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The Banbury Guardian was owned and edited by three generations of the same family for its first 109 years of publication. [2] In 1822, William Potts moved from Daventry to Banbury where he traded as a printer and bookseller. [3] Potts supported the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, and on 5 April 1838 he launched The Guardian, or Monthly Poor Law ...
Born at Banbury in Oxfordshire, Emily Morgan was the second of three daughters of an agricultural consultant and grew up in the village of Little Compton.Her younger sister is Polly Morgan, taxidermist / artist.
Fiennes is the second son of Nathaniel Fiennes, 21st Baron Saye and Sele (1920−2024), [3] who changed the family's surname from Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes to Fiennes by deed poll in 1965, [1] [4] and Mariette Helena Salisbury-Jones (born 1935) and a grandson of Sir Guy Salisbury-Jones. [1]
Roger Darvell (10 February 1931 – 21 October 2014) was an English professional footballer. He played the majority of his career playing at centre-half. [1]Darvell started his career at Charlton Athletic, where he failed to make a competitive appearance, before moving to Gillingham in 1957.
Between 1958 and 1996, Maxwell-Hyslop was on the council of the British School of Archaeology in Iraq, presiding it between 2004 and 2007.She died at the Horton Hospital in Banbury on 9 May 2011 and was buried at the church of St Michael and All Angels in Great Tew.
Harry Dunn was a 19-year-old British man who died following a road traffic collision on 27 August 2019. He was riding his motorcycle near Croughton, Northamptonshire, near the exit to RAF Croughton, when a car travelling in the opposite direction and on the wrong side of the road collided with him.
The Horton General Hospital in Banbury, during 2010.. Benjamin Geen is a British repeat murderer and former nurse who was convicted of killing two of his own patients and committing grievous bodily harm against 15 others while working at Horton General Hospital in Banbury, Oxfordshire in 2003 and 2004.
Brocklebank-Fowler was born in Banbury on 13 January 1934, as the second son of the solicitor Sidney Brocklebank-Fowler and his wife Iris Beechey. [2] He attended primary school on the west coast of Scotland during the Second World War, where his father served in the Royal Air Force, and the family lived at Culzean Castle.