Hollywood Law refers to a fictitious legal situation which in no way resembles the actual legal system in the place portrayed, but rather is played up for There are 22768 entries in the list. This list was started after I noticed my first MPAA certificate number, which was in the ending credits of the movie Tron. This Month in Exeter - 1915 Many changes in wartime city. Page updated 30 November 2015. This Month 1913 This Month 1914. Back to historic events in Exeter. This final rule amends the Medicaid regulations to define and describe state plan section 1915(i) home and community-based services (HCBS) under the Social Security.
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Levantine testimony 4. His. elder brother Henry Hardy Ongley, had by this time, secured employment. Clerk in the Consulate in Patras at the age.
Acting Consul in Resht before. Uncle, Charles Alison in Tehran.
It is likely that Charles joined his father also in the Consulate, when. But he chose not to pursue a career in the Consular. February 1. 87. 5 he obtained a commission as a Sub Lieutenant. British Army in the First West India Regiment which was at that. Sierra Leon. His career as an Officer was very short lived. Events. concerning his brother, Henry Hardy Ongley, and his father, had resulted.
July of 1. 87. 5, and in Charles’s. As a result, Charles felt obliged to resign. From this point on there appears to be a rift between Charles and his. Caroline (Charlotte’s. Henry’s daughter. Charles enlisted under the name Charles Jonathan Sarell into the 7th.
Hussars as a private, and rose through the ranks to become a regimental. South Africa. On 1. August 1. 88. 1, he married Susan Smith, still using his assumed. Pinetown in Natal, which was the command of the 7th Hussars. They would have. two more children, Irene born in 1. Aristides born in 1. But. the marriage ended in divorce.
Charles lost touch with his children. In 1. 89. 8, he married Emily Harriet Skinner in Barberton, but became engulfed. Boer War, when he was made a prisoner of war, though he had not. He was imprisoned in Capetown, and whilst there, his. It was at this time, that Charles lost his remaining contact with his.
Coast Junction, Natal. He was buried at Stellawood Cemetery.* * *Postscript: Charles’s son Grey Sarell Ongley had a daughter, Doreen, who with her. Grand- daughter Michelle Frost, were intrigued by their lost family history.
The director was one Richard Sarell, the grandson of William. Sarell who was Charles Jonathan Sarell Ongley’s cousin. Contact was. made and through Richard, Michelle made contact with the Sarell’s in. Britain, and with Peter Ongley, Frederick Ongley’s son. MINNA STAFFORD O’BRIEN. Born 1. 2th October 1. Died 1. 94. 4. Minna Augusta Ongley was born on the 1.
October 1. 85. 7 at Chalepa near. Canea (modern day Hania), on the island of Crete. Her father, Henry. Sarell Ongley was the British Consul there, and had been for the previous.
However the following year the family followed Henry to. Patras in the Peloponnese, where he had taken up a new appointment as. British Consul to the Morea.
Minna was the ninth child that her mother, Lucy had born, though she. She, therefore, grew up in a large family in Patras. Just before her fifth birthday, one of elder brothers, Alfred, died. But apart from him the rest of her siblings grew up with. When Minna was thirteen her eldest sister, Charlotte, married Lieutenant. Francis Stafford O’Brien, who was a member of the ship’s company of.
H. M. S. This link between the Ongley’s and the Stafford. O’Brien’s would in due course lead to Minna marrying Lucius Stafford. O’Brien, the youngest brother of Francis.
After her father retired in 1. Cyprus. Minna. was now in her late teens, and in 1. Lucius. With Lucius, they had a large family: Lucy was born in 1. Florence. in 1. 88. Humphrey was born on the 1.
February 1. 88. 9, whilst Minna was. Charlotte at Tixover Hall.
Then Terence was. Lucius Henry Stafford O’Brien was born in 1.
By 1. 90. 5, the family were living at Upper Fahan in Donegal, close to. Londonderry. These were troubled times for Ireland and the issue of. Home Rule and the fight for the Union was starting. Minna’s sister Evelyn. Arms and the Woman” her own experience.
Ulster in these years, and her knowledge is gained only through her. To what extent Minna and Lucius were involved is.
Eve recorded the arms running to the loyalist. The organisation had been extraordinarily good, and up to the.
Then the word went round, and in a trice every car and. Larne; the arms and ammunition. North of Ireland which was in the occupation of. The system was extraordinarily efficient, and I well remember. In 1. 91. 4 Lucius the youngest of her children died, and then in 1. Minna’s husband, Lucius died too. Minna’s sister Evelyn was involved with Le Comite Britannique of the.
French Red Cross and was providing a canteen for the French Army. Minna. joined her sister’s enterprise and was involved with this canteen at. Revigny, throughout the war. In 1. 91. 8, Minna received the sad news that so many had received over. Her eldest son, Captain Humphrey Donatus Stafford.
O’Brien, M. C. He. Battalion of the Northamptonshire Regiment.
Royal Air Force. He was. Mesopotamia fighting against the Ottoman Empire. After the war Minna returned to Donegal. Her eldest sister Charlotte. April 1. 91. 9. Minna herself died in 1. FREDERICK OLIVER JONES ONGLEY.
Born 1. 6th November 1. Died 1. 93. 6. Frederick Oliver Jones Ongley was born on the 1.
November 1. 86. 2 at. Patras, the twelfth child of Lucy and Henry Sarell Ongley. Henry Sarell. Ongley was the British Consul to the Morea and resided at Patras in. Peloponnese. After his father retired in 1. Frederick was briefly educated as. Royal Naval Cadet, no doubt in part because of the influence of his. Francis Stafford O’Brien.
But in 1. 87. 9 he became a clerk. Cyprus High Court of Justice and the Commissioners Office. Other. members of Frederick’s family were also living in Cyprus at this time. His career progressed as he became a chief secretary in 1. At the. same time his Turkish was such that he passed the higher standard Turkish. High Commissioner in 1. In 1. 89. 0 Frederick became the accountant to the Imperial Bank of Persia.
Chief Clerk to the Customs. In 1. 89. 2, Frederick translated the Ottoman Land Code and became an assistant. Director of Surveys and Principle Foreign Officer. In 1. 89. 3 Frederick became the Agricultural Commissioner and then in 1. Kyrenia. He had. also became the agricultural assistant to the local commandant at Nicosia. In 1. 89. 9 Frederick became the Agricultural Regulator General and on 1.
June 1. 91. 0 he became the Registrar General for the whole of Cyprus. Frederick was attached to the Balfour Commission on the Jewish Homeland.
Director of land registries in Palestine from the 2. January 1. 92. 1. During time Frederick married Ethel May Bennett the daughter of Walter.
Luisa Radford, who had previously been married to Noel Bennett. Died 1. 94. 4. Evelyn Helen Victoria Ongley was the youngest child of Henry Sarell.
Ongley and his wife Lucy. She was born in Patras, where her father was. Consul. Having spent her childhood in Patras, the family moved, after her father’s. Cyprus. Evelyn was living at Limasol with her family when she married John Chislett.
Culling, a surgeon in the British Army, who was posted to Cyprus and. Polymedia. Evelyn was only nineteen and therefore a minor. The wedding took.
H. M. S. Alexandria, and was conducted by the Naval Chaplain. Pidcock on the 5th October 1.
In the following year, Evie gave birth to their only child, a boy who. Evelyn Claude Culling. The Culling family continued to live in Cyprus, until 1. John. was posted to India, and then the family moved there.
In India, Evie met Captain John Sanctuary Nicholson, and started an. Her husband found out in 1. Evie left India and returned to England. The. couple had separated formally.
However when John Culling discovered that Captain Nicholson had visited. Evie in England, he did sue for divorce and was granted this in February.
He was also granted costs, and custody of their son. Evie never remarried, and Captain Nicholson ceased to play a part in. Over the next eighteen years, Evie would spend time with her sisters. Europe. She was a passive sympathiser. Suffragettes, and a close friend of hers was more active, but. Evie herself, did not get involved.
Evie also became actively involved with the theatrical world, during. In October and November of 1. Evie appeared at the Kingsway Theatre in a production of “Company. George” by Warren Bell, playing the part of Mary P. The theatre critic. The Times of the 1. October, whilst declaring the play to be a.
The play was well received”. The situation in Ireland was also of great concern to her, as her sister.
Minna, known as Darnie, was living with her husband Lucius Stafford. O’Brien in Donegal, at Fahan, which is close to Londonderry.
At the outbreak of the 1. Evie joined the Women’s Emergency. Corps in London and served on eleven committees, before she realised. Working with the. French Red Cross, it became apparent that what was needed by the French.
Army, were canteens. In April 1. 91. 5, with money raised from amongst her friends and also with.
Evelyn Claude Culling, Evie was able to take. France. Initially it was some way back from the lines. In December 1. 91. Evie and her contingent handed over their canteen. French and returned to London with the view to collecting funds.
France, and for it to be closer to the. Front Line. After some delays, during which time Evie and her colleagues helped.
Canadian Hospital at Folkestone, they returned to France. This was an important distribution centre for troops going. Front, and especially to Verdun. It was at Revigny that Evie and her colleagues, who included her sister. Minna Stafford O’Brien, spent most of the war. Even when under severe. September and October of 1.
The French recognised the role that Evie had played and honoured her. Croix de Guerre, in 1. The letter from Marshall Petain to. Eve reads as follows: March 9th 1. Dear Madam - “I have great pleasure in informing you that Marechal Petain, Commander- in- Chief. Armies of the East, has, on my proposal, conferred upon you. February 2. 7th 1.
Guerre with the following inscription: “Mistress Culling, of the British Committee of the French Red Cross. Directress of Railway Cantees, has in the course of the campaign, unceasingly. Has carried. on her beneficent mission under violent and repeated bombardments, in. Revigny, on September 5th, and 6th, and October the 4th.
Signed ) Petain.”Evie was presented with the decoration by General Gouraud in front of. After the 1. 91. 4- 1. Evie found herself in a state of limbo, until.