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William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin (26 June 1824 – 17 December 1907 [7]), was a British mathematician, mathematical physicist and engineer. [8] [9] Born in Belfast, he was the professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of Glasgow for 53 years, where he undertook significant research and mathematical analysis of electricity, was instrumental in the formulation of the first and second ...
David Kenneth Roy Thomson, 3rd Baron Thomson of Fleet (born 12 June 1957), is a Canadian/British [2] [3] [4] hereditary peer and media magnate. [ 5 ] [ 1 ] [ 6 ] Upon the death of his father in 2006, Thomson became the chairman of Thomson Corporation and also inherited his father's British title, Baron Thomson of Fleet .
Her son, William, was born in July 2021, days before her criminal trial was set to start. She and Billy later welcomed their daughter, Invicta, around February 2023.
King William III [a] 1650–1702 r. 1689–1702: James Stuart 1663–1667 Duke of Cambridge: Queen Anne 1665–1714 r. 1702–1714: Prince George 1653–1708 of Denmark: Charles Stuart 1666–1667 Duke of Kendal: Edgar Stuart 1667–1671 Duke of Cambridge: Prince William 1689–1700 Duke of Gloucester: Catherine Stuart 1675–1676: Isabel ...
Elizabeth Burns, Elizabeth Park or Mrs John Thomson [2] known as Betty Burns, was born in 1791 in Leith, Scotland. She was the illegitimate daughter of Robert Burns and Anna Park who was a barmaid at The Globe in Dumfries. [1] She married John Thomson in 1808 to become Elizabeth Thomson. [3]
She was the seventh daughter of Thomas Byerley of Etruria, Staffordshire, a nephew by marriage and sometime partner and manager of the pottery works of Josiah Wedgwood. Her sister was Maria Byerley who founded a school. [1] She married, in 1820, the physician Anthony Todd Thomson, as his second wife. [2]
Alexander Thomson of Duddingston, advocate, (died 1603), who married Margaret Preston in 1594, [7] a daughter of Samuel Preston of Craigmillar, and widow of Walter Cant. [8] Alexander Thomson, apothecary. In 1590 he had a shop or booth in a tenement at the top of Niddry's Wynd in Edinburgh. [9] Adam Thomson, apothecary
In 1903 she married John William Thompson, a post office clerk and telegraphist from the Isle of Wight, [1] at Twickenham Parish Church, [6] after which they moved to Bournemouth where they had a daughter, Winifred Grace (1903), and a son, Henry Basil (1909). [8] [9] In 1916 they moved to Liphook where their second son Peter Redmond was born ...