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Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

There is more information here as to the occupations and work grades of the servicemen shown below. There is also a list of which regiments that they were in.

www.lyrs.org.uk/images/uploads/Roll_of_Honour_1915.pdf

 

Cpl. Burgess. S.

Pte. Burgess. W.

Pte. Burgess. W.T.

Gnr. Burgis. F.W.

Pte. Burley. N.

Pte. Burns. J.

Sgt. Burns. P.W.

Pte. Burns. R.

Pte. Burns. T. (Bacup)

Pte. Burns. T.

Cpl. Burns. W.

Gnr. Burscough.J.

Csm. Burton. G.

Pte Burton. J.

Pte. Bury. A.

Pte. Butler. E.

Pte. Butterworth. J.W.

Pte. Butterworth. W.

Sgt. Butterworth. W.S.

2ND Lt. Buttery. W. (June)

Pte. Byrne. J.

Pte. Cafferatta. H.

Pte. Cain. G.

Pte. Cain. J.

Pte. Caldwell. J.

Pte. Callow. E.

Pte Calverley. J.

Sgt. Calvert. T.

Pte. Calvert, W.A.

Gnr. Campbell. E.S.

Pte. Campbell. Jas.

Pte. Campbell. J.

Pte. Campbell. J.J.

Tpr. Canovan. G.M.

Sgt. Carney. J.

Dvr, Carrol. J.

Cpl. Carrol. J.

Pte. Carrol. T.

Pte. Carrol. W.

Cpl. Carruthers. C.W.

Pte. Carson. S

Stkr. Carson. T. Mt Ser.

Pte. Carter. G.W.

Pte. Carter. G.W.

Pte. Carter. J.E.

Sgt. Cartledge. E.

Sgt. Cartwright. J.

Cpl. Catherall. A. (M.M.)

Pte. Caudwell. W.

Pte. Gaunge. H.

Pte. Cawson. W.

L/Cpl. Chadderton. T.

PioNr. Chadwick. J.

Pte. Chadwick. P.

Pte. Chadwick. H.

Pte. Chapman. C.

Pte. Chapman. S.

L/Cpl. Charles. G.

Pte. Charlton. J.A.

Pte. Charnock. J.

Pte. Chester. C.

Gnr. Chew. F.S.

Sr, Strd. Chilvers. J. Mt Ser

Pte. Chinn.P.

Gnr. Chipchase. J.

Pte. Chorlton. W.

Pte. Chorlton. W.H.

Pte. Clapham. P.

A.B. Clark.E. Mt Ser.

Pte. Clark. J.

Pte. Clarke. E.S.

Pte. Clarke. J.R.

Pte Classon. R.

Pte. Claxton. J.

Stkr. Clayton. J.

Gnr. Clegg. J.W.

Pte. Clegg. G.W.

Pte. Clegg. J.W.R.

Pte. Clough. T.

Sgt. Cobham. H.

Pte. Coble. H.

Pte. Cockin. C.

Pte. Cockram. F.

Pte. Coe. A.W.

Gnr. Coffey. J.

Pte. Cole. F.M.

Pte. Coleman. J.

Pte. Commons. J.

Pte. Conlan. T.

Sgt. Connolly. B.J.

Pte. Cook. G. Mc A.

Pte. Cook. J.W.

Pte. Cooke. E.

Pte. Cooke. F.

Lieut. Cooke. J. I.

Pte. Cookson. J.

Pte. Cookson. R.

Stkr. Coombes. W. Mt Ser.

Sgt. Coope. H.

Pte. Cooper. C.C.

Pte. Cooper. F.

Gnr. Cooper. J.

Cpl. Cooper. J.W. (M.M.)

Pte. Cooper. W.E.

Pte. Corcoran. J.W.

Sgt. Core. A.

Pte. Corefield. J.

Pte. Cornall. G.L.

Sgt. Cornall. H.E.

Pte. Costa. D. (M.M.)

Pte. Cottam. T.

Pte. Coulan. E.

Cpl. Coulter. S.

Pte. Coupe. J.

Pte. Coups. M.

Pte. Courtney.J.

Pte. Cowling. O.

Pte. Cowpe. T.B.

Cpl. Cowsill. J.

Pte. Cox.A.

Pte. Cox. F.

Pte. Coy. W.J.

Pte. Cracknell. R.H.

L/cpl. Craddock. A.

L/Cpl. Craddock. W.

Pte. Craig. W.

Pte. Crawley. A.

Pte. Crawshaw. W.E.

A.B. Creaser. E. Mt Ser.

Sgt. Critchley.P.

Pte. Crofton. W.

Pte. Crompton. A.C.

L/Cpl. Crookall. J.

Pte. Crooks. J.

2nd Lt. Cross. A.M.

Pte. Cross. B.

Pte. Cross. J.

Pte. Crowe. A.J.

Pte. Crowther. J.R.

Pte. Culshaw. E.

Pte. Cunningham. C.

Gnr. Curran. H.

Pte. Curtis. F.E.

A.B. Cutter. T. MtSer

L/Cpl. Dacey. J.

Pte. Daley. W.

Cpl. Dandy. J.

Pte. Daniel. J.

L/Cpl. Daniels. T.

Lieut. Darwin. J.H.B.

Pte. Davenport. F.E.

L/Cpl. Davidson. C.

Pte. Davidson. T.D.

Pte. Davies. A.

Pte. Davies. J.

Rfn. Davies. W.

Dvr. Davison. H.

L/Cpl. Dawson. C.

Pte. Dawson. H.

Pte. Dean. W.

Tpr. Dean. J.W.

Stkr. Dean. W.

Pte. Dean. W.N.

Gnr. Dearden. A.

Rfn. Dearden. H.

2nd Lt. Dearden. W.

Pte. Denham. F.

Pte. Dent. H.

Pte. Denton. W.

Pte. Devereaux. P.F.O.

Pte. Dewhirst. L.

Pte. Dewhurst. G.

Pte. Dewhurst. T.

Pte. Dickinson. A.

Sgt. Dillon. T.

Pte. Ding. J.

Pte. Dixon. A.B.

Pte. Dixon. P.

Sgt. Dolan. T.

Pte. Done. A.

Pte. Donlan. E.

Spr. Doyle. J.A.

Pte. Drinkwater. A.E.

Gnr. Driver. J.H.

Pte. Dubbin. M.

L/Cpl. Ducker. W.

Pte. Duddy. F.J.

Pte. Duddy.J.

Pte. Dudley. J.

Pte. Duffin. C.J.

Pte. Dunbar. W.H.

Pte. Duncan. W.

Pte. Dunlop.F.

Pte. Dunne. B.

Gnr. Dunne. P.J.

Pte. Durham. J.

Pte. Dyer. J.

Pte. Dyson. G.H.

Pte. Easton. W.

Lieut. Eastwood. R.

Bombr. Ebdale. H.R.

Pte. Eccles. J.

Pte. Eccles. J.C.

Pte. Edge. W.A.

Pte. Edwards. J.

Spr. Edwards. M.

   

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Yearbook for Douglass High School Class of 56 faculty Harriett Tynes Chipchase, Ruth G. Simth, Vandelean Mingo Edwards, Shula Beatrice Alexander, Mercedes Hannibal Wildgoose, Mildred Brown Harris and Edith Thompson.

1927 Wallis & Steevens Advance Road Roller No. 7931 'Chipsy', (OT 5350) at the 2022 Malpas yesteryear Rally.

Looking east down he aisled nave, all built between 1865 and 1869 funded by the Miss Simcoe of Wolford Lodge who together with their mother the widow of John Graves Simcoe, first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, also erected the nearby Dunkeswell Abbey chapel.in 1842 . .

- Church of St Nicholas, Dunkeswell Devon

Nick Chipchase CCL www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4877981

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Mike's Travel no 20 "Chipchase" (M569 SRE)

 

Former PMT MB 709D / Plaxton

 

Service 615

 

Thornbury

 

21st April 2008

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

The War Memorial outside St. Patrick's Church, High Spen (Gateshead).

West Face

_____________________________________________

DURHAM LIGHT INFANTRY

 

PTE GEO. CUTTER 23/12/1917

PTE J W JAMIESON 27/3/1918

PTE WALTER LAING 23/4/1918

PTE J BURT 30/5/1918

PTE F J CHIPCHASE 21/7/1918

PTE I E WALTON 24/10/1918

PTE J H RUTHERFORD 18/11/1918

PTE GEO FORBES 28/9/1916

PTE JOHN H BROWN 16/9/1916

 

NORTHUMBERLAND FUSILIERS

 

CPL. WM. WALKER 1/7/1916

lCE CPL V E CLEMENT 1/7/1916

LCE CPL ED HARWOOD 14/7/1916

PTE JOS RIPLEY 1/7/1916

PTE MICHAEL DOYLE 1/7/1916

PTE CHARLES GRANT 4/8/1916

PTE J LAYBOURNE 12/9/ 1916

PTE JOS LOWES 3/5/1917

PTE W L CLYDESDALE 25/10/1917

PTE JOHN WYLIE 13/7/1917

PTE JOHN BURKE 23/6/1917

PTE WM. BELL 1/3/1918

PTE BEN CHIPCHASE 20/3/1918

PTE WM. BEST 4/10/1918

 

EAST YORKS REGIMENT

 

PTE ROBT. G NIXON 25/9 1915

PTE ED GIBSON 10/9/1918

PTE GEO T HUTTON 9/11/1918

PTE N M DIXON 20/11/1918

 

PTE P J SWAN, D.L.I. 13/8/1920

 

1939-1945

 

ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS

PTE MATTHEW ARMSTRONG 12/7/41

ROYAL ARMY SERVICE CORPS

CORP. JAMES KENNETH WATERS 23/7/44

ROYAL SCOTS FUSILIERS

FUS. LESLIE CUMBERLEDGE 5/11/44

ROYAL AIR FORCE

F/SGT RONALD SAMPLE BELL 6/5/42

P/O HENRY WOLES BLACKLOCK 12/7/44

SERG. A/G HENRY ROSE LINTERN 16/12/43

SERG. A/G JOSEPH JEFFRIE ROBSON V.R. 15/2/43

SERG. OBS. JOHN ROBSON V.R. 17/8/43

SERG. A/G GERALD SMITH 26/7/43

P/O JOHN GRAHAM PARKER 16/7/44

P/O JOHN BROWN 24/11/43

 

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

David Ian and Tony ploughing in tandem and drilling at Chipchase.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Phone number for sale in the electronics market. 50 Egyptian Pound (6 Euro) premium for an easy to remember number sequence, and an additional 25 Egyptian Pounds premium for older operator prefixes that suggest the person has been ‘mobile’ for a while (the operator ran out of numbers, was allocated a new prefix).

 

Original context: janchipchase.com/2011/04/17736/

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Wednesday, July 24, 2013 Aspen, CO

Fortune Brainstorm TECH

10:25 AM DESIGN DRIVES CHANGE

Which designers are leading change? Around the globe, the company and the customer.

Kate Aronowitz, Design Director, Facebook

Jan Chipchase, Executive Creative Director of Global Insights, frog

Krista Donaldson, CEO, D-Rev: Design Revolution

Mauro Porcini, Chief Design Officer, Pepsico

 

Moderator: Jessi Hempel, Fortune

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH

Tony and David ploughing in tandem at Chipchase.

The band leading the funeral for Bill Bulter from the Trinity Wesleyan Methodist Church to the Key West Cemetery on August 12, 1984. Front left Harry Chipchase. From the Ida Woodward Barron Collection.

Alabaster & marble wall monument which has not fared well over time:

"Here lies buried the most virtuous Lady Catherine Graham wife of Sir Richard Graham of Netherby in the county of Cumberland, knight and Bart, daughter of Thomas Musgrove of Cumcach Esq and Susanna his wife. Well beloved in her country as being a very hospitable and charitable matron, she died March 1649 in the 48th year of her age leaving behind her 2 sons and 4 daughters namely George, Richard, Mary, Elizabeth, Susanna and Henrietta Maria."

 

Richard, bc.1583 was the 2nd son of Fergus Graham 1625 of Plump, Kirkandrews-upon-Esk and Sybil daughter of William Bell of Scotsbrig, Middlebie, Dumfries & Brockethouse by Elizabeth Bowmont

He was knighted on 9th January 1629 and created a baronet on 29th March 1629

He was groom to George, 1st Marquess (later Duke) of Buckingham by 1617, gentleman of the horse 1619-28;8 joint. clerk of customs bills 1619-21;9 equerry, King’s Stables 1629-?44; master of the harriers 1644- Member, Council in the North 1629-41 .......

Sir Richard came from one of the more obscure branches of a border clan, notorious for its participation in violent raiding, that settled at Plump by the middle of the sixteenth century His elder brother was deported to the Low Countries after a particularly audacious week of pillage in 1603, and his ‘debatable lands’ were granted to George Clifford, 3rd earl of Cumberland. Sir Richard himself ‘came on foot to London and got entertained into ... Buckingham’s service, having some spark of wit, and skill in moss-trooping and horse-coursing’. Despite a temporary loss of office in 1620 after a duel with his employer’s kinsman, a younger son of Basil Feilding*, he was able to lay out £3,955 on the purchase of property in Lincolnshire in 1621-2. As a part-time resident in Cumberland, he endeavoured to reform vice there by building a church and educating the young Appointed customer of Carlisle in 1623, he was granted permission to execute the office by deputy on account of his attendance at Court. In the same year, with Sir Francis Cottington* and Endymion Porter†, he accompanied Buckingham and Prince Charles on their ill-fated journey to Spain to woo the Infanta.

In 1624 the year of his marriage, Richard bought Norton Conyers from his wife’s father (whose own father had purchased it from the Crown in 1593 ) with 'all messuages, granges, mills, lands, tenements, tithes, waters, warrens, leet lawdays, views of frankpledge' and other liberties for £6,500.28 During the autumn he fought a duel with another follower of Buckingham, Sackville Crowe*, but again escaped serious consequences Graham took the credit for persuading Lord Robartes to buy a peerage for £3,000 in 1625, and Edward Clarke* heard that he had been rewarded with a suit valued at £500 a year.

 

He m 1624 Catherine daughter of Thomas Musgrove 1600 of 1600 of Cumcatch Manor, Brampton, Cumberland & Susanna Thwaites

Children

1. George 2nd Bart c1624-58 married Mary daughter of James Johnstone 1st Earl of Hartfell and 1st wife Margaret daughter of William Douglas, 1st Earl of Queensberry & Isabel Kerr

2. Richard 1635 - 1711 was made a baronet in 1662 for services to the royal cause in the Civil War . He m Elizabeth daughter of Chichester Fortescue & Elizabeth Slingsby

Elizabeth was the grand-daughter of William Slingsby www.flickr.com/photos/52219527@N00/6123004013/ and had a son Reginald 1728 who married Frances Bellingham

3. Mary m Edward 1st baron Musgrave 1673 of Hayton Castle, Cumberland

4. Elizabeth m (1st wife) Sir Cuthbert Heron of Chipchase Castle

5. Susanna

6. Henrietta Maria

 

Sir Richard was first elected MP for Carlisle, ten miles from his Cumbrian estate, in 1626, during the mayoralty of his kinsman Edward Aglionby*, who acted as returning officer. He left no trace on the records of the second Caroline Parliament, though he may have heard his transaction with Robartes mentioned in Sir John Eliot’s* report on 24 Mar. 1626 of the charges of corruption levelled against Buckingham. Graham attended his master on the expedition to the Ile de Ré in 1627, and with John Ashburnham* helped to rally a faltering regiment at the landing He was re-elected in 1628, but again went unnoticed in the parliamentary records. On 8 July he re-purchased Nicholl Forest and other ‘debatable lands’ formerly confiscated from his family, from the Cliffords at the favourable price of £7,050.33 After his Buckingham’s assassination he was granted a market and fair on his Cumberland estate, and rebuilt Kirkandrews church in 1637, though in a thoroughly shoddy manner.

 

Richard was created a baronet in 1629.

He fought on the side of Charles I at the Battle of Edgehill in 1642, where he was severely wounded and lived in the York garrison until 1 July when the city was relieved by Prince Rupert of the Rhine. However Rupert and Newcastle were defeated the next day at the decisive Battle of Marston Moor, where Richard suffered 26 wounds returning home on horseback more dead than alive .

Later taken prisoner while on his way from Oxford to Newark in November 1645, he promptly submitted to Parliament and was thus able to compound for his delinquency at a favourable rate, paying £2,385 on an estate of just under £1,250 a year.

 

Sir Richard made his will on 26 March 1653, leaving a portion of £1,500 for his only unmarried daughter , named after the queen, Henrietta Maria, and an annuity of £20 for a cousin at whose house in Newmarket he died on 28th January 1654 and was buried here at Wath.

His Cumberland property had been settled on his elder son George who died before the 1660 Restoration of King Charles ll , however his grandson Sir Richard Grahame reeped the rewards for their loyalty to the Crown, and was given a Scottish peerage and represented the county under James II.

 

His younger son Richard founded another branch of the family at Norton Conyers where they still live . He was created 1st Baronet Graham of Norton Conyers for his loyal services in the Civil War,

  

(The descendants of George & William seem to have intermarried in the 17c & 18c www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/88Rn92 )

 

Monument repaired by Sir Bellingham Graham bart 1783, their hands are much too big !!

- Church of St Mary, Wath, Yorkshire

www.histparl.ac.uk/volume/1604-1629/member/graham-richard... www.geni.com/people/Sir-Richard-Graham-of-Esk-1st-Baronet...

- Church of St Mary, Wath, Yorkshire

1927 Wallis & Steevens Advance Road Roller No. 7931 "Chipchase", Reg No. OT 5350 at the 2014 Malpas steam rally.

1927 Wallis & Steevens Advance Road Roller No. 7931 "Chipchase", Reg No. OT 5350 at the 2014 Malpas steam rally.

Alabaster & marble wall monument which has not fared well over time:

"Here lies buried the most virtuous Lady Catherine Graham wife of Sir Richard Graham of Netherby in the county of Cumberland, knight and Bart, daughter of Thomas Musgrove of Cumcach Esq and Susanna his wife. Well beloved in her country as being a very hospitable and charitable matron, she died March 1649 in the 48th year of her age leaving behind her 2 sons and 4 daughters namely George, Richard, Mary, Elizabeth, Susanna and Henrietta Maria."

 

Richard, bc.1583 was the 2nd son of Fergus Graham 1625 of Plump, Kirkandrews-upon-Esk and Sybil daughter of William Bell of Scotsbrig, Middlebie, Dumfries & Brockethouse by Elizabeth Bowmont

He was knighted on 9th January 1629 and created a baronet on 29th March 1629

He was groom to George, 1st Marquess (later Duke) of Buckingham by 1617, gentleman of the horse 1619-28;8 joint. clerk of customs bills 1619-21;9 equerry, King’s Stables 1629-?44; master of the harriers 1644- Member, Council in the North 1629-41 .......

Sir Richard came from one of the more obscure branches of a border clan, notorious for its participation in violent raiding, that settled at Plump by the middle of the sixteenth century His elder brother was deported to the Low Countries after a particularly audacious week of pillage in 1603, and his ‘debatable lands’ were granted to George Clifford, 3rd earl of Cumberland. Sir Richard himself ‘came on foot to London and got entertained into ... Buckingham’s service, having some spark of wit, and skill in moss-trooping and horse-coursing’. Despite a temporary loss of office in 1620 after a duel with his employer’s kinsman, a younger son of Basil Feilding*, he was able to lay out £3,955 on the purchase of property in Lincolnshire in 1621-2. As a part-time resident in Cumberland, he endeavoured to reform vice there by building a church and educating the young Appointed customer of Carlisle in 1623, he was granted permission to execute the office by deputy on account of his attendance at Court. In the same year, with Sir Francis Cottington* and Endymion Porter†, he accompanied Buckingham and Prince Charles on their ill-fated journey to Spain to woo the Infanta.

In 1624 the year of his marriage, Richard bought Norton Conyers from his wife’s father (whose own father had purchased it from the Crown in 1593 ) with 'all messuages, granges, mills, lands, tenements, tithes, waters, warrens, leet lawdays, views of frankpledge' and other liberties for £6,500.28 During the autumn he fought a duel with another follower of Buckingham, Sackville Crowe*, but again escaped serious consequences Graham took the credit for persuading Lord Robartes to buy a peerage for £3,000 in 1625, and Edward Clarke* heard that he had been rewarded with a suit valued at £500 a year.

 

He m 1624 Catherine daughter of Thomas Musgrove 1600 of 1600 of Cumcatch Manor, Brampton, Cumberland & Susanna Thwaites

Children

1. George 2nd Bart c1624-58 married Mary daughter of James Johnstone 1st Earl of Hartfell and 1st wife Margaret daughter of William Douglas, 1st Earl of Queensberry & Isabel Kerr

2. Richard 1635 - 1711 was made a baronet in 1662 for services to the royal cause in the Civil War . He m Elizabeth daughter of Chichester Fortescue & Elizabeth Slingsby

Elizabeth was the grand-daughter of William Slingsby www.flickr.com/photos/52219527@N00/6123004013/ and had a son Reginald 1728 who married Frances Bellingham

3. Mary m Edward 1st baron Musgrave 1673 of Hayton Castle, Cumberland

4. Elizabeth m (1st wife) Sir Cuthbert Heron of Chipchase Castle

5. Susanna

6. Henrietta Maria

 

Sir Richard was first elected MP for Carlisle, ten miles from his Cumbrian estate, in 1626, during the mayoralty of his kinsman Edward Aglionby*, who acted as returning officer. He left no trace on the records of the second Caroline Parliament, though he may have heard his transaction with Robartes mentioned in Sir John Eliot’s* report on 24 Mar. 1626 of the charges of corruption levelled against Buckingham. Graham attended his master on the expedition to the Ile de Ré in 1627, and with John Ashburnham* helped to rally a faltering regiment at the landing He was re-elected in 1628, but again went unnoticed in the parliamentary records. On 8 July he re-purchased Nicholl Forest and other ‘debatable lands’ formerly confiscated from his family, from the Cliffords at the favourable price of £7,050.33 After his Buckingham’s assassination he was granted a market and fair on his Cumberland estate, and rebuilt Kirkandrews church in 1637, though in a thoroughly shoddy manner.

 

Richard was created a baronet in 1629.

He fought on the side of Charles I at the Battle of Edgehill in 1642, where he was severely wounded and lived in the York garrison until 1 July when the city was relieved by Prince Rupert of the Rhine. However Rupert and Newcastle were defeated the next day at the decisive Battle of Marston Moor, where Richard suffered 26 wounds returning home on horseback more dead than alive .

Later taken prisoner while on his way from Oxford to Newark in November 1645, he promptly submitted to Parliament and was thus able to compound for his delinquency at a favourable rate, paying £2,385 on an estate of just under £1,250 a year.

 

Sir Richard made his will on 26 March 1653, leaving a portion of £1,500 for his only unmarried daughter , named after the queen, Henrietta Maria, and an annuity of £20 for a cousin at whose house in Newmarket he died on 28th January 1654 and was buried here at Wath.

His Cumberland property had been settled on his elder son George who died before the 1660 Restoration of King Charles ll , however his grandson Sir Richard Grahame reeped the rewards for their loyalty to the Crown, and was given a Scottish peerage and represented the county under James II.

 

His younger son Richard founded another branch of the family at Norton Conyers where they still live . He was created 1st Baronet Graham of Norton Conyers for his loyal services in the Civil War,

  

(The descendants of George & William seem to have intermarried in the 17c & 18c www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/88Rn92 )

 

Monument repaired by Sir Bellingham Graham bart 1783, their hands are much too big !!

- Church of St Mary, Wath, Yorkshire

www.histparl.ac.uk/volume/1604-1629/member/graham-richard... www.geni.com/people/Sir-Richard-Graham-of-Esk-1st-Baronet...

- Church of St Mary, Wath, Yorkshire

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