Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He died in 1955. Their son Colin Lucas (1906-1984) was an architect and a pioneer of reinforced concrete construction. [19] He married the chef Dione Lucas (Wilson) in 1945. Colin Lucas built Noah's Boathouse in Cookham for his parents. [20] Mary Lucas established a music room there, where musical and philosophical gatherings were held.
Mary Lucas, Countess of Kent and Baroness Lucas, passed away on 1 November 1702 and was succeeded in the barony by her eldest son Henry Grey, who in 19 August 1702 also succeeded his father as 12th Earl of Kent and was created Duke of Kent on 28 April 1710. Mary and her husband was buried at Flitton. [1] [6] [7]
Mary Frances Lucas Keene FRCS (15 August 1885 – 9 May 1977) was professor of anatomy at the London School of Medicine for Women, the first woman professor of anatomy in the United Kingdom, first woman president of the Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland, and a president of the Medical Women's Federation.
Mary Lucas, older sister of Margaret Cavendish. Cavendish's father, Thomas Lucas, was exiled after a duel that led to the death of "one Mr. Brooks", but pardoned by King James. He returned to England in 1603. [12] As the youngest of eight, Cavendish recorded spending a lot of time with her siblings.
(rel. name: Mary Alfred) 28 October 1828 Remich, Luxembourg 18 December 1899 Rochester, Minnesota: Founder, Sisters of Saint Francis of Rochester and the Sisters of Saint Francis of Mary Immaculate Winona–Rochester: Heroic Virtues 1900 Margaret Dowling (rel. name: Mary Dominic) 1853 Ballyconra, County Kilkenny, Ireland 14 July 1900 Sparkill ...
I am 35 years old—the oldest millennial, the first millennial—and for a decade now, I’ve been waiting for adulthood to kick in. My rent consumes nearly half my income, I haven’t had a steady job since Pluto was a planet and my savings are dwindling faster than the ice caps the baby boomers melted.
Marie Seymour Lucas (born Marie Elizabeth Cornelissen; 23 April 1850 – 25 November 1921) [1] was a French-born English painter. She studied in London, where she married painter John Seymour Lucas. She lived in England for the rest of her life. On the Threshold. Daughter of Louis Dieudonné Cornelissen and Marianne, née Bath, she was born in ...
Tea with Mussolini (Italian: Un tè con Mussolini) is a 1999 semi-autobiographical comedy-drama war film directed by Franco Zeffirelli, [2] scripted by John Mortimer, telling the story of a young Italian boy's upbringing by a circle of British and American women before and during the Second World War.