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  2. The Ramblers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ramblers

    The Ramblers' Association, branded simply as the Ramblers, is Great Britain's walking charity. The Ramblers is also a membership organisation with around 100,000 members and a network of volunteers who maintain and protect the path network. The organisation was founded in 1935 and campaigns to keep the British countryside open to all.

  3. Clark and McCullough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clark_and_McCullough

    Clark and McCullough had completed their last series of comedies in 1935, and McCullough sought treatment for severe depression.After he was released from a sanitarium in March 1936, McCullough visited a barber shop where he grabbed a razor, and committed suicide by cutting his throat and wrists.

  4. Edmund Seyfang Taylor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Seyfang_Taylor

    Ramblers Association Vice President David Sharp, who attended the commemoration, outlined the importance of Walker Miles' contribution, saying: [2] With his amazing series of sixpenny fieldpath guides, Walker Miles showed us the importance of our rights of way. In his day they had no legal status and had virtually been forgotten by a generation.

  5. The Rambler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rambler

    The Rambler was written primarily for the newfound, rising middle-class of the 18th century, who sought social fluency within aristocratic social circles. It was especially targeted to the middle-class audience that were increasingly marrying into aristocratic families in order to create socio-economic alliances, but did not possess the social and intellectual tools to integrate into those ...

  6. Tommy Conwell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_Conwell

    Tommy Conwell (Thomas Edward Conwell) (born January 14, 1962) is an American guitarist, songwriter and performer. He is best known as the frontman for the Philadelphia-based band Tommy Conwell and the Young Rumblers.

  7. Tom Stephenson (activist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Stephenson_(activist)

    He was for many years from 1948 the Secretary of the Ramblers' Association. He is credited with having inspired the creation of the Pennine Way, the first of Britain's long-distance footpaths, through an article he wrote for the Daily Herald in 1935, [1] and his subsequent lobbying work with MPs as Ramblers' Association Secretary. He wrote the ...

  8. Ken Tobias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Tobias

    Born and raised in Saint John, New Brunswick, Tobias worked as a draftsman in the early 1960s while also appearing as a musician at local venues in Saint John. He joined a folk group named the Ramblers in 1961, playing guitar, and he later played drums in a rock band called the Badd Cedes.

  9. Charlie Poole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Poole

    Kinney Rorer penned a biography of Charlie Poole, entitled Ramblin' Blues: The Life and Songs of Charlie Poole in 1982. Rorer is a descendant of Poole's fiddler Posey Rorer, and is the banjo player for the old-time music group The New North Carolina Ramblers.