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  2. Nim Campbell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nim_Campbell

    Norman MacDonald "Nim" Campbell (23 September 1929 — 22 September 2012) was a Scottish international rugby union player of the 1950s.. Campbell was born in Tylorstown, Wales, where his Scottish father worked as a schoolteacher.

  3. Jessie Bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessie_Bond

    [53] The Worthing Gazette stated that Bond continued to be much loved in her later years, and people came to see her from all over Britain to pay homage in her old age. [54] The Worthing Herald wrote: "Despite her great age, Miss Bond preserved a quick and active mind, and hated to be fussed over." [55] She died in 1942 at age 89 in Worthing. [42]

  4. John Potter (chemist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Potter_(chemist)

    The claims were only exposed as false after his death when he received an obituary in a local paper The Worthing Herald, [4] as well as in national papers The Express, [6] The Mirror, [7] and The Times, [3] all of which accepted his story.

  5. Bruce Allsopp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Allsopp

    Howard Bruce Allsopp was born in 1912 in Oxford to Heny Allsopp, a historian, poet and vice principal of Ruskin College, and his wife Elizabeth May Allsopp (née Robertson).

  6. M. E. Clifton James - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M._E._Clifton_James

    James, M. E. Clifton I Doubled for Montgomery series in Sydney Morning Herald, 17–19 August 1946: 1: I Doubled for Montgomery 17 August 1946 2: Gibraltar Welcomed a False British Commander 19 August 1946 3: The General Went Home as a Lieutenant 20 August 1946

  7. Douglas Hyde (author) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_Hyde_(author)

    Douglas Arnold Hyde (8 April 1911, Worthing, Sussex – 19 September 1996, Kingston upon Thames) [1] was an English political journalist and writer. Originally a communist and the news editor of the Daily Worker, he resigned in 1948 and converted to Catholicism. After his conversion, he gained an international reputation in the late 1940s and ...

  8. Goring-by-Sea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goring-by-Sea

    Goring-by-Sea, commonly referred to simply as Goring, is a neighbourhood of Worthing and former civil parish, now in Worthing district in West Sussex, England. It lies west of West Worthing, about 2.5 miles (4 km) west of Worthing town centre. Historically in Sussex, in the rape of Arundel, Goring has been part of the borough of Worthing since ...

  9. Worthing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worthing

    The Worthing Herald was founded in 1920; it acquired the Gazette in 1963, but continued to publish the newspapers separately until 1981. Since then, a single newspaper has been published weekly under the Herald name, but it is officially known as the Worthing Herald incorporating the Worthing Gazette. [211]