SIR CHARLES HYDE. Any relation. W P FEENEY by —PO 574. Pent
... SIR CHARLES HYDE. Any relation. W P FEENEY by —PO 574. Pent ...
... SIR CHARLES HYDE. Any relation. W P FEENEY by —PO 574. Pent ...
... TO THE EDITOR Blue Coat School Sir,—There was one slip In Mr. Hancock's admirable article. 81r Charles Hyde was president. not chairman, of the governors. The chairman in his time was Oeorge Bryion, one of the outstanding citizens of his day. One point ...
... for Wolverhampton and Mr Charles Hyde proprietor of the “Birmingham Post” “Birmingham Mail” and “Birmingham Weekly Post” whilst amongst the new knights are Mr Harry Bird a native of Coventry Mr Gerald du Maurier and Mr Charles Hawtrey the actor managers ...
... was president of the hospital. Charles Hyde became honorary secretary of the appeal committee and J. R. H. Smyth (who had been brought into partnership by John Feeney) was honorary treasurer. Soon afterwards Charles Hyde became president. The foundation ...
... terms of Sir Charles Hyde's will. The testator had expressed a desire that the papers should be carried on as hitherto and adopt the same policy. 0.0 •••• whose views as to the conduct of provincial papers were similar to those of Sir Charles Hyde came forward ...
... site. From the first Sir Charles Hyde may well have doubted if there was any future for the Queen's under the scheme. But he kept silent. Those who. reading between the lines of Dr. Barnes's book. might suppose that Sir Charles in any way initiated the ...
... Post ' and ' Mail ' Meantime, he resumed active business. acquiring in December, 1943. from the executors of the late Sir Charles Hyde. The Birmingham Post, The Birmingham Mail, the Birmingham Weekly Post and the Journal Printing Office. A new company, The ...
... a report on Prof. a n's important ions at the ancient military capital of Assyria, near Nineveh. Thirty years ago Sir Charles Hyde, a former proprietor of The Birmingham Pest, financed digging work at Nineveh, and the Birmingham City Museum and Art ...
... is an oil portrait of the late Sir Charles Hyde, founder of the University Union at Edgbaston. which hung in the Union; the other is a painting of a mermaid kept in the bar of the University Guild Club in Great Charles Street. Both have disappeared, and ...
... is an oil portrait of the late Sir Charles Hyde, founder of the University Union at Edgbaston, which hung in the Union; the other is a painting of a mermaid kept in the bar of the University Guild Club in Great Charles Street. Both have disappeared, and ...
... actirtues would be there for anyone who wished to use It. Nothing will be locked away. he said Con tr. CUM. from Sir Charles Hyde and A E, Hill's bequests and a !byte Trust grant hare financed the C,500.000 first phase of the C 8.50.000 centre. Wort ...
... that desperately needs some distinctive feature. The drabness of Colmore Circus would be much relieved by a statue of Sir Charles Hyde, Birmingham's most distinguished and enlightened newspaper proprietor. And certainly there should be a monument to Sir ...