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John Nash, architect and urbanist, born in Lambeth in 1752; Akai Osei, street dancer; winner of Got To Dance; born in Lambeth; Scott Parker, manager of Burnley F.C, born in Lambeth; Conrad Phillips, actor (1925–2016) Shirley Pitts (1934–1992), English fraudster and thief, the "queen of shoplifters", born on the Lambeth Walk
Mary Elizabeth Hope, Baroness Glendevon (1 September 1915 – 27 December 1998) [1] (née Wellcome, later Maugham, [2] formerly Paravicini), was the only child of the English writer W. Somerset Maugham by his then-mistress Syrie Wellcome, a daughter of orphanage founder Thomas John Barnardo.
Troxler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Ignaz Paul Vital Troxler (1780–1866), Swiss philosopher; Steve Troxler (born 1952), American farmer ...
James Leslie Houlden (1 March 1929 – 3 December 2022) was a British Anglican priest and academic. He served as Principal of Cuddesdon Theological College from 1970 to 1975, and then, after its amalgamation with Ripon Hall, Principal of Ripon College Cuddesdon from 1975 to 1977. [1]
Nothing is known of Roose (including his real name) or his life outside the case; he may have been Fisher's household cook, or less likely, a friend of the cook, at Fisher's residence in Lambeth. Roose was accused of adding a white powder to porridge given to Fisher's dining guests and servants, as well as beggars to whom the food was given as ...
On 10 January 1697 he was created LL.D. by Thomas Tenison, Archbishop of Canterbury (a so-called Lambeth degree). On 16 January 1697, he was consecrated bishop at the Savoy Chapel , London. [ 5 ] On 28 January the rectory of Badsworth was again offered to him in commendam , and again refused, though the see of Man was worth no more than £300 a ...
John Richard Bell, IV is the child of John R. "Ricky" Bell, III, and Cindy Ezzell Bell. He has one sister. His father was a highway maintenance engineer for the North Carolina Department of Transportation. [3]
In 1811, he returned to Beromünster. Troxler represented Switzerland at the Congress of Vienna in 1815. In 1820 he became a professor for philosophy and history at the lyceum in Lucerne but had to leave after a year due to political problems. He founded an educational institution in Aarau and continued working as a physician.