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William Hall (born William Vincent Langan; March 1903 – September 1986) was an American actor of Irish-English descent. He enlisted in the United States Army at the age of 14 and served in France during World War I. After being injured, he recovered in Italy where he began studying voice and performed with an Italian theater group.
Charles Henry Hall (priest) (1763–1827), English Anglican churchman and academic; Sir Charles Hall (judge) (1814–1883), English barrister and judge; Charles Francis Hall (1821–1871), American explorer of the Arctic; Charles King Hall (1845–1895), English composer; Charles D. Hall (1888–1970), British-American art director and ...
Sir Charles Hall KCMG PC QC (3 August 1843 – 9 March 1900) [1] was a British lawyer and politician. He was the second son of Sir Charles Hall (1814–1883) and his wife, Sarah née Duval. After attending Harrow School , he studied at Trinity College, Cambridge , [ 2 ] and under James Hannen, Baron Hannen at Lincoln's Inn .
Charles Francis Hall (c. 1821 – November 8, 1871) was an American Arctic explorer, best known for his collection of Inuit testimony regarding the 1845 Franklin Expedition and the suspicious circumstances surrounding his death while leading the American-sponsored Polaris expedition in an attempt to be the first to reach the North Pole.
Hall was born at Malton, Yorkshire, in about 1842. [2] His first wife, Eliza died in her youth leaving Hall a widower. They had one child, a daughter. Hall decided to shift to New Zealand and arrived at Napier in the ship Countess of Kintore in 1875 and entered the building trade upon arrival. Hall started up trade in Napier where he married ...
Charles King Hall was born 17 August 1845, St Pancras, London. [3] His father, Charles Frederick Hall (1815–1874), was a violinist [4] who served as the musical director of the Adelphi Theatre and the music conductor of the Princess's Theatre in London. [5]
William Hall (19 October 1800 – 7 March 1847) was a British publisher who, with Edward Chapman, founded Chapman & Hall, publishers for Charles Dickens (from 1840 until 1844 and again from 1858 until 1870), William Thackeray, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, [1] Anthony Trollope, Eadweard Muybridge and Evelyn Waugh among others.
Hall married in 1794 Anna Maria Bridget Byng (1771–1852), daughter of the Hon. John Byng (later fifth Viscount Torrington). [2] Their son Percy Francis Hall (1801–1884) attended one of the Powerscourt Conferences. He was a pacifist who joined the Plymouth Brethren, and published in 1833 a pamphlet justifying his resignation as a naval officer.