Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Oriel College, Oxford. Corpus Christi College, Oxford. John William Ward, 1st Earl of Dudley, PC, FRS (9 August 1781 – 6 March 1833), known as the Honourable John Ward from 1788 to 1823 and as the 4th Viscount Dudley and Ward from 1823 to 1827, was a British politician and slave holder. He served as Foreign Secretary from 1827 to 1828.

  2. William Humble David Ward, 4th Earl of Dudley was born on 5 January 1920. 1 He was the son of William Humble Eric Ward, 3rd Earl of Dudley and Lady Rosemary Millicent Leveson-Gower. 1 He married, firstly, Stella Carcano y Morra, daughter of Dr. Don Miguel Angel Carcano and Stella de Morra, on 10 January 1946. 1 He and Stella Carcano y Morra ...

  3. When William Humble Eric Ward 3rd Earl of Dudley was born on 30 January 1894, in London, England, his father, William Humble Ward 2nd Earl of Dudley, was 26 and his mother, Rachel Annie Gurney, was 25. He married Rosemary Millicent Sutherland Leveson Gower on 8 March 1919, in London, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 3 ...

  4. William Humble Ward, 2nd Earl of Dudley, GCB, GCMG, GCVO, TD, PC (25 May 1867 – 29 June 1932) was a British aristocrat, politician, and military officer who served as the fourth Governor-General of Australia, in office from 1908 to 1911. He was previously Lord Lieutenant of Ireland from 1902 to 1905, and also a government minister under Lord ...

  5. William Ward, 1st Earl of Dudley (27 March 1817-7 May 1885) of the The Earl of Dudleys Round Oak Works . 1817 Born at Edwardstone Boxford, Suffolk, the son of William Humble Ward (1781-1835) 10th Baron Ward, who had succeeded in the barony of Ward on the death of his second cousin, Foreign Secretary John Ward, 1st Earl of Dudley, in 1833 (the earldom becoming extinct).

  6. William Humble Eric and Rosemary's son, William Humble David Ward (1920 - 2013), known as Billy to his family and friends, inherited the title of Earl of Dudley when the 3rd Earl died in 1969. However, by this time, the estate had been gradually sold off and broken up as the coal, iron and steel industries gradually diminished or became nationalised during the twentieth century.