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#Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley
rabbitcruiser · 2 months
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Former Governor General Lord Stanley pledged to donate a silver challenge cup as an award for the best hockey team in Canada on March 18, 1892. It was later named after him as the Stanley Cup.
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briangilhuly-blog · 1 year
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The Stanley Cup
Hello readers,
Today I will be discussing some early hockey history. If you are unfamiliar with the Stanley Cup, it is the trophy awarded to the winning team of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The cup is named after the man, Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley, Lord Stanley of Preston, who first bought the trophy that became the Stanley Cup in 1893.
In the early days of hockey, the Stanley Cup was not played for in the NHL, it was played for by teams outside the NHL. The teams back before 1912, were able to challenge the Stanley Cup champion for the trophy at any time. Whatever team wins is the rightful owner of the cup. Then in 1912 they decided they would only play for it once per year.
The trophy is the only one in professional sports that has never been replaced. It has been the same trophy passed around to each team that wins it. Interestingly, in 1907, after the Montreal Wanderers won the trophy, they took it to have their pictures taken but forgot to bring it back. They later found the photographer’s mother using it as a flowerpot.
It is remarkable to think that the same trophy that was once used as a flowerpot is the same one that the players of today will compete for come April.
-Brian Gilhuly
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i know i haven’t been paying attention to round 2 because my only true sentiment now is Anyone But The Lighting but like. calgary my loves. matthew tkachuk birthday bestie. please for the love of Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley, Lord Stanley of Preston, and the son of the 14th Earl of Derby do not let the oilers win round 2
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winsonsaw2003 · 3 years
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I’m Looking For Descendants Of Edmund Augustus Blundell (1804-1868)
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Edmund Augustus Blundell,Commissioners of Tenasserim from(1833-1843)/Resident Councillor of Malacca from(1847-1849)/Resident Councillor of Penang from(1849-1855).Born in 1804.Son of William Blundell & Mary Ann ?.He joined the service of the H.E.I.C. in the Straits Settlements in 1820 as a writer. In 1823 edition he is an assistant to the collector; in 1825 he is a deputy collector. From 1826 to 1834 he is an assistant to the Commissioner for Mergui and Tavoy. In 1835 he becomes a Commissioner for Mergui and Tavoy. From 1836 to 1840 he is a Commissioner in the Tenasserim provinces. He married to Meliora Mynors Farmar.Beside that,he had a Burmese mistress who had given him 11 childrens.He gave them his name and sent them to be educated in Calcutta and England.He died in 1868 at Harrogate.
His issue -
ai)Fanny Blundell(1837-1924) married to Kenneth Bruce Stuart Robertson.
Their issue:-
bi)James Bruce Robertson(1860 - 1941)married Emily Bertha Neubronner.
His issue:- ci)Archibald Bruce Robertson (1892 - 1927) married Ethel May Stork.
His issue:-
di)Elinor Robertson married ? Proctor.
cii)Emily Mabel Stuart Robertson (1886 - )married Frank Goodall.
ciii) Constance Ethel Robertson (1887 - ) married Gilles Hennus. bii) Charles Harry Everton Robertson (1857 - 1930) married Henrietta Anna Phillipine van Delder.
His issue:- ci) ? Robertson(1889).
cii)Charles John Stuart Robertson (1891 - 1923) married Wilhelmina Beck.
ciii)Henry Everton Robertson (1893 - ? )married Vera Dorothy Westlake.
civ)Archibald Wallace Robertson (1895 - 1954)married Irene Elizabeth McLeod. cv)Frank Dudley Vincent Robertson (1903 - 1943)married Marjorie Tann. biii)Elizabeth Robertson (1862 - 1954)married Alfred Howard Vincent Newton.
Their issue:- ci)Maud Jessie Newton (1883 - )married William Joseph Mayson.
cii)William Howard Newton (1885 - 1919)married 1stly Catherine McWhirter Cowan and 2ndly,Oswald Phillip Griffith-Jones.
ciii)Lillian Allan Newton (1894 - ).
biv)Fanny Stuart Robertson (1868 - )married Anthony Hannay Raeburn.
Their issue:- ci)Agnes Marjorie Raeburn (1889 - )married Vivian Thomas Dyer Smith. cii)Anthony Charles Stuart Raeburn (1890 - ). ciii)Francis Colin Raeburn (1892 - ).
civ)Douglas Alfred Raeburn (1894 - )married Victoria Mary Sutton.
His issue:-
di)John Raeburn married Padday. cv) Lionel Stanley Raeburn (1896 - )married 1stly Edith Kathleen Gibson and 2ndly Kathleen Mary Innes-Haddon.
His issue:-
di)Valerie Raeburn married ? Kempis.
Their issue:- ei)Deidre Ann Kempis married Mark Shepherd. eii)Christopher Kempis. cvi)William Hannay William Raeburn (1907 - ). cvii)Ailsa Fanny Grace Raeburn (1915 - 2001)married Francis Edward Templer. bv)Edmund John Robertson (1855 - )married Elizabeth Shackleton.
His issue:-
ci)Kenneth Bruce Stuart Robertson (1884 - ).
aii)Augusta Blundell married to Michel Jules Moniot. aiii)Mary Blundell married to Capt. George Tod Wright.
Their issue:-
bi)David Moncrieff Wright(1849-1895). bii)Jessie Augusta Wright (1851) Singapore. biii)Arthur Blundell Wright (1853-?)married to ?
.His issue:-
ci)David Moncrieff Wright.
cii)Richard Moncrieff Wright. biv)Mary Alma Wright (1855-1924).
bv)Maxwell James Wright (1858-1927)married Edith Graham Campbell.
His issue:- ci)Effie Graham Wright(1890-?)married to William Cowan Glegg. cii)Rev. George Tod Wright(1892-?).
ciii)Mary (Minnie) Moncrieff Wright(1894-?). civ)Maxwell Campbell Wright(1896-?).
cv)James Campbell G. Wright(1901-?). cvi)Ninian Blundell Wright(1905-1993). bvi)Louis William Wright(1864-?)married to Bridget Bowler.
His issue:- ci)Gordon Francis Moncrieff Wright(1899-?). bvii)Jessie Moncrieff Wright (19 February 1865-1948). bviii)Alice Georgina Wright (19 February 1865, St Andrews -1951).
bix)Augustus Frederick Wright (24 June 1866),St.Andrews. bx)Hector Charles Wright (24 June 1866) St Andrews. bxi)Alfred Victor Wright (1868),St Andrews. bxii)Amy Constance Wright (1869-1950), Scotland. aiv)Ann Blundell married to Adolph Emil Schmidt.
av)Lucy Blundell married to William Willans Willans.
Their issue:- bi)Thomas Church Willans(?-1890) married to ?. His issue :- ci)Bessie Gwendoline Willans married to Roderic Arthur Clapham.
bii)William Blundell Willans married Amy Jeune. His issue:- ci)Gordon Jeune Willans(1883-1963)married to Ruth Inskip.
His issue:- di)Robert Inskip Willans(1917-2001)married to Elizabeth Tuffield. His issue:- ei)Carolyn Mary Jeune Willans married to Stephen G.Townsend. dii)William Digby Willans married to Enid Kathleen Mercer.
cii)Sir Frederick Jeune Willans(1883-1949) married to Wynefred Manby.
ciii)Maxwell Jeune Willans(1886-1906). civ)Norman Jeune Willans(1892-1948). cv)Lucy Jeune Willans. cvi)Elsie Jeune Willans. cvii)Eva Jeune Willans(1883-1937) married Townsend Shaw.
cviii)Alan Jeune Willans(1896-1918).
biii)Harry Walter Willans married to Catherine Vaughan de Jersey Clere.
His issue:- ci)Willam Murray Willans married to Blanche Rose Walker.
His issue:-
di)Malcolm Murray Willans married Eileen Spurdle.
His issue:-
ei)Ashley Willans married Lizanne Hogg.
eii)Ian Willans married Jenny Blinkhorn.
eiii)Suzanne Willans married Peter Linklater.
dii)Harry Leonard Willans married to Dorothy Mary Johnstone.
His issue:- ei)Neil Robert Willans married to Sandra Dymond.
His issue:-
fi)Mark James Willans.
fii)Julie Sara Willans.
eii)Sally Diane Willans married Roger Menzies.
Their issue:-
fi)Erin Leigh Menzies.
fii)Kelly Andrea Menzies.
fiii)Scott Andrew Menzies.
eiii)Delys Marie Willans.
cii)Lucy Willans married Ernest Picot.
Their issue:- di) David Picot.
dii)Peter Picot. diii)Nancy Picot married Bob Hope-Gibbons. div)Elizabeth Picot.
ciii)Dorothy Willans married Percy Hodson.
Their issue:-
di)Catherine Hodson. dii)Sydney Hodson. diii)Mary Hodson.
div) Fraser Hodson.
dv) Pam married Jim Sharpe.
Please contact me at - [email protected]
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nellygwyn · 7 years
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Covent Garden Lovers
courtesy of Hallie Rubenhold’s “The Covent Garden Ladies”
A list of the notable and famous frequenters of London’s brothels in the latter half of the 1700s. “Patrons du peche” (patrons of sin)
Look out for the royalty, and the great and the “good.”
Lord Chief Justice Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth
Admiral George Anson, 1st Baron Anson
Sir William Apreece
Sir Richard Atkins
Sir John Aubrey, MP
Richard Barry, 7th Earl of Barrymore
Allen Bathurst, 1st Earl of Bathurst
Sir Charles Bingham, 1st Earl of Lucan
Captain George Maurice Bisset (yes, THAT George Bisset, of Lady Seymour Worsley’s scandal)
Admiral Edward Boscawen 
Hugh Boscawen, 2nd Viscount Falmouth
James Boswell (diarist, great friend of Samuel Johnson)
Sir Orlando Bridgeman
Thomas Bromley, 2nd Baron Montfort
Captain John Byron (Lord Byron’s grandfather)
John Calcraft, MP
Archibald Campbell, 3rd Duke of Argyll
John Campbell, 5th Duke of Argyll
John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun
George Capell, 4th Earl of Essex
David Carnegie, Lord Rosehill
John Cleland (writer of the pornographic novel “Fanny Hill: Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure”)
Henry Fiennes Clinton, 9th Earl of Lincoln.
Robert “Cock-a-doodle-doo” Coates
Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess of Cornwallis
Colonel John Coxe
William Craven, 6th Baron Craven
His Royal Highness, Prince Ernest, Duke of Cumberland
His Royal Highness, Prince Henry Frederick, Duke of Cumberland
His Royal Highness, Prince William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland
The Honourable John Damer
Sir Francis Dashwood, Lord Despenser (founder of “The Hellfire Club” and Chancellor of the Exchequer)
Francis Drake Delevel
Reverend William Dodd
George Bubb Doddington, Lord Melcombe
William Douglas, 4th Duke of Queensbury
Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville
George Montagu Dunk, 2nd Earl of Halifax
Sir Henry Elchin
Richard Edgecumbe, Lord Mount Edgecumbe
Sir Charles Fielding, son of the Earl of Denbigh
The Honourable John Finch
John Fitzpatrick, 1st Earl of Upper Ossory
Samuel Foote (theatre manager and dramatist)
Charles James Fox (prominent Whig statesman, arch-enemy of William Pitt the Younger)
Stephen Fox, 2nd Baron Holland
George Fox-Lane, 3rd Baron Bingley
John Frederick, 3rd Duke of Dorset
His Majesty, King George IV (oh, what a surprise)
Sir John Graeme, 3rd Duke of Montrose
Charles Hamilton, Lord Binning
Charles Hanbury-Williams (British envoy to the court of Russia, introduced Catherine the Great to her lover, Stanislaw Poniatowski)
Colonel George Hanger
Count Franz Xavier Haszlang, Bavarian Envoy to London
Judge Henry Gould
Robery Henley, 1st Earl of Northington
Augustus Henry Fitzroy, 3rd Duke of Grafton (great-great-great-great grandson of King Charles II)
Henry Herbert, 10th Earl of Pembroke
Joseph Hickey
William Hickey
William Holles, 2nd Viscount Vane
Rear-Admiral Charles Holmes
Admiral Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood
Charles Howard, 11th Duke of Norfolk
Thomas Howard, 3rd Earl of Effingham
Admiral Lord Richard Howe, 4th Viscount Howe
Thomas Jefferson (not that TJeffs; manager of the Drury Lane Theatre)
John Phillip Kemble
Augustus Keppel, 1st Viscount Keppel
William John Kerr, 5th Marquess of Lothian
Sir John Lade
Penistone Lamb, 1st Viscount Melbourne
William Longhorne (the poet laureate)
Lord Edward Ligonier
Field Marshall John Ligonier, 1st Earl of Ligonier
Simon Luttrell, 1st Baron Carhampton
Thomas Lyttleton, 2nd Baron Lyttleton
Kenneth Francis Mackenzie, 4th Earl of Seaforth
Charles Macklin
The Honourable Captain John Manners
John Manners, 3rd Duke of Rutland
Charles Maynard, 1st Viscount Maynard
Captain Anthony George Martin
James Macduff, 2nd Earl of Fife
Captain Thomas Medlycott
Isaac Mendez
Major Thomas Metcalfe
Sir George Montgomerie Metham
John Montague, 4th Earl of Sandwich
Alexander Montgomerie, 10th Earl of Eglinton
Arthur Murphy
Richard “Beau” Nash (famous dandy, popularised ballroom etiquette at the assemblies in Bath)
Francis John Needham, MP
Henry Nevill, 2nd Earl of Abergavenny
John Palmer (actor)
Thomas Panton
William Petty, 1st Marquess of Landsdowne
Evelyn Meadows Pierrepoont, 2nd Duke of Kingston
Thomas Potter
John Poulett, 4th Earl of Poulett
William Pulteney, 1st Earl of Bath
William Powell (manager of Drury Lane)
Charles “Chace” Price
Richard “Bloomsbury Dick” Rigby
Admiral George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney
David Ross (actor)
Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford
Frederick John Sackville, 3rd Duke of Dorset
Sir George Saville
George Selwyn (politician and wit)
Edward “Ned” Shuter (actor)
John George Spencer, 1st Earl of Spencer
Charles Stanhope, 3rd Earl of Harrington
Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield
Sir William Stanhope, MP
Edward Stanley, 12th Earl of Derby
Sir Thomas Stapleton
John Stewart, 3rd Earl of Bute
Frederick St John, 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke
Colonel Sir Banastre Tarleton
Commodore Edward Thompson
Lord Chief Justice Sir Edward Thurlow
Robert “Beau” Tracy
John Tucker, MP
Arthur Vansittart, MP
Sir Henry Vansittart, MP
Robert Vansittart
Sir Edward Walpole
Sir Robert Walpole (Britain’s first Prime Minister)
John Wilkes
His Majesty, King William IV
Charles Wyndham, 2nd Earl of Egremont
Henry Woodward (actor)
His Royal Highness, Edward, Duke of York
His Royal Highness, Frederick, Duke of York
Lieutenant Colonel John Yorke
Joseph Yorke, 1st Baron Dove
Extra information is my own
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newestbalance · 6 years
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Pipelines, the Stuff of Canadian Politics: the Canada Letter
Canadian readers were also keen to comment on the informative and sweeping article about Mr. Trump’s decision to place tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada, Mexico and Europe by Ana Swanson, our Washington-based trade expert. Here is a sampling, shortened for space:
“Canuck Lit Lover” from British Columbia: “I am finally relieved that our Prime Minister has stood up to the neighborhood bully. So many of us have waited with bated breath, in disappointed and disbelief that Trudeau seemed to have checked his duty to defend our honor, avoided calling out hateful and antagonistic speech, and sidestepped critical moments that could have drawn some kind of line between us and the frightening devolution of political and moral standards in this American government.”
Brian in Toronto: “America’s allies will trade with each other, and with China, and America will become less and less relevant in the world. As it becomes less relevant, it will become poorer, starting with the heartland.”
Mark, somewhere in Canada: “The silver lining to this mess is that it will finally teach Canadians a lesson they should have learned since the 1950s: don’t put all your eggs in one basket. Diversify. It has been convenient hitching the one economy onto the other, but by now the folly of the underlying premise — that the other side can be trusted — is surely exposed for the folly it always was.”
White House to Impose Metal Tariffs on E.U., Canada and Mexico
‘A Slap in the Canadians’ Face.’ Ontario Steel Town Reacts to Trump’s Tariffs.
Opinion: Trump Tariffs Threaten National Security
Screen Time
The new month means another batch of viewing recommendations for Netflix subscribers in Canada from my colleagues in Watching, The New York Times’s pathfinder for screens big and small. Among other things, June’s list includes Philip Seymour Hoffman’s portrayal of a C.I.A. agent in “Charlie Wilson’s War” and the Coen brothers’ sort of sequel to “Barton Fink,” “Hail, Caesar!”
Trans Canada
—It’s taken 70 years but Léo Major’s courageous acts during World War II have now made him Quebec’s newest hero.
—Ian Davies went to Quebec’s Tadoussac bird observatory on Monday and saw 700,000 warblers. James Gorman, a science writer at The Times, explains how Mr. Davies counted them.
—Butter tarts are invading the United States, at least in a small way.
—When Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley, the British lord and governor general who gave Canada a hockey cup in his name, died there was no mention of the sport in his obituary in The Times.
The post Pipelines, the Stuff of Canadian Politics: the Canada Letter appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2Lf8FKR via Everyday News
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cleopatrarps · 6 years
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Pipelines, the Stuff of Canadian Politics: the Canada Letter
Canadian readers were also keen to comment on the informative and sweeping article about Mr. Trump’s decision to place tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada, Mexico and Europe by Ana Swanson, our Washington-based trade expert. Here is a sampling, shortened for space:
“Canuck Lit Lover” from British Columbia: “I am finally relieved that our Prime Minister has stood up to the neighborhood bully. So many of us have waited with bated breath, in disappointed and disbelief that Trudeau seemed to have checked his duty to defend our honor, avoided calling out hateful and antagonistic speech, and sidestepped critical moments that could have drawn some kind of line between us and the frightening devolution of political and moral standards in this American government.”
Brian in Toronto: “America’s allies will trade with each other, and with China, and America will become less and less relevant in the world. As it becomes less relevant, it will become poorer, starting with the heartland.”
Mark, somewhere in Canada: “The silver lining to this mess is that it will finally teach Canadians a lesson they should have learned since the 1950s: don’t put all your eggs in one basket. Diversify. It has been convenient hitching the one economy onto the other, but by now the folly of the underlying premise — that the other side can be trusted — is surely exposed for the folly it always was.”
White House to Impose Metal Tariffs on E.U., Canada and Mexico
‘A Slap in the Canadians’ Face.’ Ontario Steel Town Reacts to Trump’s Tariffs.
Opinion: Trump Tariffs Threaten National Security
Screen Time
The new month means another batch of viewing recommendations for Netflix subscribers in Canada from my colleagues in Watching, The New York Times’s pathfinder for screens big and small. Among other things, June’s list includes Philip Seymour Hoffman’s portrayal of a C.I.A. agent in “Charlie Wilson’s War” and the Coen brothers’ sort of sequel to “Barton Fink,” “Hail, Caesar!”
Trans Canada
—It’s taken 70 years but Léo Major’s courageous acts during World War II have now made him Quebec’s newest hero.
—Ian Davies went to Quebec’s Tadoussac bird observatory on Monday and saw 700,000 warblers. James Gorman, a science writer at The Times, explains how Mr. Davies counted them.
—Butter tarts are invading the United States, at least in a small way.
—When Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley, the British lord and governor general who gave Canada a hockey cup in his name, died there was no mention of the sport in his obituary in The Times.
The post Pipelines, the Stuff of Canadian Politics: the Canada Letter appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2Lf8FKR via News of World
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party-hard-or-die · 6 years
Text
Pipelines, the Stuff of Canadian Politics: the Canada Letter
Canadian readers were also keen to comment on the informative and sweeping article about Mr. Trump’s decision to place tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada, Mexico and Europe by Ana Swanson, our Washington-based trade expert. Here is a sampling, shortened for space:
“Canuck Lit Lover” from British Columbia: “I am finally relieved that our Prime Minister has stood up to the neighborhood bully. So many of us have waited with bated breath, in disappointed and disbelief that Trudeau seemed to have checked his duty to defend our honor, avoided calling out hateful and antagonistic speech, and sidestepped critical moments that could have drawn some kind of line between us and the frightening devolution of political and moral standards in this American government.”
Brian in Toronto: “America’s allies will trade with each other, and with China, and America will become less and less relevant in the world. As it becomes less relevant, it will become poorer, starting with the heartland.”
Mark, somewhere in Canada: “The silver lining to this mess is that it will finally teach Canadians a lesson they should have learned since the 1950s: don’t put all your eggs in one basket. Diversify. It has been convenient hitching the one economy onto the other, but by now the folly of the underlying premise — that the other side can be trusted — is surely exposed for the folly it always was.”
White House to Impose Metal Tariffs on E.U., Canada and Mexico
‘A Slap in the Canadians’ Face.’ Ontario Steel Town Reacts to Trump’s Tariffs.
Opinion: Trump Tariffs Threaten National Security
Screen Time
The new month means another batch of viewing recommendations for Netflix subscribers in Canada from my colleagues in Watching, The New York Times’s pathfinder for screens big and small. Among other things, June’s list includes Philip Seymour Hoffman’s portrayal of a C.I.A. agent in “Charlie Wilson’s War” and the Coen brothers’ sort of sequel to “Barton Fink,” “Hail, Caesar!”
Trans Canada
—It’s taken 70 years but Léo Major’s courageous acts during World War II have now made him Quebec’s newest hero.
—Ian Davies went to Quebec’s Tadoussac bird observatory on Monday and saw 700,000 warblers. James Gorman, a science writer at The Times, explains how Mr. Davies counted them.
—Butter tarts are invading the United States, at least in a small way.
—When Sir Frederick Arthur Stanley, the British lord and governor general who gave Canada a hockey cup in his name, died there was no mention of the sport in his obituary in The Times.
The post Pipelines, the Stuff of Canadian Politics: the Canada Letter appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2Lf8FKR via Breaking News
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rabbitcruiser · 4 years
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Sweetland and Ross first presented the Stanley Cup trophy on March 17, 1893 to the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association on behalf of the affiliated Montreal Hockey Club, the champions of the Amateur Hockey Association of Canada (AHAC) 
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