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Sir Bobby Charlton CBE, 86, English footballer (Manchester United, national team) and manager (Preston North End), world champion . [267] Carroll Coates, 94, British-American songwriter, composer and lyricist. [268] Bill Gates, 79, English footballer (Middlesbrough). [269] 22 October – Dave Courtney, 64, English self-proclaimed gangster.
The Collegiate Church of St Mary is a Church of England parish church in Warwick, Warwickshire, England. It is in the centre of the town just east of the market place. It is Grade I listed, and a member of the Major Churches Network. The church has the status of collegiate church as it had a college of secular canons. In governance and ...
Contents 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 ← September October November → The following is a list of notable ...
Warwickshire Fire and Rescue Service: W: 2 November 2007: The 2007 Warwickshire warehouse fire; A fire broke out at a vegetable packing warehouse near to Atherstone-on-Stour in Warwickshire in November 2007. Averis and two colleagues, Ashley Stephens and Darren Yates-Bradley, were not recovered for four days afterwards due to the instability of ...
Shirley Spencer Griffiths (11 July 1930 - 3 February 2015) was a Barbadian former cricketer who played first-class cricket in 27 matches for Warwickshire between 1956 and 1958. [1] [2] He was born in Christ Church, Barbados. Griffiths was a right-handed tail-end batsman and a right-arm fast bowler.
Charles Walton was born 12 May 1870 [3] to Charles and Emma Walton. [4] [5] An agricultural worker, he had lived in Lower Quinton all his life. [6]He was a widower who shared a small cottage, 15 Lower Quinton, with his 33-year-old niece Edith Isabel Walton, whom he had adopted thirty years previously upon the death of her mother. [7]
Robin Welch (23 July 1936 – 5 December 2019) was a studio potter.. Robin Welch was born in Nuneaton, Warwickshire.In 1953, he studied art at Penzance School of Art in Cornwall, and in 1956 he studied at Central Saint Martins, London. [1]
It commemorates the service of the British 29th Division during the First World War. The memorial became a Grade II listed building in 1987, upgraded to Grade II* in 2015, and it is described by Historic England as "probably the most significant single memorial in Britain associated with the Gallipoli campaign ".