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Mairi and Hedderwick
Mairi Hedderwick, the illustrator and author, lives on Coll and has used the island as the setting for her Katie Morag series of children's books.

Mairi and .
* Mairi Maclean.
A notable 17th-century poetess Mary Macleod ( Mairi Nighean Alasdair Ruaidh ) was said to have been banished here.
Mount Stewart was the home of Lady Mairi Bury ( 1921-2009 ), who was the youngest and only surviving child of the 7th Marquess and his wife Edith, née Chaplin.
Lady Mairi Bury died peacefully on Tuesday 17 November 2009 at the age of 88 in the same bed at Mount Stewart as she had been born in, having lived there all her life.
Lady Mairi Bury is now recognised as having been the world's greatest female philatelist.
Camilla Edith Mairi Elizabeth Jessel ( b. 1940 ) who was married and has issue ; and ( iii ) Hon.
* Lady Mairi Elizabeth Vane-Tempest-Stewart ( 1921 – 2009 ), who married in 1940 ( div.
1958 ) Derek William Charles Keppel, Viscount Bury ( 1911 – 1968 ), eldest son of Walter Keppel, 9th Earl of Albemarle and had issue: ( i ) Lady Elizabeth Mairi Keppel ( b. 1941 ) who married in 1962 ( div.
In recent years, the label has again become active in releasing work by other artists as well, including Jim Bryson, Ivy Mairi, Finlayson / Maize, Lee Harvey Osmond and Huron.
Other performers of the traditional Cape Breton style include Andrea Beaton, Winnie Chafe, Winston ( Scotty ) Fitzgerald, Kimberley Fraser, Carl MacKenzie, Howie MacDonald, Buddy MacMaster, Mairi Rankin.
" Mairi's Wedding " ( aka " Marie's Wedding ", the " Lewis Bridal Song ", or " Mairi Bhan ") is popular in weddings with a Scottish theme.
The garden and estate has been the property of the National Trust for Scotland since it was gifted to the Trust along with a generous endowment for its future upkeep by Osgood's daughter Mairi Sawyer in 1952.

Hedderwick and .
* Mosshouse Point ; Hedderwick Sands ; Belhaven Bay, Tyne Sands, St. Baldred's Cradle, John Muir Country Park
The ships were built by the following companies: Robert Napier & Company, Randolph Elder & Company, Dobbie Hedderwick & Co., Dobie & Company, Mackie & Thomson, Smith & Rodgers, London & Glasgow Engineering and Iron Shipbuilding Co. Ltd., William Beardmore & Company, John Elder & Company, Fairfield Shipbuilding & Eng.
9 of Calendar of the State Papers Relating to Scotland and Mary, Queen of Scots, 1547-1603, Glasgow: Hedderwick, 1915, pp. 356 – 388.
The Luggie and other Poems, with an introduction by R. Monckton Milnes, and a brief memoir by James Hedderwick, was published in 1862 ; and a new and enlarged edition of Gray's Poetical Works, edited by Henry Glassford Bell, appeared in 1874.
His early poems appeared in the Glasgow Citizen, in whose editor, James Hedderwick, he found a friend.
In 1900, Thomas Hedderwick, a Scottish Liberal Party MP, raised the issue in the British House of Commons.
Recalling to the House the contributions of Dadabhai Naoroji and Mancherjee Bhownagree, Indian MPs serving in the House of Commons, Hedderwick mooted the possibility that an autonomous India might one day be represented in an Imperial Parliament.
The former Football Kingz FC General manager Guy Hedderwick was promoted to the role of New Zealand Knights chief executive officer.
The seat reverted to the Conservatives by a wide margin, William Arthur Mount recording a majority of 2, 358 over the new Liberal candidate, Thomas Hedderwick the former MP for Wick Burghs.
Schultz was a stockbroker by trade, working on the Liverpool Exchange for a firm known as Messrs Hedderwick and Schultz.

author and illustrator
* 1872 – Aubrey Beardsley, English illustrator and author ( d. 1898 )
* 1927 – Dick Bruna, Dutch author and illustrator
* 1915 – Tasha Tudor, American author and illustrator ( d. 2008 )
* 1925 – Laurent de Brunhoff, French author and illustrator
* 1923 – Doris Burn, American author and illustrator ( d. 2011 )
Helen Beatrix Potter ( 28 July 186622 December 1943 ) was an English author, illustrator, natural scientist and conservationist best known for her imaginative children ’ s books featuring animals such as those in The Tale of Peter Rabbit which celebrated the British landscape and country life.
Alexander Bunyip, created by children's author and illustrator Michael Salmon, first appeared in print in The Monster That Ate Canberra in 1972, Alexander Bunyip went on to appear in many other books and a live-action television series, Alexander Bunyip's Billabong.
* Cyrus Leroy Baldridge, American artist, illustrator, author, and adventurer
* 1949 – Jan Brett, American author illustrator
From Children of the Forest ( 1910 ) by Swedish author and illustrator Elsa Beskow.
* 1954 – Uri Shulevitz, American author and illustrator
* 1888 – Edward Lear, English artist, illustrator, author, and poet ( b. 1812 )
* 1949 – Chris Van Allsburg, American author and illustrator
* 1944 – Patricia Polacco, American author and illustrator
* 1932 – Natalie Babbitt, American author and illustrator
* 1882 – David Burliuk, Ukrainian author and illustrator ( d. 1967 )
* 1955 – David Kirschner, American illustrator, producer, and author
* 1838 – Walter Goodman, English painter, illustrator, and author ( d. 1912 )
* 1846 – Kate Greenaway, English author and illustrator ( d. 1901 )
* 2006 – Alan Moore ( author ) and David Lloyd ( illustrator ), V for Vendetta graphic novel
* 1962 – Jon Berkeley, Irish author and illustrator
* 1927 – Eric Hill, English author and illustrator
* 1934 – Tomie dePaola, American author and illustrator
As an author, illustrator and medievalist, he helped to establish the modern fantasy genre, and was a direct influence on postwar authors such as J. R. R. Tolkien.
** Walter Goodman, British painter, illustrator and author ( b. 1838 )

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