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Wellington 5 November 1944 One of four firefighters overcome by carbon monoxide while fighting an industrial fire, and died in hospital four days later [6] Fireman Eric Bright Auckland 15 November 1943 Trapped in a ship when he could not find his exit route after the fire flared up [6] Fireman William Molloy Bluff 25 October 1938
Wellington Provincial Memorial in 2025. The cemetery contains separate World War I and World War II services sections. Buried here are 268 Commonwealth service personnel of World War I [3] – including most deaths from the first New Zealand Expeditionary Force Reinforcement Camp and others at Trentham, and the Upper Hutt Remount Depot [4] – and 123 of the World War II, besides a Norwegian ...
City of Wellington: 1843 1884: 14 March 1905 61/62 Francis Fisher (1905 City of Wellington by-election) Richard Seddon [a] [b] Westland: 22 June 1845 1879: 10 June 1906 60 Heart attack Tom Seddon (1906 Westland by-election) Matthew Kirkbride [7] Manukau: 13 August 1848 1902: 4 November 1906 58 Frederic Lang (1906 Manukau by-election) Edward ...
He was born in Ware Town, Mass., and lived in the Tri-Cities for 54 years. He was a retired pediatrician in the Tri-Cities area. Mueller’s Tri-Cities Funeral Home, Kennewick, is in charge of ...
Death notices are provided to The News Tribune once per month by the Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department. Here are the deaths for January 2023. Abraham, William Edward, 92, Jan. 1, Puyallup
John Barlow and Eugene Thomas were both members of Wellington's Wellesley Club, drank together occasionally and had known each other for years. [9] In the 1980s, Barlow had invested $85,000 in the Thomas' superannuation fund and in 1992, borrowed $70,000 against it. At the time of the murders, the Thomases owed Barlow about $10,000. [10]
Vicki A. Anderson. Vicki Ann Anderson, 72, of Pasco, died March 14 in Pasco. She was born in Prosser and was a lifelong Tri-Cities area resident.
Wellington was the first site of local government in New Zealand, and the city's archives date back to 1842 when the Wellington Borough Council was established. [3] As recently as 1994, council records were stored at more than 10 places around Wellington, loosely classified using a system devised in 1926.