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In 1936 the first Connells estate agency branch was opened in Luton, Bedfordshire. [4] Connells acquired Sequence estate agency in 2003', [5] increasing its estate agency network to around 500 branches. In the same year, Connells acquired estate agency Sharman Quinney. [6] In 2008 Connells Group sold its remaining 18% stake in Rightmove plc. [7]
William Norwich is an American writer and author. He is a former editor at Vogue and the former New York Post society gossip columnist. He is the editor for fashion and interior design at Phaidon Press. [1] [2] His novel My Mrs. Brown was inspired by the 1958 Paul Gallico novel Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris. [3]
William Brown Gloag Strawbridge, Outside Engineer Manager, Alexander Stephen & Sons Ltd., Glasgow. Geoffrey Roy Sudell, Deputy Controller, Telecommunications Group, Berlin, Ministry of Defence (Army). Francis Harry Ashley Taft, Centre Manager, Long Eaton Government Training Centre and Industrial Rehabilitation Unit, Ministry of Labour.
Lewis William Brown, Headmaster of Hantoub Secondary School, Sudan. Frederick Charles Church, British subject resident in Brazil. Thomas Millar Cowan, First Secretary (Labour), Office of the Commissioner General for Her Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom in South-East Asia.
William Robson Brown, MP, Member of Parliament for Esher since 1950. For political and public services in Surrey. For political and public services in Surrey. Gordon Roy Cameron , MB, FRCP, Professor of Morbid Anatomy, University College Hospital Medical School, University of London.
Horatio Bolingbroke – in 1819 he was chosen as the Mayor of Norwich. John Bowyers – Bishop of Thetford in 1903. Francis Burges – published The Norwich Post the country's first provincial newspaper. William Chambers – Sheriff of Norwich in 1834. John Dowson – a solicitor, spent much of his wealth in improving education in Norwich and ...
John Leslie Fryer, Head Postmaster, Norwich. Robert William Gadsdon, Controller, Statistical Office, Board of Customs and Excise. David Galloway, Chairman, Association of Multiple Retail Meat Traders. Cecil Arthur Gardner, Deputy Crown Estate Surveyor, Office of the Crown Estate Commissioners.
All Saints, Hainford, Norfolk (1838–40). He was the pupil of the architect William Brown of Ipswich, a close relative. [1] He was, along with his two sons, the surveyor for Norwich Cathedral, where his work there included a restoration of the crossing tower, undertaken during the 1830s. [2]