- male, deceased (1969)
- William Walsingham, Jr. (1909-1969) was an American front office executive in Major League Baseball. He spent the bulk of his 30-year career with...
More
-
- male, deceased (1590)
- Sir Francis Walsingham is remembered by history as the "spymaster" of Queen Elizabeth I of England. An admirer of Machiavelli, Walsingham is...
More
-
- female, deceased (1631)
- Frances Walsingham was the only daughter of Sir Francis Walsingham, spymaster for Queen Elizabeth I and Ursula St. Barbe. A lady-in-waiting to...
More
-
- male
- Alan of Walsingham, died c. 1364; a celebrated architect, first heard of in 1314 as a junior monk at Ely, distinguished by his skill in goldsmith's...
More
-
- male, deceased (1422)
- Thomas Walsingham (d. c. 1422), English chronicler, was probably educated at St Albans Abbey at St Albans, Hertfordshire, and at Oxford.
-
- male, deceased (1630)
- Thomas Lake (1567 - 17 September 1630) was Secretary of State to James I of England. He was a member of Parliament in 1604, 1614, 1625 and 1626....
More
-
- male, deceased (1640)
- Thomas Fitzherbert (1552, Swynnerton, Staffs, England-17 August 1640, Rome) was an English Jesuit. His father having died whilst he was an infant,...
More
-
- male
- George Ratcliffe Woodward was born 27 Dec 1848; died 3 March 1934. Born at 26, Hamilton Square, Birkenhead and educated in Elstree, Hertfordshire,...
More
-
- male, deceased (1610)
- Peter Bales, English calligrapher, one of the inventors of shorthand writing, was born in London in 1547, and is described by Anthony Wood as a...
More
-
- male, deceased (1995)
- Arthur Mervyn Stockwood (May 27 1913 - January 13 1995) was Anglican Bishop of Southwark from 1959 to 1980. Stockwood was born in Bridgend, Wales....
More
-
| |