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  1. Catherine Gladstone / by Mary Drew. / Search the collection. 1 of 253523 objects; Drew, Mary Catherine Gladstone / by Mary Drew. 1919. 22.0 x 3.0 cm (book measurement ...

  2. Catherine Gladstone (née Glynne) (1812-1900), Philanthropist; wife of William Ewart Gladstone. Sitter in 47 portraits. William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898), Prime Minister and writer; Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery. Sitter associated with 321 portraits.

  3. www.williamgladstone.org.uk › catherine-jessyCatherine Jessy Gladstone

    Catherine Jessy Gladstone. (1845–1850) . Catherine Jessy Gladstone was William and Catherine's second daughter. She was born at St. Martin in the Fields, Westminster in 1845. Sadly she died in Belfast, N.Ireland in 1850 at the age of 4. It is said that she died from Meningitis.

  4. Capa comum – 12 agosto 2022. Catherine Glynne was born in 1812, in the same year as Charles Dickens. An earl's daughter she married the son of a self-made merchant, William Ewart Gladstone, who became Queen Victoria's Prime Minister on four occasions. While the Queen and the PM loathed each other, they both loved Catherine, Gladstone's wife.

    • Capa Comum
    • Janet Hilderley
  5. Catherine Gladstone (née Glynne) (1812-1900), Philanthropist; wife of William Ewart Gladstone. Sitter in 47 portraits. William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898), Prime Minister and writer; Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery. Sitter associated with 321 portraits.

  6. During the First World War, the Home became the Catherine Gladstone Relief Hospital, an auxiliary military hospital with 60 beds for wounded and sick servicemen. It was affiliated to the London Hospital, which had become a section of the Bethnal Green Military Hospital. In 1916 the Home celebrated the golden jubilee of its founding in 1866.

  7. 30 de abr. de 2022 · "Catherine Gladstone", wrote Masterman, "was one of those informal geniuses who conduct life, and with complete success, on what the poverty of language compels me to call a method of their own."[2] She was "like a fresh breeze" wherever she went and could, wrote a friend, grasp the subject of a discussion in "a few minutes' airy inattention".[3]