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  1. Sir George FitzGerald Hill, 2nd Baronet (1 June 1763 – 8 March 1839) was an Irish politician. Family and early life [ edit ] He was the oldest son of Sir Hugh Hill, 1st Baronet of Brook Hall, County Londonderry , [2] who had been a member of the Parliament of Ireland for Londonderry City from 1768 to 1795. [3]

  2. Lady Evelyn Stanhope. George Edward Stanhope Molyneux Herbert, 5th Earl of Carnarvon, DL (26 June 1866 – 5 April 1923), styled Lord Porchester until 1890, was an English peer and aristocrat best known as the financial backer of the search for and excavation of Tutankhamun's tomb in the Valley of the Kings .

  3. Lord George really is anything but a Tragedy when it comes to the fragrance itself. This is a warm, masculine and confident scent. It combines Brandy, Shaving Soap and Tonka Bean to offer a unique sensation of feeling as though you are suddenly in a grand country house with the Lord and Lady.

  4. 28 de jun. de 2007 · Although Lord George Hill died almost 130 years ago he is still a regular conversation topic in his former home, Ballyarr House in Ramelton, Co Donegal, where his portrait is reproduced on a mural ...

  5. Asenath Nicholson. Annals of the Famine in Ireland. 1851. Chapter III (12) | Start of Chapter. My next visit was to the far-famed Gweedore, the estate of Lord George Hill. This gentleman is too well-known to need a description. His works will live when he is where the "wicked cease from troubling." His facts on Gweedore are the most amusing of ...

  6. Lord George Augusta Hill was the godson of a British king and the son of one of the largest landowners in Ireland and one of England’s richest women. He also married two of Jane Austen’s nieces. In 1838 he bought 23,000 acres of Gweedore, west Donegal, and sought to gain a reputation as a kindly landlord, despite doing away with the traditional rundale system of farming.

  7. 5 de jul. de 2023 · Like most of the buildings at the harbour, it was erected by Lord George Augustus Hill. This Anglo Irish landlord gets a mixed reception from locals to this day, from educating the populace to ripping them off with rent hikes. The Clady was the manager’s house of the adjoining store. Seamus’ family once owned the whole block.