# |
Notes |
Linked to |
151 |
From: "Andrew Sellon" < andrew.sellon@lineone.net > Subject: RE: Bendall at Cam
Hunt as I will, I can not find Marilyn's query about the name Bendall. I amnot going to allow that from asking her if she has come across the name ofLittlehales associated with Bendall?My gr gr gr grandfather William Sellon had a childhood sweetheart namedSarah Littlehales. He left school in London, (she lived in Westminster,where he was at school), to go up to Cambridge. He did not get far with hisstudies there, having got her pregnant and being forced to give them up onmarriage. He then studied for the church (and ended up in Clerkenwell asperpetual curate, and gained the sobriquet 'Silvertongue Sellon').Sarah Littlehales had a nephew, Bendall Robert Littlehales, Vice-Admiral ofthe Red, 1765 - 1847, who took her grandson, my gr gr grandfather namedWilliam Richard Baker Smith (who later changed his name to Sellon to complywith the terms of a bequest) into the Royal Navy as Midshipman. | LITTLEHALES, Vice Admiral Bendall Robert (I317)
|
152 |
From: "Andrew Sellon" < andrew.sellon@lineone.net > Subject: RE: Bendall at Cam
Hunt as I will, I can not find Marilyn's query about the name Bendall. I amnot going to allow that from asking her if she has come across the name ofLittlehales associated with Bendall?My gr gr gr grandfather William Sellon had a childhood sweetheart namedSarah Littlehales. He left school in London, (she lived in Westminster,where he was at school), to go up to Cambridge. He did not get far with hisstudies there, having got her pregnant and being forced to give them up onmarriage. He then studied for the church (and ended up in Clerkenwell asperpetual curate, and gained the sobriquet 'Silvertongue Sellon').Sarah Littlehales had a nephew, Bendall Robert Littlehales, Vice-Admiral ofthe Red, 1765 - 1847, who took her grandson, my gr gr grandfather namedWilliam Richard Baker Smith (who later changed his name to Sellon to complywith the terms of a bequest) into the Royal Navy as Midshipman.If this has not muddled you, it certainly has me. Basically, Marilyn, I amasking if you have ever come across traces Littlehales, Baker, Smith (!) oreven Sellon in your searches into Bendall. All, apart from Sellon, did haveWest Country connections. | LITTLEHALES, Sarah (I2600)
|
153 |
Full name from Burkes 2002 on-line "Fagge".
Third son of Dr. John Littlehales (1754-1810), physician at Winchester Hospital, of Southgate Street, Winchester, Hampshire. From marriage notice in The Times - see marriage notes and from "Biographical Index", p. 551, in Jane Austen's Letters, ed. Deirdre Le Faye (Oxford Univ. Press via Google Books). | LITTLEHALES, Eldred Harry (I8711)
|
154 |
Grave Ref: 6. G. 6. | LITTLEHALES, Reginald (I39)
|
155 |
Grave: A1801 | LITTLEHALES, Emma (I9006)
|
156 |
Grimsby Fisherman's Chapel Memorial | LITTLEHALES, Charles Henry (I11)
|
157 |
Guessed last digit. | LITTLEHALE, John (I3117)
|
158 |
He dropped the first part of his name and called himself Hale, his nephew John said because he was too lazy to write his full name. | LITTLEHALE, John (I2828)
|
159 |
He was murdered by the Molly Maguires in an attempted robbery. | LITTLEHALES, William Henry (I1338)
|
160 |
He was on board the Steam Trawler “Equinox”, when it was mined and sunk on 25 August 1916, leaving no survivors. | LITTLEHALES, Charles Henry (I11)
|
161 |
Headstone Mason: Nelson Cemetery Ref. No.T.4R.377 | LITTLEHALES, Micheal Gascoyne (I8907)
|
162 |
Hi
The photos of my Dad Ronald Littlehales
He was a semi professional musician playing both Saxophone ???? and Clarinet, the group you see in the second photo are of the City Gent Six, they were a Jazz band that went on to represent Milford Haven in our Twin town in France ????????. He played with several local bands throughout his career, his main job was an Electrician like myself, he later went on to buy a Pub in our local town called the Royal hotel where he worked until his retirement. | LITTLEHALES, Ronald (I9334)
|
163 |
Holy Cross And Saint Giles | Family (F141)
|
164 |
Holy Cross And Saint Giles | Family (F267)
|
165 |
Holy Cross And Saint Giles | Family (F363)
|
166 |
http://contentdm.byu.edu/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/FH22&CISOPTR=8215&REC=7 | Source (S08)
|
167 |
http://www.wvculture.org/vrr/va_view2.aspx?FilmNumber=1983740&ImageNumber=1159 | LITTLEHALES, Ivan Wilmer (I856)
|
168 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/130266156 | LITTLEHALES, Ivan Wilmer (I856)
|
169 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/132907399/melba-j.-littlehales | BAILEY, Melba Jane (I3673)
|
170 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/44719179 For grave picture | LITTLEHALES, Olive Norton (I1291)
|
171 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/44727526 | LITTLEHALES, Henry A (I1206)
|
172 |
I checked partnership deeds of Child & Co in our archive and the 1902 history of the bank The Marygold by Temple Bar by F G H Price (who was also the author of A Handbook of London Bankers, and became a partner in Child & Co following Frederick Littlehales' retirement). These confirm that Frederick Littlehales became a junior partner in Child & Co on 4 March 1875 and retired on 20 June 1887, and that his full name appears to have been Frederick Littlehales (and not Frederick Gascoyne Littlehales).
Until the bank was acquired by Glyn, Mills & Co in 1924 the rule at Child & Co was that (with the exception of the senior partnership) the only people who could become partners in the bank were clerks who had worked their way up through the firm until they became senior clerks, and so Frederick Littlehales would have worked as a clerk before becoming a partner. Unfortunately there are no surviving staff records covering the period in which he might have served as a clerk, and so we cannot tell when he started work with the bank, though many clerks started in their late teens. The bank was legally restricted to a maximum of 6 partners at any time, and each partner was entitled to a share of the profits of the firm, calculated in 1/24th shares in the business - Frederick Littlehales' partnership share was initially 1.5 shares, rising to 2 shares from March 1883 when a new partnership agreement came into effect. | LITTLEHALES, Frederick Gascoyne (I977)
|
173 |
If you were to walk into any store, pharmacy, or theater lobby 100 years ago, you would be see handmade advertising signs everywhere. These were called "show cards" and they were big business for commercial artists. | WHITE, Samuel (I3733)
|
174 |
Illegitimate daughter | MARTYN, Maria Hill (I2597)
|
175 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (P4)
|
176 |
In register as Simeon | LITTLEHALES, Simon (I8834)
|
177 |
Independent Chapel-Nc | LITTLEHALES, Eliza (I2369)
|
178 |
Infant Orphan at birth | SUDLOW, Emma (I3458)
|
179 |
John Crisp Gascoyne Littlehales was awarded the Military Cross with the citation: For conspicuous gallantry in action. At the Lomogol River on 27th November 1940, 2nd Lieutenant Littlehales, although wounded twice and unable to walk, was surrounded and outnumbered by 6 to 1. He fought his patrol until all his men were killed or so seriously wounded they could use their weapons no longer. He was finally taken prisoner. | LITTLEHALES, Major John Crisp MC (I1815)
|
180 |
Lady Elizabeth Baker Daughter of the Duke of Lienster | FITZGERALD, Lady Hon. Elizabeth Mary (I2585)
|
181 |
Likely 1852 | BARTLETT, Virginia Elizabeth Louisa Sarah (I3417)
|
182 |
listed in draft document as Littlehale | LITTLEHALES, Harry Lamont (I1482)
|
183 |
LITTLEHALES, REGINALD. Sergeant (Air Gunner), 1268196.
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve. 625 Squadron, Royal Air Force.
Died 3 November 1943. Aged 33.
Son of Joseph and Annie Littlehales.
Husband of Kathleen Littlehales of Lydden, Dover, Kent.
Buried Reichswald Forest War Cemetery, Kleve, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany.
Grave Ref: 6. G. 6.
Lancaster bomber ED321 CF-V, flown by Flight Sergeant (Pilot), John G. Blackwood
R.A.F. (V.R.) of Glasgow crashed over the target area at D?sseldorf, Germany, killing all
the aircrafts seven crew including Reginald. At 1723 hours on 3 November 1943 the
bomber took off from R.A.F. Kelstern, Lincolnshire, as part of a mixed bomber force of
589 aircraft, comprised of 344 Lancasters, 233 Halifaxes, and 12 Mosquitos. A total of 18
aircraft failed to return from the raid on D?sseldorf, they being 11 Lancasters and 7
Halifaxes. The main weight of the raid fell in the centre and south of the city with
extensive damage both to housing and to industrial premises. 38 Lancaster II?s of Nos. 3
and 5 Groups made the first large-scale test of the G-H blind-bombing device and
attempted to bomb the Mannesmann tubular-steel works on the northern outskirts of
D?sseldorf while the main raid was taking place. Five had to return early and two others
were lost; the equipment in 16 other aircraft failed to function leaving only 15 aircraft to
actually bomb the factory on G-H. The device later became a most useful blind-bombing
device when it was produced in sufficient numbers for a major part of Bomber Command
to be fitted with it. Resulting from this raid Flight Lieutenant William Reid, R.A.F.
(V.R.) of 61 Squadron, R.A.F. was awarded the Victoria Cross, it being amongst the 23
that were awarded to airmen of Bomber Command during the Second World War, many
of which were posthumous awards. Badly wounded and with his Lancaster was badly
damaged on the way to D?sseldorf, by a Focke-Wulf F.W-190, with dead and injured
crew, he pressed on rather than taking the normal course of turning back, William Reid
then bombed the target accurately, and then in a display of incredible flying managed to
get his shattered bullet riddled aircraft back to Norfolk. | LITTLEHALES, Reginald (I39)
|
184 |
Lost in SS Laristan of which he was in command, when that ship foundered during a heavy gale in the
North Atlantic. The German SS Bremen stood by her for three days and ultimately rescued six of the
crew, the terrific weather conditions making it impossible to save the rest. (The Cadet magazine sources are shown YYYY MM Page 1926 04 4) | LITTLEHALES, Captain Frederick (I738)
|
185 |
Marie?? | LITTLEHALES, Maria (I1279)
|
186 |
Married by CG LITTLEHALES. | Family (F501)
|
187 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family (F1471)
|
188 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1)
|
189 |
May be BOWDEN | BODEN, Jane (I8795)
|
190 |
May be named Ethel Littlehales HUDSON | LITTLEHALES, Ethel (I9033)
|
191 |
MILITARY: Private
44065
9th Battalion
King's Own Yorkshire Light Inantry | LITTLEHALES, Albert (I8)
|
192 |
Miners Rest | LITTLEHALES, Ellen Elizabeth (I2482)
|
193 |
Missing presumed killed | LITTLEHALES, Charles Henry (I11)
|
194 |
Monument in Winchester Cathedral
Near to this place are deposited the remains of
John Littlehales, M.D.,
Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians,
and formerly of Pembroke College, Oxford.
His eminent professional talents,
by the blessing of Divine Providence,
were successfully exerted with a generosity so distinguished,
and beneficence to the poor so diffusive and unwearied,
amidst a very extended practice,
that his decease was an event most deeply regretted and lamented.
The principal inhabitants of Winchester and its neighbourhood,
have erected this monument,
as a public record of their affectionate gratitude
to the memory of their friend and benefactor:
but from the Saviour of the world,
whose faith he adorned by a life devoted to Christian benevolence,
he will receive his final reward.
He departed this life the 2nd of January, 1810, aged 57 years | LITTLEHALES, John MD (I586)
|
195 |
Mum always said she was born in Bloxwich | VENABLES, Hannah (I8821)
|
196 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I4)
|
197 |
Name from record of marriage for Eldred Harry Littlehales. | WILDES, Emma (I8708)
|
198 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family (F18)
|
199 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family (F1519)
|
200 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I3672)
|