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Page 5 of 6 of 64 Records
From The Times, Monday, 4th September, 1939:  MR. ANTHONY WILLS and MISS LESLIE MELVILLE. 'Owing to the international situation, the marriage took place quietly on Saturday in St. Andrews Cathedral, Inverness, of the Hon. Frederick Anthony Hamilton Wills, eldest son of Lord and Lady Dulverton, and Miss Judith Betty Leslie Melville, eldest daughter of the Hon. Ian and Mrs. Leslie Melville. The Bishop of Moray, Ross and Caithness (Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church) officiated, assisted by the Very Rev. A. A. D. Mackenzie, Provost of Inverness Cathedral. The bride, who was given away by her father, wore a brown two-piece suit. There were no bridesmaids. The Hon. E. R. H. Wills (brother of the bridegroom) was best man. A reception was afterwards held in the Station Hotel by the Hon. Mrs. Leslie Melville.'  The marriage ended in divorce in 1961. Anthony Wills, the 2nd Baron Dulverton b.1915-d.1992. Judith Betty Leslie-Melville b.1916.
Reference: 1192a
From The Times, Monday, 4th Se...
Lady Paine, The White Lodge, Walton-on-Thames.
Reference: 24922c
Lady Paine, The White Lodge, W...
Lady Paine, The White Lodge, Walton-on-Thames.
Reference: 24922b
Lady Paine, The White Lodge, W...
Lady Paine, The White Lodge, Walton-on-Thames.
Reference: 24922a
Lady Paine, The White Lodge, W...
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon. Victoria Frances Maud Baillie (b.14 March 1899-d.10 January 1931). Daughter of Colonel James Evan Bruce Baillie of Dochfour and Nellie Lisa Bass, Baroness Burton of Burton-on-Trent and of Rangemore. She married Sir Digby Lawson, 2nd Bt. on 2 November 1922. She died on 10 January 1931 at age 31. (See also ref: 30601).
Reference: 25513d
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon...
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon. Victoria Frances Maud Baillie (b.14 March 1899-d.10 January 1931). Daughter of Colonel James Evan Bruce Baillie of Dochfour and Nellie Lisa Bass, Baroness Burton of Burton-on-Trent and of Rangemore. She married Sir Digby Lawson, 2nd Bt. on 2 November 1922. She died on 10 January 1931 at age 31. (See also ref: 30601).
Reference: 25513c
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon...
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon. Victoria Frances Maud Baillie (b.14 March 1899-d.10 January 1931). Daughter of Colonel James Evan Bruce Baillie of Dochfour and Nellie Lisa Bass, Baroness Burton of Burton-on-Trent and of Rangemore. She married Sir Digby Lawson, 2nd Bt. on 2 November 1922. She died on 10 January 1931 at age 31. (See also ref: 30601).
Reference: 25513b
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon...
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon. Victoria Frances Maud Baillie (b.14 March 1899-d.10 January 1931). Daughter of Colonel James Evan Bruce Baillie of Dochfour and Nellie Lisa Bass, Baroness Burton of Burton-on-Trent and of Rangemore. She married Sir Digby Lawson, 2nd Bt. on 2 November 1922. She died on 10 January 1931 at age 31. (See also ref: 30601).
Reference: 25513a
Lady Lawson, Dochfour. The Hon...
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...
Older lady portrait c.1922. #
Reference: H-0043b
Older lady portrait c.1922. #...
Older lady portrait c.1922. #
Reference: H-0043a
Older lady portrait c.1922. #...