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Frederick and Wordsworth
Frederick Wordsworth Ward jnr took the surname of his stepfather although by occupation he walked in the shoes of his birth-father.
He became a groom and later a horse-trainer, and died unmarried as Frederick Wordsworth Burrows in 1937.
Constant ), Frederick Jaeger ( Ramble ), John Sharp ( Politic ), Brendan Barry ( Dabble ), Richard Wordsworth ( Squeezum ), and Keith Marsh ( Sotmore ).

Frederick and Ward
Other lay leaders of Plymouth Church would summer with him, including Henry Ward Beecher, the church ’ s pastor ; Frederick Hinrichs, whose descendents still live in Woodstock ; the Holt publishing family ; the Tappans ; and Albert Lythgoe, an Egyptologist renowned for pioneering the use of scientific methods in the unearthing of antiquities.
Frederick Ward is a cattle drover earning money for his wedding when he is accused of cattle theft and sentenced to seven years at Cockatoo Island.
John Gavin directed the movie, and played the lead role of Frederick Ward.
* Potter, Frederick Scarlett, Melcomb Manor: A Family Chronicle, London, Marcus Ward, 1875.
According to Anna Smith in her book " Johannesburg Street Names " ( Juta, 1971 ), Sturdee Avenue in Rosebank, Johannesburg ( South Africa ), is " believed that it commemorates Admiral Sir Frederick Charles Doveton Sturdee ( 1859 1925 ) of World Ward 1 fame.
A militia of Europeans and Asians was raised for the defence of the city and placed under the command of an American, Frederick Townsend Ward, and occupied the country to the west of Shanghai.
Here his contemporaries included Benjamin Jowett, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, John Campbell Shairp, William George Ward and Frederick Temple.
He found his cause supported by the " Ever Victorious Army ", which, having been raised by an American named Frederick Townsend Ward, was placed under the command of Charles George Gordon.
Former editors include Frederick William Ward, Charles Brunsdon Fletcher, Colin Bingham, Max Prisk, John Alexander, Paul McGeough, Alan Revell, Alan Oakley and Peter Fray.
Three employees of the now-defunct Sydney Gazette, Ward Stephens, Frederick Stokes and William McGarvie, founded The Sydney Herald in 1831.
Ward received a fellowship and attended the Juilliard School of Music in New York from 1939 to 1942, where he studied composition with Frederick Jacobi, orchestration with Bernard Wagenaar, and conducting with Albert Stoessel and Edgar Schenkman.
The original headquarters was a greenhouse on East Bank Road lent by Thomas Asline Ward, father of the first club president Frederick Ward, and the adjacent field was used as their first playing ground.
Edward Frederick Ward ( 1907 1987 ), third son of the second Earl, was a Group Captain in the Royal Air Force.
* The Devil Soldier, a biography of 19th-century American mercenary Frederick Townsend Ward ( 1992 )
Frederick Ward was the son of convict Michael Ward (" Indefatigable " 1815 ) and his wife Sophia, and was born in 1833 around the time his parents moved from Wilberforce, New South Wales to nearby Windsor.
On 11 September 1863 Ward and a companion, Frederick Britten, slipped away from their Cockatoo Island workgang and hid for two days before swimming from the north side of the island, almost certainly to Woolwich.
The infamous bushranger Captain Thunderbolt ( Frederick Ward ) is buried in the old Uralla Cemetery ( John Street ).
The National School was founded in 1788 by Frederick Ward and originally located at the southern end of Annesley Road.
His son Sir Thomas William Evans 1st Bt, who was also a politician, sold it in 1879 to Frederick Ward who sold it to W. S. Curgenven who was the first of a number of surgeons to own it.
These disputes with Frederick Knight, a severe car accident Ward later was in, and the fading appeal of disco music halted Ward's career, and she came to be regarded as a one-hit wonder.
* Jan 1894 Nov 1898: Frederick William Ward

Frederick and aka
After leaving the Rank Organisation in the early 1960s, Bogarde abandoned his heart-throb image for more challenging parts, such as barrister Melville Farr in Victim ( 1961 ), directed by Basil Dearden ; decadent valet Hugo Barrett in The Servant ( 1963 ), which garnered him a BAFTA Award, directed by Joseph Losey and written by Harold Pinter ; The Mind Benders ( 1963 ), a film ahead of its times in which Bogarde plays an Oxford professor conducting sensory deprivation experiments at Oxford University ( precursor to Altered States ( 1980 )); the anti-war film King & Country ( 1964 ), playing an army lawyer reluctantly defending deserter Tom Courtenay, directed by Joseph Losey ; a television broadcaster-writer Robert Gold in Darling ( 1965 ), for which Bogarde won a second BAFTA Award, directed by John Schlesinger ; Stephen, a bored Oxford University professor, in Losey's Accident, ( 1967 ) also written by Pinter ; Our Mother's House ( 1967 ), an off-beat film-noir directed by Jack Clayton in which Bogarde plays an n ' er do well father who descends upon " his " seven children on the death of their mother, British entry at the Venice Film Festival ; German industrialist Frederick Bruckmann in Luchino Visconti's La Caduta degli dei, The Damned ( 1969 ) co-starring Ingrid Thulin ; as ex-Nazi, Max Aldorfer, in the chilling and controversial Il Portiere di notte, The Night Porter ( 1974 ), co-starring Charlotte Rampling, directed by Liliana Cavani ; and most notably, as Gustav von Aschenbach in Morte a Venezia, Death in Venice ( 1971 ), also directed by Visconti ; as Claude, the lawyer son of a dying, drunken writer ( John Gielgud ) in the well-received, multi-dimensional French film Providence ( 1977 ), directed by Alain Resnais ; as industrialist Hermann Hermann who descends into madness in Despair ( 1978 ) directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder ; and as Daddy in Bertrand Tavernier's Daddy Nostalgie, ( aka These Foolish Things ) ( 1991 ), co-starring Jane Birkin as his daughter, Bogarde's final film role.
* Frederick Fyvie Bruce ( 12 October 1910 11 September 1990 ) aka F. F.
Frederick S. Mates, aka Frederic Mates, founded in August 1967 the Mates Investment Fund, a high-flying mutual fund during the ' Go-Go ' 60s that later crashed in the bear market of the early 1970s.
* Charles Frederick Lindauer aka Charlie Lindauer

Frederick and Captain
Francis Scott Key was born to Ann Phoebe Penn Dagworthy ( Charlton ) and Captain John Ross Key at the family plantation Terra Rubra in what was Frederick County, Maryland ( now Carroll County, Maryland ).
* Following his surrender to Captain Frederick Maitland of off Rochefort in 1815, Napoleon was taken to Plymouth Sound where he remained on board, 26 July 4 August, while his future was decided.
* February 10 Captain Frederick Marryat, British author ( d. 1848 )
* July 15 Napoleon boards off Rochefort and surrenders to Captain Frederick Lewis Maitland of the Royal Navy.
Captain Frederick W. Light of the Manola reported that both the Canadian and the American weather stations had storm flag signals flying from their weather towers.
Brown County was said to be the place of origin of the White Burley type of tobacco, grown in 1864 by George Webb and Joseph Fore on the farm of Captain Frederick Kautz near Higginsport from seed from Bracken County, Kentucky.
Following the Battle of Washita River in November 1868, Custer was alleged ( by Captain Frederick Benteen, chief of scouts Ben Clark, and Cheyenne oral tradition ) to have unofficially " married " Mo-nah-se-tah, daughter of the Cheyenne chief Little Rock in the winter or early spring of 1868 1869.
Custer divided his forces into three battalions: one led by Major Marcus Reno, one by Captain Frederick Benteen, and one by himself.
Major Marcus Reno's failure to press his attack on the south end of the Lakota / Cheyenne village and his flight to the timber along the river after a single casualty have been cited as a causal factor in the destruction of Custer's battalion, as has Captain Frederick Benteen's allegedly tardy arrival on the field and the failure of the two officers ' combined forces to move toward the relief of Custer.
The cape at Point Hope was renamed by Captain Frederick William Beechey of the Royal Navy, who wrote on August 2, 1826: " I named it Point Hope in compliment to Sir William Johnstone Hope ".
During this time, development bloomed around train and trolley stops, and a number of wealthy families, including those of Captain James Frederick Oyster and Charles I. Corby ( who developed methods that revolutionized the baking industry ), lived or summered in the area.
Personnel who have reported the UFOs include Captain ( then First Lieutenant ) Robert Salas, Colonel Frederick Meiwald, First Lieutenant Robert C. Jamison, and Staff Sergeant Louis D. Kenneweg.
* Captain Frederick F. Henry, United States Army ( Deceased ), Korean War Medal of Honor recipient
Frederick William Charteris ( 1833 1887 ), third son of the ninth Earl, was a Captain in the Royal Navy.
He sent it with a Danish-speaking officer, Captain Sir Frederick Thesiger, under a flag of truce to the Dano-Norwegian regent, Crown Prince Frederik, who had been watching the battle from the ramparts of the Citadel.
Intended by her Dahomeyan captors to be a human sacrifice, she was rescued by Captain Frederick E. Forbes of the Royal Navy, who convinced King Ghezo of Dahomey to give her to Queen Victoria, " She would be a present from the King of the Blacks to the Queen of the Whites ," Forbes wrote later.
Blücher sent in a rude letter of resignation, which Frederick the Great granted in 1773: Der Rittmeister von Blücher kann sich zum Teufel scheren ( Cavalry Captain von Blücher can go to the devil ).
On 26 June 1895, at St. Margaret's Church, Carnarvon married Almina Victoria Maria Alexandra Wombwell, daughter of Marie Wombwell née Boyer, the wife of Captain Frederick Charles Wombwell.
In the opinion of Admiral Brown and of Captain Frederick C. Sherman, commanding the Lexington, Lieutenant O ' Hare's actions may have saved the carrier from serious damage or even loss.
* John Gregson as Captain Frederick " Hookie " Bell, HMS Exeter
Alerted by the commotion, he jumped out of bed and, ignoring the pleas of the arresting officers Captain William Bellingham Swan ( later assistant town Major of Dublin ) and Captain Daniel Frederick Ryan to surrender peacefully, FitzGerald stabbed Swan and mortally wounded Ryan with a dagger in a desperate attempt to escape.
Despite his poor military experience, Pope Leo X named him Gonfalonier and Captain General of the Church ( commander in chief of the Papal Army ), though a clause allowed Frederick to avoid fighting against the Empire, to which Mantua has been always traditional ally.
However Wallis had written to an influential intelligence officer, Group Captain Frederick Winterbotham.
After Weston's 1926 election to President-General, he was succeeded by Frederick Augustus Toote ( 1929 ), Clifford Bourne ( 1930 ), Lionel Antonio Francis ( 1931 1934 ), Henrietta Vinton Davis ( 1934 1940 ), Lionel Antonio Francis ( 1940 1961 ), Captain A L King ( 1961 1981 ) and Milton Kelly, Jr. ( 1981 2007 ).

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