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The tower of Orr Square Church Paisley taken from the churchyard of Oakshaw Trinity Church. Orr Square church is now luxury apartments. The church was opened in 1843 as the "The Free High". From 1834 till it closed in 1994 it only had seven ministers.
Found these cards on ebay.
the center photo card is of my mother's grandfather, incorrectly
signed as being Noah Frederick .
The center image is of Clement Laird V Orr .
Never do genealogy when tired, Bit of a correction...
The card on the left : Of Noah Frederick , Noah Married
Hannah McAllister . their Daughter Nancy Jane Frederick,
Nancy Jane Married James J Orr. Nancy had thirteen children .
Clement's mother is Nancy Jane Frederick . Clement married Lottie Lee Leslie and had a daughter Nellie P Orr.
Nellie is mother to my mother, Jacqueline.
It felt strange/ odd, to find family images being sold on ebay
and lucky i identified who they are to see that image of Clement and buy all four of these cards.
GD2006-0285m
Template created for 2006 Air Cadet Group Photos. Created on the 12 April 2006 by Cpl Andrew L Davis in the 14 Wing Imaging Digital Section, Greenwood, NS.
Here I am caught in the act of photographing a Peppered Rock-Shield Lichen. Photographed by Bonnie Ott. Western Regional Park, Maryland.
Bob Dolph (left) and Tommy Gregg using infrared film on the mountain pine beetle project. La Grande Ranger District, Wallowa-Whitman National Forest, Oregon.
Photo by: Peter W. Orr
Date: August 1970
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.
Source: Division of Timber Management, Insect and Disease Control Branch Collection; Regional Office, Portland, Oregon.
Image: ID-839
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
High school junior Spencer Orr has been involved in 4-H since he was in fifth grade. Orr competes in various horse competitions and showings at the local and state level and has played a role in taking his local Bits and Spurs Judging Team to win the Iowa state championship four years in row. 4-H has provided Orr with the opportunity to gain leadership, citizenship, and communication skills, all while being able to learn and help others within his community. Orr plans to go to college to study agriculture.
Orr was very probably the most talented hockey player of all time, though he's far too humble to acknowledge any such thing. In this autobiography, the legendary Boston Bruins defenseman credits just about everybody else except himself. This is no literary masterpiece, but it is interesting because of who's telling the story. It's very much an apple-
pie and motherhood tale, with (REFRESHINGLY!) no 'dirt' at all. The only real 'bad guy' in the narrative is a certain criminal, a former players' agent named Eagleson . . .
A photo of my flat mate camy.
Taken in Lidl Car Park, Dundee, Scotland, September 2011
Using Canon 500D, 30mm f/1.4
Located in Newtonville, Ma., the circa-1896 Colonial Revival Orr Building was torn down, along with several others in the area, in 2018 to make way for the Trio Newton apartment/retail/restaurant complex.
Mathias Orr, Company D, 70th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
Ninth plate tintype.
Sick Man's Odyssey
Mathias Orr, a 25 year old native of Hamilton County, Ohio, enlisted in Company D, 70th Ohio Volunteer Infantry at Cincinnati on September 10, 1861. The following Spring he took part in the horrific clash of armies at Pittsburg Landing on April 6 and 7. On July 28, 1862, a little more than three months after the battle of Shiloh, Orr was promoted to corporal but that lofty rank did not prevent him from being assigned to extra duty sawing boards in October.
It would appear that Orr was not destined for greatness. Sometime in the Spring of 1863 his health began to fail and, according to his company commander, Captain Charles Johnson, "...he continued to grow worse and weaker until he was unfit for active service in the field."
Orr was admitted to Washington General Hospital, at Memphis, Tennessee on June 9, 1863 where he was treated for gonorrhoea. Some records show that he was returned to duty on June 19, but other records indicate that he had only been transferred to the Post Hospital, Provisional Encampment, Fort Pickering near Memphis. Between June 19 and July 5 he was treated for intermittent fever; between July 5 and July 10 for inflammation of the liver; July 17 to 29 for chronic rheumatism; and from August 12 to 16, 1863 for intermittent fever again.
In September 1863 Corporal Orr was listed on a roll of officers and enlisted men of the regiment who were unfit for active field service but fit for duty in the Invalid Corps. The nature of his disability was cited as "chronic inflammation of liver (10 months)." His character while in the hospital was listed as "good," and additional remarks reported him to be "a good and brave soldier."
Mathias Orr was sent back to his home State where he entered the West End General Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio on November 17, 1863 suffering from anaemia. On December 5, 1863 he was transferred to the General Hospital at Camp Dennison, Ohio for treatment of spinal irritation. On December 21, 1863, after nearly a year of ill health, Corporal Orr was transferred to the Invalid Corps. It was an unfortunate choice for a name because the initials were the same as those used by the quartermaster's corps to brand rejected materiel as "Inspected - Condemned." Many of the disabled veterans resented the implications that the initials had for them. A few months later, the corps of disabled veterans had its name changed to the Veteran Reserve Corps.
For the next nine months Corporal Orr served in Company F, 17th Regiment VRC, primarily performing hospital duty in Indianapolis, Indiana. He was discharged from the army at the expiration of his three year enlistment on September 16, 1864 still suffering from chronic diarrhea and derangement of the liver.
Name:ORR, LLOYD JAMES
Initials:L J
Nationality:Canadian
Rank:Private
Regiment/Service:Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa (M.G.), R.C.I.C.
Unit Text:3rd Bn.
Date of Death:02/05/1945
Service No:B/148212
Casualty Type:Commonwealth War Dead
Grave/Memorial Reference:X. F. 3.
Cemetery:HOLTEN CANADIAN WAR CEMETERY
Robert Orr speaks at the 2013 Global Leadership Awards Dinner hosted by the UN Foundation and UNA-USA, Wednesday, November 6, 2013, at Gotham Hall in New York City. (Insider Images/Stuart Ramson for UN Foundation)