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Joy was the son of William Bruce Joy, MD, and the brother of sculptor Albert Bruce-Joy, descendants of an old Huguenot family which settled in Antrim in 1612. [2] General Gordon's Last Stand. Joy's portrayal of Gordon's death. He was initially destined for the military and was also an accomplished violin player.
The British soldier Major-General Charles George Gordon, a former Governor-General of Sudan (1876–1879), was re-appointed to that post, with orders to conduct the evacuation. [ 3 ] Gordon's views on Sudan were radically different from Gladstone's: Gordon felt that the Mahdi's rebellion had to be defeated before it gained control of the whole ...
Joy, George William (1904) The work of George W. Joy: With an Autobiographical Sketch, Thirty Rembrandt Photogravures, Sixteen Reproductions in Colours, and Other Illustrations, London: Cassell and Company : Author
George Joy may refer to: George Joy (colonial administrator), British colonial administrator; George W. Joy, Irish painter; George Joye, also Joy, Bible translator
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Object history: Exhibited at the Salon of 1902 of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France.: Inscriptions: Signed "George Joy" in the bottom left-hand corner. ...
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George William Gordon (c. 1820 – 23 October 1865) [1] was a Jamaican businessman, magistrate and politician, one of two representatives to the Assembly from St. Thomas-in-the-East parish. He was a leading critic of the colonial government and the policies of Jamaican Governor Edward Eyre .