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This list is of people who were born or raised in the County of Northumberland, in England. The area covered is the ceremonial county , hence the exclusion of places traditionally regarded as being in Northumberland which are now in Tyne and Wear for administrative and ceremonial purposes.
She was infamous for her "fever ship" voyage in 1852 from Liverpool (England) to Port Phillip, Victoria (Australia) carrying 795 passengers, arriving on 3 November 1852. It was a double-decker ship, overcrowded, and with more than her recommended load of 630. Many passengers were small children, as the restrictions on the number of children per ...
List of shipwrecks: 2 May 1858 Ship State Description Equivalent United Kingdom: The ship was wrecked at Wyk auf Föhr, Duchy of Holstein. Her crew were rescued. [8] She was on a voyage from Sunderland, County Durham to Hamburg. [9] Hope United Kingdom: The ship was driven ashore and severely damaged at Goodwick, Pembrokeshire.
Northumberland succeeded his childless elder brother in the dukedom in 1847. In 1852 he was sworn of the Privy Council [10] and appointed First Lord of the Admiralty, with a seat in the cabinet, by the Earl of Derby, a post he held until the fall of the government in December 1852. In 1853 he was made a Knight of the Garter. [11]
List of shipwrecks: 17 September 1852 Ship State Description Duchess of Argyll, and Emperor United Kingdom: The paddle steamer Emperor collided with the steamship Duchess of Argyll and sank in Gare Loch at Shandon, Argyllshire. Duchess of Argyll was beached. [50] Firth United Kingdom: The ship sank in the English Channel off Cap de la Hague ...
List of ship launches in 1852; A. USS A. Houghton; Adolphus (1852) HMS Agamemnon (1852) SS Arabia (1852) French ship Austerlitz (1852) C. Carrier Pigeon (ship)
The Duchess tended to her in person, as well as providing her with the services of the ducal family physician. However, Darling's condition declined and she was conveyed to the place of her birth in Bamburgh, where she died, aged 26, of consumption in October 1842. She is buried in the churchyard of St Aidan's Church, Bamburgh.
Frances Julia Percy, Duchess of Northumberland (née Burrell; 21 December 1752 – 28 April 1820) [1] was the second wife of Hugh Percy, 2nd Duke of Northumberland, and the mother of the 3rd [2] and 4th Dukes. Frances was a daughter of the barrister Peter Burrell, of Beckenham, Kent, and his wife, the former Elizabeth Lewis. [3]