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Hamill married her third husband, John MacColl, in 2009. [17] Her second autobiography A Skating Life: My Story, was published in 2007. For much of her adult life, Hamill has experienced chronic depression, which is controlled through medication and therapy. Her daughter also suffers from the condition. [18]
General Sir John Chalmers McColl, KCB, CBE, DSO, KStJ (born 17 April 1952) is a retired senior British Army officer and a past Lieutenant Governor of Jersey. McColl previously served as Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe from 2007 to 2011.
John McColl may refer to: John McColl (British Army officer) (born 1952), British Army officer and Lieutenant Governor of Jersey John McColl (politician) (1875–1933), politician and member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
John MacColl, Bonawe [1] - - 1882 Angus MacDonald, Piper to MacDonell of South Morar [1] - - 1883 Angus MacRae, Piper to Mr H.E.Wood, Raasay [1] - - 1884 John MacDougall Gillies, Aberdeen [1] - - 1885 Pipe Major John Cameron, 2nd Queens Own Cameron Highlanders [1] - - 1886 Pipe Major Robert Meldrum, 2nd Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders [1 ...
Edward MacColl, actually Albert Edward MacColl, was born on 8 July 1882 in Dumbarton, Dunbartonshire. His mother was English and his father was John MacColl, originally from Kilmelford in Argyll, Scotland. John MacColl died while Edward was still a child, and so the family moved in with his mother's parents.
MacColl discovered Bragg in 1983 when she went to see one of his live performances. [10] One of the songs Bragg played was "A New England", which MacColl immediately identified as having hit potential. MacColl told Smash Hits in 1985, "I always
"Don't Come the Cowboy with Me Sonny Jim!" is a song by British singer and songwriter Kirsty MacColl, released on 12 March 1990 as the fourth and final single from her second studio album, Kite. It was written by MacColl and produced by Steve Lillywhite. [2] The song reached No. 82 in the UK and remained in the charts for four weeks. [3]
Composer Ruth Crawford Seeger, Peggy Seeger's mother. Seeger's father was Charles Seeger (1886–1979), a folklorist and musicologist; her mother was Seeger's second wife, Ruth Porter Crawford (1901–1953), a modernist composer who was the first woman to receive a Guggenheim Fellowship.