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Nine books, including First Son: George W. Bush & The Bush Family Dynasty; City on Fire; The Most Dangerous Man in America. Timothy L. O'Brien (M.A., Journalism) – author and journalist; edits and oversees the Sunday Business section of The New York Times; Rita Omokha (M.S., Journalism) – journalist and author
Strickland married Margaret Alford, eldest of the three daughters and co-heiresses of Sir William Alford of Meaux Abbey and Bilton, Yorkshire and his first wife Elizabeth Rookes, and had issue, besides his eldest son Sir Thomas Strickland, another son Walter Strickland, and two daughters, Dorothy, who married Wiliam Grimstone, and Theresa, who married as his second wife John Stafford-Howard ...
Thomas Strickland (died 1612), represented Westmoreland in Parliament in 1601 and 1604; Sir Thomas Strickland (cavalier) (1621–1694), English politician and soldier; Sir Thomas Strickland, 2nd Baronet (c. 1639–1684), English politician; Thomas John Francis Strickland (c. 1682–1740), English Roman Catholic bishop of Namur and doctor of the ...
Detail from Thomas Greg and family by Strickland Lowry c 1762, lighter version: You cannot overwrite this file. File usage. The following page uses this file:
Alfred Paul Ries (November 14, 1926 – October 7, 2022) was an American marketing professional and author. He was the cofounder and chairman of the Atlanta-based consulting firm Ries & Ries with his partner and daughter, Laura Ries. Along with Jack Trout, Ries is credited with resurrecting the idea of "positioning" in the field of marketing. [2]
For his gallantry, Thomas Strickland was made knight banneret by King Charles I in person, on the field at Edgehill, 23 October 1642. [4] [5] After the Restoration of Charles II, Sir Thomas was Member of Parliament for the county of Westmorland in the Cavalier Parliament of 1661 until 1676 when he was expelled as a Popish recusant.
Strickland in return denounced the Pretender's bigotry. Strickland was made bishop of Namur in 1727. He resided at Rome for some years as an agent of the English government, and was employed by the Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI , who had high personal regard for him, sent him in 1734 on a mission to England in connection with a vain attempt to ...
Thomas' son Walter Strickland (described in 1452 as an 'esquire') was an indentured retainer of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, and his 1452 indenture survives. He contracts to support the Earl of Salisbury with "bowmen horsed and harnessed, 69; billmen horsed and harnessed, 74; bowmen without horses, 71; billmen without horses, 76 ...