at Westminster Gardens, Marsham Street in London but often stayed at the Czechoslovak Chancellery residence at Wingrave. In 1942, about the time this photo was taken, Masaryk received an LL.D. from Bates College. Masaryk remained Foreign Minister following the liberation of Czechoslovakia as part of the multi-party, Communist-dominated National Front government. The Communists under Klement Gottwald saw their position strengthened after the 1946 elections but Masaryk stayed on as Foreign Minister. On 10th March 1948 Masaryk was found dead, dressed in his pajamas, in the courtyard of the Foreign Ministry below his bathroom window. The initial investigation by the Communist ministry of interior stated that he had committed suicide by jumping out of the window, although for a long time it was been believed by some that he was murdered by the nascent Communist government. In a second investigation taken in 1968 during the Prague Spring, Masaryk's death was ruled an accident, not excluding a murder and a third investigation in the early 1990s after the Velvet Revolution concluded that it had been a murder.
Reference: 37639
His Excellency Jan Masaryk, Vi...
Portrait. #
Reference: 28763
Portrait. #...
Corporal James Dalgleish Pollock (1890-1958). The Cameron Highlanders, The Depot. One of four VC winners re-copied for a composite picture in January 1929. Pollock was 25 years old, and a corporal in the The Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders during the First World War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC: On 27th September 1915 near the Hohenzollern Redoubt, France, at about noon the enemy's bombers in superior numbers were successfully working up Little Willie Trench towards the Redoubt. Corporal Pollock, after obtaining permission, got out of the trench alone and walked along the top edge with complete disregard for danger, and compelled the enemy bombers to retire by bombing them from above. He was under heavy machine-gun fire the whole time, but contrived to hold up the progress of the Germans for an hour before he was at length wounded. His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Regimental Museum of Queen's Own Highlanders, Fort George.
Reference: 27563c
Corporal James Dalgleish Pollo...
Nurse Jessieman.
Reference: 26120
Nurse Jessieman. ...
Lady Lovat, Rosamond Delves Broughton was born in London on 20th May 1917, to Major Sir Henry John 'Jock' Delves Broughton of the Irish Guards and his wife Vera Edyth Griffith-Boscawen. She married Simon Joseph Fraser (9th July 1911-16th March 1995), Master of Lovat and 15th Lord Lovat, known to his friends as Shimi from the historic gaelic title The MacShimidh (son of Simon) for the chief of the Clan Fraser, on 10th October 1938. They took over Beaufort Castle from his mother, although it had been almost destroyed in a fire in June 1937.  They had six children. Lady Lovat moved to London in her later years to be closer to most of her family and died at her home on Montpelier Street, Knightsbridge on 3rd March 2012 and was buried alongside her husband in the family plot at the historic St Mary's Roman Catholic Church on the banks of the river Beauly in Eskadale.
Reference: 47682b
Lady Lovat, Rosamond Delves Br...