Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He was cremated at Basingstoke Crematorium on 6 October 2006. [3] He is commemorated with his wife, Anita, in Upton Grey Churchyard, Grave 1 E-3. He appeared in episodes of several TV series, including The Persuaders! and Danger Man and was a regular cast member of the Dickie Henderson Show , playing Dickie's friend Jack.
Basingstoke Crematorium; Charlton Park Crematorium, Andover New Forest Crematorium, New Milton The Oaks Crematorium, Havant Park Crematorium, Aldershot; Portchester Crematorium
Planning for the funeral began in 2009. The committee was initially chaired by Malcolm Ross, former Master of the Royal Household.Following the 2010 general election that brought the coalition government into power, Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude was made the new chairman of the committee; the codename given to the plans was changed to True Blue from Iron Bridge to provide it with "a ...
Following the state funeral, Carter's remains will be returned to his native Plains where he lived in his 44 post-White House years and made the base of operations for his diplomatic work and ...
The crematorium was founded by Tommy Marsh in the mid-1970s and was located in the Noble community, north of the city of LaFayette in northwest Georgia. It provided cremation services for a number of funeral homes in Georgia, Alabama , and Tennessee , and made cremation an option for people in communities where it had previously been difficult ...
The Basingstoke Gazette is a local newspaper for Basingstoke, Hampshire, England. The newspaper is published once a week, on a Thursday. A Wednesday edition branded as the Basingstoke Extra, distributed free of charge, ceased to be published in 2017. The newspaper is owned by regional newspaper publisher Newsquest.
John Carpenter Turner [1] (12 November 1867 – 9 February 1952) was Archdeacon of Basingstoke from 1927 until 1947. [2] Turner was educated at Cavendish College, Cambridge; and ordained Deacon in 1890, and Priest in 1891. [3] After a curacy in Ryde he was Vicar of Whitchurch from 1899 to 1910; and Rector of Overton from 1910 to 1934. [4]
The funeral and committal service of the Queen were the first of any British monarch to be broadcast on television to the public. [179] Filming had been prohibited during the state funeral of George VI , although the procession of his coffin was partially televised, [ 180 ] and the service itself had been broadcast on radio.