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Trevelyan and Hall
They looked upon Wallington Hall, the Trevelyan family estate in Northumberland as their real home.
Lord Trevelyan arranged the grant from the Sir James Knott Trust that provided funding for the Sir James Knott Hall.
Pencaitland Community Council meets 10 times throughout the year, typically on the last Wednesday of the month at the Trevelyan Hall in Wester Pencaitland.

Trevelyan and was
Trevelyan was at least in part attracted to the period by an almost unconscious desire to take up the story where Macaulay's History Of England had broken off.
Admiral Bedford Clapperton Trevelyan Pim was born here in 1826.
Led by Chamberlain and Sir George Trevelyan, the Round Table Conference was an attempt to see if reunion of the Liberal party was possible.
" To Trevelyan, Marlborough's behaviour during the 1688 revolution was a sign of his ' devotion to the liberties of England and the Protestant religion '.
He was G. M. Trevelyan Lecturer at Cambridge University for 1966-67, and also lectured for six weeks at the State University of New York.
This, bringing the History down to the death of William III, was prepared for publication by his sister, Lady Trevelyan, after his death.
His great-nephew was the Cambridge historian G. M. Trevelyan.
This is revealed to be Alec Trevelyan — his execution by Ourumov in the Arkhangelsk facility was faked.
The movie was directed by George Foster Platt and written by Francis Trevelyan Miller.
Spencer, assisted by George Trevelyan, his new secretary, was now faced with the difficult task of pacifying Ireland.
George Macaulay Trevelyan, OM, CBE, FRS, FBA ( 16 February 1876 – 21 July 1962 ), was a British historian.
Trevelyan was the third son of Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet, and great-nephew of Thomas Babington Macaulay, whose staunch liberal Whig principles he espoused in accessible works of literate narrative avoiding a consciously dispassionate analysis, that became old-fashioned during his long and productive career.
Trevelyan was born into late Victorian Britain in Welcombe, Stratford-on-Avon, the large house and estate owned by his maternal grandfather, Robert Needham Philips, a wealthy Lancashire merchant and the Liberal Member of Parliament ( MP ) for Bury.
After attending Harrow, where he specialised in history, Trevelyan studied at Trinity, where he was a member of the secret society, the Cambridge Apostles and founder of the still existing Lake Hunt, a hare and hounds chase where both hounds and hares are human.
Trevelyan was the first president of the Youth Hostels Association and the YHA headquarters are called Trevelyan House in his honour.
Trevelyan was a prolific author:
The quote was, as Trevelyan puts it, " directed in a kindly spirit at the reforming zeal of a group of junior Fellows ".
His mother was Urith Monica Trevelyan, who had training in the Fröbel teaching method.
When H. A. L. Fisher in 1928 gave the Raleigh Lecture on The Whig Historians, from Sir James Mackintosh to Sir George Trevelyan he implied that " Whig historian " was adequately taken as a political rather than a progressive or teleological label ; this put the concept into play.
He was afterwards legal secretary to the board ; and after acting as one of the secretaries to the Great Exhibition of 1851, co-operated with Sir Charles Trevelyan in framing the Northcote-Trevelyan Report which revolutionized the conditions of appointment to the Civil Service.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel and his family lived in Weston, at Swiss Villa ( towards the north end of Trevelyan road, see map 1901, Weston-super-Mare ), while he was supervising the construction of the Bristol and Exeter Railway in the area.
Barrie and was the inspiration for Nana in the book Peter Pan Others visiting included D. H. Lawrence, Lady Ottoline Morrell, Compton Mackenzie, Bertrand Russell, the historian G. M. Trevelyan, interior decorator Dora Carrington, Lytton Strachey.

Trevelyan and by
Trevelyan centers too exclusively on Bright, is insufficiently appreciative of the views of Bright's opponents and critics, and makes light of the genuine difficulties faced by Peel.
Trevelyan estimates Villeroi ’ s casualties at 13, 000, but adds, ‘ his losses by desertion may have doubled that number ’.
* The Trevelyan family of Cornwall takes its coat of arms from a local legend, in which a man named Trevelyan escaped the innundation by riding a white horse.
During the mission, Trevelyan is apparently killed by Colonel Arkady Ourumov, but Bond escapes by commandeering an aeroplane.
Bond and Natalya escape from Trevelyan, but are arrested by the Russian police and taken to the military archives for interrogation.
* Trinity College An Historical Sketch by G. M. Trevelyan ( 1943 )
They were claimed by the late Earl's third cousin Frederick Joseph Trevelyan Perceval, who lived in Canada.
During the opening, a serenade in three movements composed by Sir Malcolm Arnold, whose daughter was in the first intake of students, called " The Trevelyan Suite " was played.
Approximately 320 fully catered students can be housed in the building, and around 600 are members of the college, making Trevelyan the third smallest of Durham's seventeen colleges, and the smallest of those maintained by the university council.
The artists Julian Trevelyan and Mary Fedden OBE ( his second wife ), some of whose work is owned by the college.
Trevelyan has several scholarships and prizes that are awards to members of the college, some founded by the Trevelyan Trust, others from private donors.
At Cambridge began to get interested in historical scholarship, attending lectures by amongst others G. M. Trevelyan and Helen Maude Cam.
The famed progenitor of Bedlington was a dog named " Old Flint ", whelped in 1782 and owned by " Squire Trevelyan.
* Rights of Way: a guide to law and practice 4th Edition-Paul Clayden and John Trevelyan ( 2007 )-published by The Ramblers ' Association-ISBN 13: 978-1-901184-99-0

Trevelyan and Mrs
* The Robert Calverley Trevelyan fonds at the Victoria University Library at the University of Toronto consists of twelve letters written to Mrs. Rosebery concerning writing, travel, friends, social activities and other matters.

Trevelyan and at
Thus Trevelyan repeats the story which pictured Victor Emmanuel as refusing to abandon the famous Statuto at the insistence of General Radetzky.
Published in 1923, it did not gain the popular acclaim of the Garibaldi volumes, probably because Trevelyan felt less at home with Manin, the bourgeois lawyer, than with Garibaldi, the filibuster.
In 1924 Trevelyan traveled to the United States, where he delivered the Lowell lectures at Harvard University.
In four opening chapters reminiscent of Macaulay's famous third chapter, Trevelyan surveys the state of England at the opening of the eighteenth century.
Once the scene is set, Trevelyan skilfully builds up the tense story until it reaches its climax in the dramatic victory of Marlborough and Eugene of Savoy at Blenheim.
G. M. Trevelyan hails 1832 as the watershed moment at which "' the sovereignty of the people ' had been established in fact, if not in law.
These traits may have been exaggerated for the purposes of party faction but, notes Trevelyan, nearly all other statesmen of the day were engaged in founding families and amassing estates at the public expense ; Marlborough only differed in that he gave the public much more value for their money.
* The Elizabethans and America: The Trevelyan Lectures at Cambridge, 1958, London, Macmillan, 1959
He then follows the fleeing Trevelyan through a series of flooded caverns, eventually arriving at the antenna of the control centre's radio telescope.
According to British historian George Otto Trevelyan, the battle " exercised a permanent and most potent influence " especially on Howe's behaviour, and that Howe's military skills thereafter " were apt to fail him at the very moment when they were especially wanted.
A century later, British historian Sir George Otto Trevelyan would write in a study of the American Revolution, when talking about the impact of the victories at Trenton and Princeton, that " It may be doubted whether so small a number of men ever employed so short a space of time with greater and more lasting effects upon the history of the world.
Trevelyan lectured at Cambridge until 1903 at which point he left academic life.
Trevelyan College at Durham University is named after him.
She then studied at Trevelyan College, Durham University, reading sociology and anthropology.
That same year he wrote his Horace at the University of Athens, a topical drama in verse, parts of which are said to have offended William Whewell and lost Trevelyan a fellowship.
Other people at the opening include the Chancellor, the Vice-Chancellor, two Pro-Vice-Chancellors, the Bishops of Durham and Ripon ( whose wife, Mary Moorman was a relative of Trevelyan and also present ) and the Mayor and Mayoress of Durham.
The Trevelyan Trust is a charitable fund aimed at providing prizes and bursaries for Trevelyan students.

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