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William Lodge (July 4, 1649 – 1689) was an English engraver and printmaker of the Baroque period. Life. He was born in Yorkshire, where his father was a merchant ...
William Penn Lodge (May 2, 1890 – June 4, 1950) was an American football coach. He was the third head football coach at Southern Illinois Normal College—now known as Southern Illinois University Carbondale—serving for one season, in 1919, and compiling a record of 2–2. Lodge was born in Philadelphia on May 2, 1890.
James William Lodge (11 January 1895 – 24 October 1971), also known as Jimmy Barrass, was an English professional footballer who played as a full-back in the Football League for Hull City and Halifax Town, and in non-League football for Cox Lodge, Scotswood, Newburn, Nuneaton Town and York City.
Other members included fellow artists Francis Place, William Lodge and John Lambert, the doctor and naturalist Martin Lister, and the antiquarians Thomas Kirke and Miles Gale. [2] Place often sought commissions for Gyles through his contacts in London, and Place's publisher, Pierce Tempest , provided him with Flemish, Dutch and German prints ...
Mary Cassatt, In the Box, oil on canvas, 1879, Private Collection Mary Cassatt, At the Theater, oil on canvas,21 5/8 in x 17 3/4 in, 1879, Collection Mrs. William Coxe Wright Mary Cassatt, The Loge, oil on canvas, 32 in x 26 in, 1880, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. This oil on canvas painting is 32 x 23 1/2 inches (81.3 x 59.7 cm). [1]
The cottage incorporates building materials of John Nash's Royal Lodge from Windsor Great Park.At the time of construction in 1831, it was described as "chastely elegant" and having two public rooms, in addition to a retiring room for the queen, and a pages' room, as well as furnishings from the former royal lodge and a marble fireplace mantel in the regency Graeco-Egyptian style.
Thomas Lodge was the son of William Littleton alias Lodge and born at Cound, Shropshire. [1] His paternal grandfather was Sir William Littleton (d. 8 November 1507), knighted after the Battle of Stoke, eldest son and heir of Sir Thomas Littleton (d.1481), justice and author of Littleton's Tenures.
Thomas Lodge was born about 1557 in West Ham, the second son of Sir Thomas Lodge, Lord Mayor of London, [2] [3] by his third wife Anne (1528–1579), daughter of Henry Luddington (died 1531), a London grocer.