Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sue Ryder is a British palliative and bereavement support charity based in the United Kingdom.Formed as The Sue Ryder Foundation in 1953 by World War II Special Operations Executive volunteer Sue Ryder, the organisation provides care and support for people living with terminal illnesses and neurological conditions, as well as individuals who are coping with a bereavement.
Margaret Susan Cheshire, Baroness Ryder of Warsaw, Baroness Cheshire, CMG, OBE (née Ryder; 3 July 1924 – 2 November 2000), commonly known as Sue Ryder, was a British volunteer with Special Operations Executive in the Second World War, and a member of the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry, who afterwards established charitable organisations, notably ...
Holme Hall Roman Catholic chapel, Holme Hall. Holme Hall is a grade II* listed 18th-century country house in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. [1] It was then a Sue Ryder Care Home until its closure in February 2018.
Joyce Grove is a country house built in a Jacobethan style in Nettlebed, Oxfordshire, England.It was formerly owned by Sue Ryder (charity) which, until March 2020 operated its Nettlebed Palliative Care Facility at Joyce Grove at Nettlebed in Henley-On-Thames, Oxfordshire. [1]
The Ryder-Cheshire Mission [39] was set up by Leonard Cheshire and his wife Sue Ryder at the time of their marriage in 1959 and later became the Ryder-Cheshire Foundation which operated until 2010. [40] Other related former charities include Target Tuberculosis, operating in India and certain countries of Africa (2003–2016). [41]
Hickleton Hall is a Grade II* listed [1] Georgian stately home in Hickleton, South Yorkshire, England, about 6 miles (10 km) west of Doncaster.For more than 50 years (until 2012) it was a Sue Ryder Care home.
After a period as a hospital, it is currently used as a Sue Ryder hospice. While parliamentary soldiers were in Peterborough in 1643 during the English Civil War , they ransacked the cathedral . Parliament disposed of Church property to raise money for the army and navy and the parliamentarian Oliver St John bought the lease to the manor of ...
The Hall was formerly a family home between 1717 and 1906, and used by the Army until the 1960s. In 1985 it became a Sue Ryder neurological care centre. The Hall was sold to Manchester business man Colin Shenton in 2020 who is restoring it to its original purpose as a family home. The parkland and wider estate are known as Cuerden Valley Park ...