Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Robert Bamford attended Sherborne School as a day boy from May 1897 to April 1900. [7] During the First World War he served for one year as private in The London Regiment, 25th (County of London) Cyclist Battalion, and then as a lieutenant with the Army Service Corps (RASC), Mechanical Transport. [8] [9] Bamford, historically, is a Lancashire ...
Aston Martin was founded in 1913 by Lionel Martin and Robert Bamford. [23] The two had joined forces as Bamford & Martin the previous year to sell cars made by Singer from premises in Callow Street, London where they also serviced GWK and Calthorpe vehicles.
Robert Bamford one of the two founders of Aston Martin was born in 1883 in Lamarsh. References External links. Media related to Lamarsh at Wikimedia ...
Edward Bamford was born on 28 May 1887 to the Rev. Robert Bamford and Blanch Edith Bamford (née Porter). The Rev. Robert Bamford served as curate of Lamarsh, Essex (1882–1885) and curate of Holy Trinity, Lambeth (1885–1886).
James Bamford (born September 15, 1946) is an American author, journalist and documentary producer noted for his writing about United States intelligence agencies, especially the National Security Agency (NSA). [1]
Joyce Bamford-Addo (born 1937), Ghanaian lawyer and politician; Maria Bamford (born 1970), American comedian and actress; Mark Bamford (film director), American writer and director; Patrick Bamford (born 1993), English footballer; Robert Bamford (1883–1942), founder of Aston Martin; Samuel Bamford (1788–1872), English radical reformer and ...
Joseph Bamford was born into a recusant Catholic family in Uttoxeter, Staffordshire, which owned Bamfords Ltd, an agricultural engineering business. [2]His great-grandfather Henry Bamford [3] was born in Yoxall and had built up his own ironmongers business, which by 1881 employed 50 men, 10 boys and 3 women.
At university his tandem partner in 1901 was Henry Curtis-Bennett, where they tried to set records in September 1901. [3] He rode with the BRC in 1902. On Wednesday 27 August he left Land's End at 7.06am and rode to London, getting to Hyde Park Corner at 5.22am, completing the immense journey in 22 hours and 16 minutes, much faster than the previous record of 25 hours and 25 minutes.