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  1. View the profiles of people named John Salmond. Join Facebook to connect with John Salmond and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to...

  2. By John A. Salmond. Of the wave of labor strikes that swept through the South in 1929, the one at the Loray Mill in Gastonia, North Carolina, is perhaps the best remembered. In Gastonia 1929 John Salmond provides the first detailed account of the complex events surrounding the strike at the largest textile mill in the Southeast.

  3. Since the first edition in 1907, this book rapidly attained, and has maintained, its position as a classic exposition of the law of tort. Indeed, Sir John Salmond contributed much to the development of tort law as a dis- tinct body of rules, the coherence of which depended upon certain demonstrable legal principles.

  4. John Salmond, originally from Montrose, and his wife, Mary, emigrated to Otago district, New Zealand, in 1849. They were probably encouraged to go by reports published in the local press and the 'Otago journal'. The Salmonds lived in Dunedin for a year. In 1851 they settled in the Tokomairiro area – present-day Milton – about 35 miles south ...

  5. Sir John Salmond died in Wellington on 19 September 1924. Anne Salmond had been hospitalised with a mental illness about 1918 or 1919. Following her recovery, she returned to England, where she died in Bournemouth on 22 March 1941. A photograph of Salmond taken in his maturity shows him as benign and composed, with a hint of humour in the eyes.

  6. Sir John William Salmond (1862–1924) Sir John William Salmond (1862-1924), professor of law and judge, was born on 3 December 1862 at North Shields, Northumberland, England, eldest son of William Salmond, Presbyterian minister, and his wife Jane Paxton, née Young. When in 1876 his father was appointed professor at the Theological Hall, Otago ...

  7. John Salmond. John Salmond, 1925. Sir John Maitland Salmond GCB, CMG, CVO, DSO & Bar (* 17. Juli 1881 in London; † 16. April 1968 in Eastbourne, East Sussex) war ein britischer Offizier, der in der Zwischenkriegszeit zum Marshal of the Royal Air Force und Chief of the Air Staff aufstieg.