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318 Sentences With "cozens"

How to use cozens in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "cozens" and check conjugation/comparative form for "cozens". Mastering all the usages of "cozens" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Reporting by Reporting by Elena Berton; Editing by Claire Cozens.
But back in the Yukon, Dylan Cozens is a pioneer.
Reporting by Karla Mendes, Editing by Zoe Tabary and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Adela Suliman; Editing by Tom Finn and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Megan Davies, Editing by Tom Finn and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Karla Mendes and Adela Suliman, Editing by Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Michael Taylor, Editing by Claire Cozens and Katy Migiro.
Peggy Cozens: You can always look back in hindsight about selling.
Reporting by Nellie Peyton, Editing by Tom Finn and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Inna Lazareva, Editing by Tom Finn and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Nellie Peyto, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith and Claire Cozens.
Reporting By Kieran Guilbert, Editing by Jared Ferrie and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Gregory Scruggs, Editing by Claire Cozens and Jared Ferrie.
Reporting by Serena Chaudhry; Editing by Claire Cozens and Katy Migiro.
Writing by Kieran Guilbert, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Elena Berton, Editing by Claire Cozens and Tom Finn.
Reporting by Sonia Elks, Editing by Katy Migiro and Claire Cozens.
Reporting By Jason Fields; Editing by Katy Migiro and Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst, Editing by Katy Migiro and Claire Cozens.
They named it Cogslea, an acronym for Cozens, Oakley, Green and Smith.
Additional reporting by Oscar Lopez in Mexico City, Editing by Claire Cozens.
Cozens has a home run and two RBIs in 11 plate appearances.
Cozens, a second-round pick in 2012, hit his 20th homer Monday.
Reporting by Charles Pensulo; Writing by Emma Batha; Editing by Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Carey L. Biron, Editing by Tom Finn and Claire Cozens.
OF Dylan Cozens was selected the MVP of the Double-A Eastern League.
Reporting by Amber Milne, additional reporting from Zoe Tabary, editing by Claire Cozens.
Reporting by Elena Berton and Lin Taylor, Editing by Claire Cozens and Jason Fields.
Additional Reporting and Writing by Nellie Peyton; Editing by Kieran Guilbert and Claire Cozens.
Cozens said he expected the app to prove particularly popular in India and Germany.
Reporting By Heba Kanso, Writing by Emma Batha and Kieran Guilbert, Editing by Claire Cozens.
Peggy Cozens: I always felt like I was a fish out of water being the female.
"I needed to leave if I was going to make a name for myself," Cozens said.
Sources: Reuters, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Equaldex, ILGA Reporting by Yasmin Mills, Editing by Claire Cozens.
Sources: Human Rights Watch, Reuters, United Nations, Amnesty International Reporting by Molly Millar, Editing by Claire Cozens.
Not far from the players' minds, or, for that matter, their parents', was the legend of Dylan Cozens.
"This guy was about 225 pounds, 6 feet; Dylan was 12 years old and a hundred pounds lighter," Mike Cozens said.
Cozens, 24, went 2-for-9, though he did slug a two-run home run against the Chicago Cubs on Wednesday.
Here are some key facts and figures about modern slavery and human trafficking worldwide: Writing by Arantxa Underwood, Editing by Claire Cozens.
Then there is the Bantam Rivermen team that joined the B.C. Hockey Zone Program, arriving in Whitehorse two years after Cozens left.
Reporting by Anastasia Moloney in Bogota, Christine Murray in Mexico City, additional reporting by Oscar Lopez in Mexico City, Editing by Claire Cozens.
The Phillies made room for Hoskins by putting rookie outfielder Dylan Cozens on the 10-day disabled list with a strained left quad.
Cozens valued the gold market at $8 trillion and said people would be surprised by how many people want to hold or spend gold.
When things began picking back up in the early 80s, Balma and Tracker employee Peggy Cozens came up with a strategy for keeping the industry healthy.
"I've spent so much time out there, some of the best memories of my life," Dylan Cozens said in a phone interview from Buffalo in September.
S.) bt Dorothy Stevenson 6-3 6-2 1937 Wynne Bolton by Hood Westacott 6-19233 5-7 6-4 1936 Joan Hartigan bt Wynne Bolton 6-4 6-4 63 Dorothy Round Little (Britain) Nancy Lyle Glover 1-6 6-1 6-3 1934 Hartigan bt Margaret Molesworth 6-1 13-4 1933 Hartigan bt Coral Buttsworth 6-4 6-3 1932 Buttsworth bt Kathleen Le Messurier 9-7 73-4 1931 Buttsworth bt Marjorie Cox Crawford 1-6 6-3 6-4 1930 Daphne Akhurst Cozens bt Sylvia Lance Harper 53-8 2-6 7-5 1929 Akhurst Cozens bt Louise Bickerton 6-1 5-19223 6-2 1928 Akhurst Cozens bt Esna Boyd Robertson 7-5 6-2 1927 Boyd Robertson bt Lance Harper 5-63 6-1 6-7 26 Akhurst Cozens bt Boyd Robertson 21-27 25-21922 33 Akhurst Cozens bt Boyd Robertson 23-210 28-6 6-4 1924 Lance Harper bt Boyd Robertson 6-3 103-6 8-6 1923 Margaret Molesworth bt Boyd Robertson 6-1 7-5 1922 Molesworth bt Boyd Robertson 6-3 10-8 Compiled by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Toby Davis
S.) bt Dorothy Stevenson 6-3 6-2 1937 Wynne Bolton by Hood Westacott 6-19233 5-7 6-4 1936 Joan Hartigan bt Wynne Bolton 6-4 6-4 63 Dorothy Round Little (Britain) Nancy Lyle Glover 1-6 6-1 6-3 1934 Hartigan bt Margaret Molesworth 6-1 13-4 1933 Hartigan bt Coral Buttsworth 6-4 6-3 1932 Buttsworth bt Kathleen Le Messurier 9-7 73-4 1931 Buttsworth bt Marjorie Cox Crawford 1-6 6-3 6-4 1930 Daphne Akhurst Cozens bt Sylvia Lance Harper 53-8 2-6 7-5 1929 Akhurst Cozens bt Louise Bickerton 6-1 5-19223 6-2 1928 Akhurst Cozens bt Esna Boyd Robertson 7-5 6-2 1927 Boyd Robertson bt Lance Harper 5-63 6-1 6-7 26 Akhurst Cozens bt Boyd Robertson 21-27 25-21922 33 Akhurst Cozens bt Boyd Robertson 23-210 28-6 6-4 1924 Lance Harper bt Boyd Robertson 6-3 103-6 8-6 1923 Margaret Molesworth bt Boyd Robertson 6-1 7-5 1922 Molesworth bt Boyd Robertson 6-3 10-8 Compiled by Rohith Nair in Bengaluru, editing by Nick Mulvenney
S.) bt Dorothy Stevenson 6-3 6-2 1937 Wynne Bolton by Hood Westacott 6-19233 5-7 6-4 1936 Joan Hartigan bt Wynne Bolton 6-4 6-4 63 Dorothy Round Little (Britain) Nancy Lyle Glover 1-6 6-1 6-3 1934 Hartigan bt Margaret Molesworth 6-1 13-4 1933 Hartigan bt Coral Buttsworth 6-4 6-3 1932 Buttsworth bt Kathleen Le Messurier 9-7 73-4 1931 Buttsworth bt Marjorie Cox Crawford 1-6 6-3 6-4 1930 Daphne Akhurst Cozens bt Sylvia Lance Harper 53-8 2-6 7-5 1929 Akhurst Cozens bt Louise Bickerton 6-1 5-19223 6-2 1928 Akhurst Cozens bt Esna Boyd Robertson 7-5 6-2 1927 Boyd Robertson bt Lance Harper 5-63 6-1 6-7 26 Akhurst Cozens bt Boyd Robertson 21-27 25-21922 33 Akhurst Cozens bt Boyd Robertson 23-210 28-6 6-4 1924 Lance Harper bt Boyd Robertson 6-3 103-6 8-6 1923 Margaret Molesworth bt Boyd Robertson 6-1 7-5 1922 Molesworth bt Boyd Robertson 6-3 10-8 Compiled by Hardik Vyas in Bengaluru
Outfielder Dylan Cozens, who was recalled from Triple-A Lehigh Valley to fill Hoskins' roster spot, was placed on the 10-day DL in a corresponding move.
Peggy Cozens: One of the things that I think was so critical was that everybody felt like they were owners, like they were part of the whole picture.
When Dylan Cozens turned 3, his father, Mike, built a small rink in the backyard where Dylan, with his friends or brothers, would run games throughout the winter.
Phillies (ss) 27, Blue Jays 5 Dylan Cozens hit a three-run home run and Rob Brantly also drive in three runs as Philadelphia's split squad cruised at Dunedin, Fla.
Phillies (ss) 27, Blue Jays 21 Dylan Cozens hit a three-run home run and Rob Brantly also drive in three runs as Philadelphia's split squad cruised at Dunedin, Fla.
Reporting by Nellie Peyton, Editing by Claire Cozens Please credit Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, and climate change.
Peggy Cozens: I always said it was Harvard MBAs who thought they knew more than those of us in the trenches, and to this day I still believe they didn't get it.
Laura O'Brien's 22020-year-old son, Kadyn, was one of the three dozen players who tried out for the Pee Wee Mustangs — the same team Dylan Cozens played for nine years before.
For Sports, Gerald Narciso traveled to Whitehorse to tell the story of Dylan Cozens, who last year became only the fourth player from the Yukon to be drafted by an N.H.L. team.
Reporting by Charles Pensulo, Editing by Claire Cozens Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience.
Peggy Cozens: Basically, we called people and said we were going to do a newsletter—we didn't tell them it was a magazine—and asked if they would send their ads to us.
Reporting By Kieran Guilbert, Editing by Claire Cozens Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience.
Reporting by Sonia Elks, Editing by Claire Cozens; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, resilience and climate change.
German defenseman Moritz Seider (Detroit Red Wings), Canadian center Dylan Cozens (Buffalo Sabres), Swedish defenseman Philip Broberg (Edmonton Oilers), Zegras Ducks) and Russian right winger Vasily Podkolzin (Vancouver Canucks) rounded out the top 10.
Cozens, who starred last season for the Lethbridge Hurricanes of the Western Hockey League, a major junior league, has been an inspiration for her son and many other children in the Yukon, O'Brien said.
Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst, Editing by Claire Cozens and Belinda Goldsmith; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience.
The blast spoiled a milestone night for Phillies rookie Dylan Cozens, who hit his first career homer, a tiebreaking, two-run shot in the top of the ninth to give the Phillies a 5-3 lead.
Months before, on June 21, Cozens, 18, a Whitehorse native, became the first player from the area to be selected in the first round of the N.H.L. draft, taken by the Sabres with the seventh pick.
Inspired by artist William Morris to form artistic communes, Oakley, Smith, and Green — plus Oakley's mother, Green's parents, and Green's friend, Henrietta Cozens, in 21945 rented an 92013th-century estate, the Red Rose Inn, in suburban Villanova.
Jason Cozens, the company's chief executive and co-founder, said Monday that central banks' quantitative easing policies and the collapse of some banks have made many people realize that traditional accounts are not a risk-free option.
Phillies (ss) 4, Rays 3 Gift Ngoepe hit a two-run home run in the seventh inning and Dylan Cozens added a solo shot in the eighth as Philadelphia rallied for a victory at Port Charlotte, Fla.
So when Cozens, a 246-foot-220 forward who combines "Riverdale" cast member looks with explosive speed and a blindingly quick shot, became an elite hockey prospect, children in the Yukon suddenly had a model to aspire to.
Reporting By Kieran Guilbert, Additional Reporting by Roli Srivastava in Mumbai, Nellie Peyton in Dakar, Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani in Abuja and Jared Ferrie in Phnom Penh, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith and Claire Cozens; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience.
Cozens was married in 1919 to Amelia Schmertz. They had four children, Ernest B. Cozens, Jr. (born c. 1917, Amelia Cozens (born c. 1920), William Cozens (born c.
Cozens was educated at Eton, and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. In 1939 Cozens married Helen Barnes in London. They had a son, Keith Alexander Cozens, and a daughter, Brenda Joyce Cozens.
His mother Carrie E. (Beharrell) Cozens was born in Indiana in 1858. Cozens had an older sister, Ella M. Cozens, born in 1884.
William Cozens-Hardy William Hepburn Cozens-Hardy, 2nd Baron Cozens-Hardy, KC (25 March 1869 – 25 May 1924) was a British Liberal politician and lawyer.
Cozens also served as the dean of UCLA's college of Applied Arts from 1939 to 1942. At the time of the 1920 United States Census, Cozens was living in Los Angeles with his wife Helen J. Cozens and one-and-a-half year old son, Federick K. Cozens. Cozens' occupation was recorded as a professor at a university.Census entry for Frederick W. Cozens. Ancestry.com.
Herbert Cozens-Hardy, 1st Baron Cozens-Hardy. Baron Cozens-Hardy, of Letheringsett in the County of Norfolk, was a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 1 July 1914 for Sir Herbert Cozens-Hardy, Master of the Rolls from 1907 to 1918. He was succeeded by his eldest son, the second Baron.
Cozens was born in Edmonton, Middlesex in 1909, the son of James Henry Theodore Charles Cozens and Mary Margarite Cozens (née Jones). He was a bank clerk by profession and his family came from the Welsh county of Montgomeryshire. He married Elizabeth Kindlberger in London in 1939. In 1935, Cozens' mother Mary died, leaving £145 to Lewis and his brother David.
Herbert Cozens-Hardy Spy published in Vanity Fair in 1901 Monument, Kensal Green Cemetery Herbert Hardy Cozens-Hardy, 1st Baron Cozens-Hardy, (22 November 1838 – 18 June 1920) was a British politician and judge who served as Master of the Rolls from 1907 until 1918.
Cozens-Hardy The by-election was triggered by the succession to the peerage of the serving Coalition Liberal Member of Parliament (MP), William Cozens-Hardy.
Cozens-Hardy was the eldest son of Herbert Cozens-Hardy, 1st Baron Cozens-Hardy and Maria Hepburn. Herbert Cozens-Hardy was a lawyer and Liberal Member of Parliament for North Norfolk from 1885–99. He was then appointed a judge and eventually became Master of the Rolls. The Barony was created in 1914 and William succeeded as 2nd Baron on the death of his father in 1920.
Cozens returned to Berkeley in 1942 and served as a professor and director of physical education from 1942 to 1954. Cozens died in 1954 in Berkeley.
Plynlimon and Hafan Tramway locomotives Talybont and Victoria, this photograph first appeared in Cozens' book on the Tramway Lewis Cozens (full name Henry Lewis Cozens) was a British railway author and historian, notable as one of the earliest writers on Welsh narrow gauge and light railways.
Cozens was the first Whitehorse-born hockey player to be selected in the first round of the WHL bantam draft, chosen 19th overall, by the Lethbridge Hurricanes. The Hockey News magazine ranked Cozens as the top Canadian player in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft. Cozens was selected seventh overall by the Buffalo Sabres, making him the first player from Yukon selected in the first round of an NHL entry draft. On July 15, 2019, Cozens was signed to a three-year, entry-level contract with the Sabres.
Alexander Cozens died in Duke Street, Piccadilly, London, on 23 April 1786.
Hirst was born in Meltham, the son of Thomas William Hirst, and Margaret Joy, née Cozens-Hardy. His father was a cotton mill owner. His mother was a member of the Cozens-Hardy from Norfolk; his maternal grandfather founded a firm of solicitors in Norwich, while his great-uncle was the politician and judge Herbert Cozens-Hardy, 1st Baron Cozens-Hardy, who served as Master of the Rolls from 1907 to 1918. He was educated at Packwood Haugh School and Eton College, where he was a King's Scholar.
In 1907 Cozens-Hardy succeeded Sir Richard Henn Collins as Master of the Rolls. He was created Baron Cozens-Hardy, of Letheringsett, in the County of Norfolk, on 1 July 1914. Retiring from in 1918, he died less than two years later in 1920, aged 81, and was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery. His eldest son, the Hon William Cozens-Hardy KC MP, succeeded to the barony.
John Leamon (1804 - 1866) was an English-born merchant and politician in Newfoundland. He represented Port de Grave in the Newfoundland House of Assembly from 1859 to 1866 as a Conservative. The son of Robert Leamon and Mary Cozens, he was born in Blandford and came to Brigus as an agent of Charles Cozens. From 1828 to 1833, Leamon operated in partnership with Cozens.
Peter Cozens is the Director of Finance for the New Zealand Oceans Foundation.
The score was 6–3, 4–6, 6–4. Bickerton was friends with Daphne Akhurst Cozens. In 1935 she married Daphne's widower, Royston Stuckey Cozens, to whom she remained married for 63 years until her death at the age of 95.
Cozens' occupation was again listed as a professor at a university.Census entry for Frederick W. Cozens. Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Census Place: Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California; Roll: 147; Page: 3B; Enumeration District: 390; Image: 604.0.
The 1921–22 Southern Branch Cubs finished with a record of 9–2 under second year coach Fred Cozens. Cozens stepped downed as head coach at the end of the season and remained as Director of Physical Education at the Southern Branch.
Cozens was "one of the first of the roving centers." In the 1910 game between Penn and the Haskell Indian School, Cozens intercepted a pass and returned it 80 yards for a touchdown. He was also the catcher for the Penn baseball team.
He won 26% of the votes, losing to the Liberal Party candidate William Cozens-Hardy.
Chris Cozens (born 14 June 1982, in Bristol) is a freestyle swimmer from Great Britain.
Frederick Warren Cozens (November 17, 1890 – January 2, 1954) was an American college basketball, football, and boxing coach. He was the first head coach of both basketball and football at UCLA and served as the school's athletic director from 1919 to 1942. Cozens was born in Portland, Oregon in 1890. His father, Frederick Cozens (born 1849), was emigrated from England in 1870 and became a salesman at a hardware store in Portland.
Cozens served as an Alternate captain for Team Canada at the 2019 IIHF World U18 Championships.
Lord Cozens-Hardy MR, Buckley LJ and Kennedy LJ held that the agreement was void. Kreglinger appealed.
Daphne Akhurst Cozens died on 9 January 1933, aged 29, from an ectopic pregnancy and was cremated.
He spent two years at Westminster School, and had art lessons from Alexander Cozens and other masters.
Lieutenant-General George Alexander Cozens, KCMG, (1 Aug 1910 - Sept 1986) was an officer in the British Army.
Brigadier Dame Florence Barbara Cozens, (24 December 1906 – 18 July 1995) was a British military nurse and nursing administrator.
The son of the Russian-born drawing master and watercolourist Alexander Cozens, John Robert Cozens was born in London. He studied under his father and began to exhibit some early drawings with the Society of Artists in 1767. In 1776 he displayed the large oil painting, A Landscape with Hannibal in His March Over the Alps, Showing to His Army the Fertile Plains of Italy (now lost) at the Royal Academy in London.Kim Sloan "Alexander and John Robert Cozens - The Poetry of Landscape" (1986).
Cozens- Hardy was born in Letheringsett, Norfolk in 1838, the second son of William Hardy Cozens-Hardy, a former Norwich solicitor, and Sarah, née Theobald, daughter of Thomas Theobald, textile manufacturer. His grandmother was the diarist Mary Hardy. His family were Methodists, a connection which proved to be useful in his career at the bar. Cozens-Hardy was educated at Amersham School and University College, London, where he read Law, graduating in 1858 and taking the LLB in 1863, later becoming a fellow of University College.
Alexander Cozens was born in St. Petersburg, Russia. Widely mistaken to be a natural son of Emperor Peter I of Russia and a British woman — Mary Davenport — from Deptford, he was, in fact, the son of Richard Cozens (1674–1735), who worked for Peter I as a shipbuilder.Jean-Claude Lebensztejn's L'art de la tache: Introduction a la Nouvelle methode d'Alexander Cozens, Paris, 1990, pp. 31sq. The emperor was the godfather of Alexander.; text online at He was educated in England from 1727, but later returned to Russia.
Cozens was still involved in military affairs at the outbreak of the Second World War. In 1941, he was serving under General Sir William Platt in Abyssinia, after which he returned to General Headquarters in Cairo: there he was appointed to Special Operations and later Military Intelligence. During the latter part of the North African campaign, Cozens served as a Brigadier (General Staff) in the 8th Army Group. In April 1944, Cozens was promoted Lieutenant-General and was later appointed Assistant Chief to General Ronald Scobie.
Matlock Alexander Cozens (1717–1786) was a British landscape painter in watercolours, born in Russia, in Saint Petersburg. He taught drawing and wrote treatises on the subject, evolving a method in which imaginative drawings of landscapes could be worked up from abstract blots on paper. His son was the artist John Robert Cozens.
Wells, Matt and Cozens, Claire (2004)"Daily Mail sacks writer who painted Hindley picture", The Guardian. Retrieved 24 April 2006.
After the war, Cozens spent the rest of his career with Military Intelligence. He retired from military service in 1954.
Charles Cozens (1784 – August 6, 1863), politician, magistrate, was elected to the House of Assembly representing the district of Conception Bay on the first general election held in Newfoundland in 1832. Cozens was born at Blandford, Dorset England and immigrated to Newfoundland in the early 19th century. He was a cooper by trade and is accredited with establishing the road from Brigus to Makinsons. Cozens served for only one term at the Newfoundland House of Assembly and did not run in the general election that was held in 1836.
' Not all the squad would share his opinion, but it is clear that tensions arose from the fact that he and Cozens,Syd Cozens, was the British team manager in the 1955 Tour de France a former star of the winter six-day track races, had been brought in from BSA, Hercules' bitter rivals in domestic racing. There were factions within the team: Maitland and Tony Hoar did not see eye to eye, nor did Brian Robinson and Syd Cozens, while Jones and Krebs just did not get on.
In 1778 Cozens published Principles of Beauty relative to the Human Head (a work "of more ingenuity than value"), with nineteen engravings by Francesco Bartolozzi. The list of subscribers included William Beckford (father of Cozens' pupil William Thomas Beckford), Burke, Garrick, Flaxman, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and other men of culture. In 1782 Thomas Banks exhibited his Head of a Majestic Beauty, composed on Mr.Cozens's principles. Cozens also published The Various Species of Composition in Nature, and The Shape, Skeleton, and Foliage of Thirty-two Species of Trees (1771, reprinted 1786).
Soon after it was transferred to John Cozens."LICENCING BENCH." The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957) 7 December 1859: 3. Web.
William Camden died in 1796 but the firm continued under the same name until Calvert died in 1809.Cozens, p. 20.
Cozens Grove is an ancient wood which has coppiced hornbeam and a medieval sunken ditch. In 2010 Broxbourne Council proposed to remove the site from the Green Belt, which would have laid it open to development, but the proposal was dropped after campaigning by the Friends of Wormley Open Spaces. There is access from Cozens Lane West.
Caroline Colman, née Cozens-Hardy, was born to William Hardy and Sarah Cozens of Letheringsett Hall on 9th May 1831. She was the eldest of the family's four sons and five daughters. Before her marriage, Caroline dedicated her time to largely helping within the home and the local village. She cleaned and cared for her siblings.
Cozens, pp. 76–77."Human Capital in the British Slave Trade" by Stephen D. Behrendt in King is credited by Kenneth Cozens with further expanding the firm's activities into the fields of banking, insurance, and London infrastructure such as the construction of London Docks. His son William was a director of the London Dock Company.Cozens, p. 25.
1920 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Census Place: Los Angeles Assembly District 63, Los Angeles, California; Roll: T625_106; Page: 15B; Enumeration District: 151; Image: 250. At the time of the 1930 United States Census, Cozens was still living in Los Angeles with his wife, Helen. The couple had two sons, Frederick K. and James B. Cozens.
Quartetto Gelato has commissioned works from Canadian composers including Rebecca Pellett, Howard Cable, Michael Occhipinti, Hilario Duran, Charles Cozens, and Jossy Abramovich.
Lake of Albano and Castel Gandolfo at Sunset c. 1777, auctioned in 2010 for £2.4 million Lake Nemi and Genzano, Italy c. 1777. Lake Nemi John Robert Cozens (1752 – 14 December 1797) was a British draftsman and painter of romantic watercolour landscapes. Cozens executed watercolors in curious atmospheric effects and illusions which had an influence on Thomas Girtin and J.M.W. Turner.
Top Field Cozens Grove Top Field and Cozens Grove is a 6.1 hectare Local Nature Reserve in Wormley in Hertfordshire. It is owned and managed by Broxbourne Borough Council. Top Field (also known as Wormley Top Field) is a wildflower meadow which is mown to provide a habitat for small mammals, birds and insects. In 2014 it was given the Green Flag Award.
Wormley Rovers Football Club and Wormley Cricket Club are based at Wormley playing fields. Wormley also has Top Field and Cozens Grove Local Nature Reserve.
Charles Thomas Cozens is a Canadian musician born in Hamilton, Ontario. His works span several genres including Classical, Classical Crossover, Jazz, Pop, and New Age.
In 1919, Fred Cozens became the first head coach of the UCLA basketball and football teams. Cozens coached the basketball team for two seasons, finishing with an overall record of 21–4. Caddy Works was the head coach of the Bruins from 1921 to 1939, guiding them to a 173-159 record. Works was a lawyer by profession and coached the team only during the evenings.
2, no. 3. Cozens has also been a dogged advocate for New Zealand to adopt an oceans policy, noting that "whether it be swimming, or being at the beach, diving or watching seabirds, New Zealanders love the water." Cozens' views have not found universal support. A letter to The Listener magazine in May 2006 described him as an "ex-navy wallah" who needs his "head read".
Census entry for Frederick Cozens and family. Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Census Place: Portland Ward 8, Multnomah, Oregon; Roll: T623_1350; Page: 7A; Enumeration District: 69.Census entry for Frederick Cozens and family. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Census Place: Portland Ward 8, Multnomah, Oregon; Roll: T624_1287; Page: 4A; Enumeration District: 0207; Image: 312; FHL Number: 1375300.
Horne's father, nonconformist minister and Liberal MP Silvester Horne Kenneth Horne was born Charles Kenneth Horne on 27 February 1907 at Ampthill Square, London. He was the seventh and youngest child of Silvester Horne and his wife, Katherine Maria ' Cozens-Hardy. Katherine's father was Herbert Cozens-Hardy, the Liberal MP for North Norfolk who became the Master of the Rolls in 1907 and Baron Cozens-Hardy on 1 July 1914. Silvester, a powerful orator, was a leading light in the Congregationalist movement, as minister at the Whitefield's Tabernacle, Tottenham Court Road from 1903 and, from 1910, chairman of the Congregational Union of England and Wales.
1924) and Lee Cozens (born c. 1927). He died suddenly of heart failure while sitting in his office at Penn. He was age 40 when he died.
After graduating from Penn, Cozens was a football coach at Carnegie Tech and a baseball coach at Shady Side Academy. In 1922, Cozens was hired as the graduate manager of athletics at Penn. In that capacity, he was one of the organizers of intercollegiate boxing and served as the President of the Eastern Intercollegiate Boxing Association. He also helped organize and served as President of the Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League.
Wright owned paintings by Cozens who taught his students to paint landscapes. He told them to create blots on paper and then use these as inspiration for the composition.
John Cozens (27 April 1906 - 5 April 1999) was a Canadian arts administrator, arranger, choir conductor, and tenor of English birth. He became a naturalized Canadian citizen in 1950.
He, however, declined the latter honour on account of a slight that he believed that he had received, and severed his official connection with the academy, although he continued to contribute to the exhibitions from 1783 until 1794. Joseph Wright of Derby acknowledged that he was influenced by Alexander Cozens, owned paintings by him, and applied his ideas as inspiration for compositions. He also described the technique Cozens recommended for creation from blots.
He soon followed with books on the Corris Railway, the Mawddwy Railway and other local lines. His books were the first serious attempt to publish histories of these railways and they introduced many early railway enthusiasts to them. Cozens was a friend of other notable early railway historians, including James Boyd, and R. W. Kidner. Cozens and Boyd have been described as the "eminent authors on the minor railways of North- and Mid-Wales".
Cozens, Claire; "Spanner in the Works", The Guardian, 28 May 2003. Retrieved 3 September 2009.Hazlehurst, Jeremy; "Art of the Big Steal", The Times, 1 August 2003. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
Born in Darjeeling, India, Cozens received her training and education to become a nurse at the Victoria Hospital for Children, Chelsea, and at St Thomas' Hospital in Stangate, Lambeth, finishing her training in 1933. She joined Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service (QAIMNS) on 3 August 1933 with the rank of staff nurse, and was posted to Cambridge Military Hospital, Aldershot, and later to India for five years. In India, and later in Palestine and Egypt, she nursed military personnel, later returning to England. During the Second World War Cozens served in the United Kingdom and overseas, and was awarded the Associate of the Royal Red Cross in 1943. Cozens was promoted from senior sister to junior commander on 1 February 1949.
His large collection of historical documents about the city was given to the library by his great grandson and his paintings went to the Norwich Castle Museum In 1856 he married Caroline Cozens-Hardy, the eldest daughter of William Hardy and Sarah Cozens of Letheringsett Hall, who changed their surnames by royal licence in 1842 to Cozens-Hardy. They had six children and after her elder son Russell James Colman recovered from a serious childhood illness in 1863, Caroline became closely associated with the work of the Jenny Lind Hospital for children. She gave her husband much support in his civic and parliamentary duties. She was the central figure behind all the welfare work for the employees of the company.
Cheap heard an altercation outside his tent, came out in a rage, and shot Cozens in the face at point blank range without any warning. This incident further raised tensions, as Cheap refused to allow medical aid for Cozens, who took ten days to die of his wound.Pack, S (1964), p. 62 The carpenter continued modifying the boats for an undetermined plan of escape, and outright mutiny remained only a possibility so long as his work continued.
Born in Haddonfield, New Jersey, Cozens attended the Haverford School where he played football, baseball and cricket. He enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania in 1907 and became one of the greatest athletes in the school's history. He was selected as an All-American at the center in 1910, and also won All-Eastern honors in baseball. Cozens was the starting center for Penn in 1909 and 1910 and was elected captain of the 1910 team.
Cozens relinquished her appointment as Matron-in-Chief on 27 July 1964, and retired from the Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps on 24 August. Cozens served as Chief Nursing Officer to the St John Ambulance Brigade in 1965–1966, and was appointed Colonel Commandant of the Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps on 31 July 1966. On 24 December 1966, having attained the age limit, she ceased to belong to the Regular Army Reserve of Officers, but retained the rank of brigadier.
An > improvement on this plan was to splash the bottoms of earthenware plates > with these blots, and to stamp impressions therefrom on sheets of damped > paper. In 1785 Cozens published a pamphlet on this manner of drawing landscapes from blots, called A New Method of Assisting the Invention in Drawing Original Compositions of Landscape.A transcription of Cozens's New Method is available in Adolph Paul Oppé, Alexander and John Robert Cozens, Cambridge, Mass., 1954, 165-87; in Joshua C. Taylor, ed.
Gordon was the son of the diplomat"Obituary", The Times, 29 November 1974, p. 20. Sir Archibald Gordon CMG and his wife Dorothy, the daughter of Charles Silvester Horne,Who's Who 1971 p. 1224 MP:and father of the humorous broadcaster Kenneth Horne his great-grandfather, Herbert Cozens- Hardy, 1st Baron Cozens-Hardy, was Master of the Rolls from 1907 until 1918. He was educated at Rugby School and Balliol College, Oxford (organ scholar)Who's Who, 19920713635142 BA 1950, MA 1952Crockford's Clerical Directory (2002/03), p.
The style used by Cozens before he finally settled in Britain may be seen in a collection of fifty-four early drawings, mostly Italian scenes, in the British Museum. Cozens lost them in Germany on his way from Rome to Britain, and they were only recovered by his son in Florence in 1776. They show him as a highly skilled draughtsman in the style of the time, with a feeling for elegant composition. Some are wholly in pen and ink in the manner of line engravings.
Though never a travel enthusiast, Smith finally agreed to tour Europe in 1933 with Isabel Crowder, who was both Henrietta Cozens' niece and also a nurse.Nudelman, 1990, pp. 45, 141. During her trip, her health deteriorated.
The first-seeded Louie Bickerton and Daphne Akhurst Cozens defeated the unseeded Nell Lloyd and Gwen Utz 6–0, 6–4 in the final, to win the Women's Doubles tennis title at the 1931 Australian Championships..
Ernest Brazier Cozens (November 24, 1888 – June 8, 1929) was an American football player and college administrator. He was one of the first "roving centers" in American football and was named an All-American in 1910.
Draft Registration Card completed by Frederick Warren Cozens, June 1917. Ancestry.com. World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 [database on-line]. Registration Location: Alameda County, California; Roll: 1530663; Draft Board: 2. In 1919, Cozens moved to the Southern Branch of the University of California, now known as UCLA, where he served as the Director of Physical Education and Athletics and professor of physical education from 1919 to 1942. He became the first head coach of the Southern Branch men's basketball and football teams in 1919. Cozens remained the Southern Branch's basketball coach through 1921 and guided them to a 20-4 record. His Southern Branch football teams compiled a 2-6 record. The Southern Branch did not participate in an athletic conference until 1920, so the 1919 football team played a schedule full of local high schools and other assorted teams.
London saw one race at Olympia in July 1923, and then a series of races at Wembley starting in 1936. The local man, Frank Southall, crashed and left for hospital. So did another British hope, Syd Cozens.
So did another British hope, Syd Cozens. Only nine of the 15 teams lasted the race. The series continued, with more success, until the start of the second world war in 1939. Racing began hesitantly after 1945.
Dan Morgan is a 1911 Australian film from Charles Cozens Spencer about the bushranger Dan Morgan.Vagg, S., & Reynaud, D. (2016). Alfred Rolfe: Forgotten pioneer Australian film director. Studies in Australasian Cinema, 10(2),184-198. doi:10.1080/17503175.2016.
In 2013, Cozens was the first Canadian invited to Cuba to conduct. He continues to conduct Orquesta de Villa Clara from time to time."Accordion Champ to Conductor: Hamilton Man Leads Cuban Orchestra". CBC News Headlines, 5/5/13.
Altogether these show that by this time Cozens was a well-trained artist who observed nature and was not without poetical feeling. After his arrival in Britain he appears, from some drawings in the Victoria and Albert Museum, to have adopted a much broader style, aiming at an imposing distribution of masses and large effects of light and shade. Henry Angelo, who (like Sir George Beaumont) was his pupil at Eton, described Cozens' unusual method of teaching in his Reminiscences: > Cozens dashed out upon several pieces of paper a series of accidental > smudges and blots in black, brown, and grey, which being floated on, he > impressed again upon other paper, and by the exercise of his fertile > imagination, and a certain degree of ingenious coaxing, converted into > romantic rocks, woods, towers, steeples, cottages, rivers, fields, and > waterfalls. Blue and grey blots formed the mountains, clouds, and skies'.
In 1931, Cozens received a commission in the Light Infantry He later passed the Staff College and went on to serve as a staff officer in the Sudan in 1937 and on the British Military Mission to the Egyptian Army.
Local rider Frank Southall crashed and left for hospital. So did another British hope, Syd Cozens. Only nine of the 15 teams lasted the race. The series continued, with more success, until the start of World War II in 1939.
The whole banking business was ultra vires and so the bank's depositors could recover nothing. In the Court of Appeal, Lord Cozens-Hardy MR, Buckley LJ held the depositors would be paid last, after the shareholders. Fletcher Moulton LJ dissented.
Mary and William Hardy married in Whissonsett Church in 1765 when they were aged 32 and 33, and set up home at East Dereham. Their first child, named Raven for his mother, was born there 9 November 1767. Their second son, William, was born on 1 April 1770 at Litcham, in central Norfolk, where his father had been posted. The last child, Mary Ann (the grandmother of Herbert Cozens-Hardy, 1st Baron Cozens-Hardy), was born at Coltishall, north-east of Norwich, on 3 November 1773; by then William Hardy was tenant of a farm and manager of a commercial maltings and brewery.
Still image taken from Charles Cozens Spencer's film of the 1909 VFL Grand Final. South Melbourne players enter the field before the game. Australian football was filmed as early as August 1898, when Essendon played Geelong at the East Melbourne Cricket Ground. The earliest known surviving footage of an Australian football match is Charles Cozens Spencer's film of the 1909 VFL Grand Final in which South Melbourne won their first flag against reigning premiers Carlton. In 2009, the National Film and Sound Archive celebrated the film's centenary by screening it daily over two weeks at Melbourne's Federation Square.Smith, Simon (13 September 2010).
Sloan worked for the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1986 where she curated an exhibition on Alexander Cozens from November 1986-January 1987. The exhibition then traveled to the Art Gallery of Ontario with additional works by his son John Robert Cozens and was on display January–March 1987. In 1992, Sloan became the curator of British Drawings and Watercolours before 1880 at the British Museum. While at the British Museum, Sloan has worked primarily on Sir William Hamilton and his collections at the British Museum, the watercolours of J. M. W. Turner, and the Hans Sloane collections.
Red Rose Girls, Pictured left are Violet Oakley, Jesse Willcox Smith and Elizabeth Shippen Green (with Henrietta Cozens). The Red Rose by Violet Oakley The Red Rose Girls were a group of female artists from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, active in the early 1900s. The work of the three working artists in the group, Violet Oakley, Jessie Willcox Smith, and Elizabeth Shippen Green, was supported by Henrietta Cozens, who took on the responsibility of managing their communal household. They rented the Red Rose Inn in Villanova, Pennsylvania, in Mainline Philadelphia from 1901-1906, before moving to Cogslea in Mount Airy, Philadelphia from 1906-1911.
Other conducting credits include numerous television and film soundtracks, CD recordings, and over 50 theatrical productions, many with Drayton Entertainment and Theatre Aquarius including Fiddler On The Roof, Beauty And The Beast, My Fair Lady, Cats, Miss Saigon, Crazy For You, Anne Of Green Gables, Man Of La Mancha, and The King And I. Television and film conducting includes Tek Wars, Ray Bradbury Theatre, The Twilight Zone, At The Midnight Hour, Clarence, Christmas In America, and The Long Road Home. Cozens also served as conductor for the Duke of Edinburgh Awards for Prince Philip (Toronto 2004). He also conducted a Command Performance of “Man of La Mancha” for the Governor General of Canada, The Right Honourable Ray Hnytashyn (Theatre Aquarius 1991). More recently in 2012, Cozens conducted the Charles Cozens orchestra for the 25th final presentation of Toronto's Fashion Cares evening, working with such stars as Sir Elton John and Grammy Award-winning singer Janelle Monáe.
The first issue of TWS contained the article "Skate and Create". Its author, Peggy Cozens, noted, "I have become increasingly concerned about a new skate attitude being pushed on skaters: Skate and Destroy". She highlighted the positive and creative side of skating.
Sir David Cozens-Hardy Hirst (31 July 1925 – 31 December 2011) was an English barrister and judge who served as a Lord Justice of Appeal from 1992 to 1999. The Times described him as "one of the leading advocates of his generation".
Sydney Turner Cozens (17 July 1908 - 5 February 1985) was a British cyclist. He competed in the sprint event at the 1928 Summer Olympics. Sydney was the British champion in track cycling at the inaugural British National Individual Sprint Championships in 1930.
Steel rode for Viking Cycles from 1951 to 1955. In 1955 he rode the Tour de France in the first team Britain had entered. Many of the riders were from a rival domestic team sponsored by Hercules. So was the manager, Syd Cozens.
Cooltide is an album by John Martyn. Recorded at CaVa Sound Workshops, Glasgow, Scotland. Originally released on CD by Permanent Records, catalogue number PERM CD 4. The album marks the handover by longtime Martyn keyboard collaborator Foster Patterson to his successor Spencer Cozens.
The 100 Club has been the home to the world longest running Northern soul all-nighters, the 6t's Rhythm 'n' Soul Club, started by Randy Cozens and Ady Croasdell of Kent Records UK. The 6t's had their 31st anniversary event on 18 September 2010.
More recently The build-up has been presented by Ant Payne, Will Manning, Aimee Vivian & Rob Howard. Will Cozens was on air during the event with Niall Gray on the after party. JJ presented online interactive content whilst Jimmy Hill was a backstage reporter.
The British National Individual Sprint Championships are held annually as part of the British National Track Championships organised by British Cycling. The men's championship was inaugurated in 1930 and won by Sydney Cozens. A women's championship was held for the first time in 1972.
In early 2007 Peter Cozens was taken to hospital for stress related heart problems related to overwork. He recovered well. In 2009, he retired to Motueka, where he continues his research and writing about nautical and maritime subjects and where he is building a boat.
When Cozens-Hardy succeeded to the peerage in 1920 as Baron Cozens-Hardy, Edwards won the resulting by-election in July 1920, with 46% of the votes, with Liberal vote split between pro- and anti- coalition candidates. Edwards was then nearly 70 years of age, one of the oldest ever by-election winners. At the 1922 general election, the Liberals did not field a candidate, and he lost the seat to the Conservative Thomas William Hay. Edwards was returned to the House of Commons at the 1923 general election, when he beat Hay with a majority of only 861 votes, but lost again in 1924, to the Conservative James Christie.
The 1909 Grand Final was filmed by Charles Cozens Spencer's Sydney-based film company, and is the oldest known surviving footage of Australian rules football in action. The near-complete silent film can be viewed on the National Film and Sound Archive's YouTube channel (see external links).
Cozens, Kenneth James. (2005) Politics, Patronage and Profit: A Case Study of Three 18th Century London Merchants. Greenwich: Greenwich Maritime Institute. pp. 19–21. From the 1760s, Camden was the owner with Anthony Calvert of ships involved in the slave trade between West Africa and the Caribbean.
John Robert Cozens, and Thomas Jones were working.Matthew Hargraves. Great British watercolors: from the Paul Mellon collection at the Yale (Yale University press, 2007) p34 ff. He remained there till the autumn of 1782, when he died of pleurisy (his wife having died in the city in June 1778).
Minerva Cozens Kline Brooks (1883 – May 5, 1929) was a supporter of the women's suffrage movement in the United States and was active in the arts scene in Cleveland, helping to form the Cleveland Play House in 1915. She taught dance at the Noyes School of Rhythm in Cleveland.
He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1862, and read in the chambers of Thomas Lewin and James Dickinson. Cozens-Hardy acquired a large junior practice at the Chancery bar, and became Queen's Counsel in 1882. It was then the practice of Chancery Queen's Counsels to attach themselves to the court of a particular Chancery Division judge: Cozens-Hardy initially attached himself to the court of Mr Justice Fry; upon the latter's promotion to the Court of Appeal in 1883 he attached himself to Mr Justice North. In 1893 he became a 'special', a Chancery silk unattached to any particular judge, but who charged a special fee of £50 for any appearance.
In 1899, the elevation of Sir Robert Romer to the Court of Appeal on the death of Lord Justice Chitty created a vacancy in the Chancery Division. Though Lord Halsbury, the Lord Chancellor, was known to biased toward Conservatives in judicial appointments, he nevertheless recommended Cozens-Hardy for the vacancy, writing to him that "Notwithstanding your abominable politics I think you are the fittest person to succeed Romer". Cozens-Hardy was duly appointed to the High Court and assigned to the Chancery Division, receiving the customary knighthood in the 1899 Birthday Honours. In 1901, he succeeded Lord Justice Rigby as a Lord Justice of Appeal and was sworn of the Privy Council.
Similar in format to Cineflix's production, American Pickers, Canadian Pickers follows Scott Cozens and Sheldon Smithens as they travel across Canada looking for items in basements, garages, attics, sheds, barns, warehouses, storage units, flea markets, yard sales, and shops. Always clad in cowboy hats and Western wear, the pair make use of their folksy charm when negotiating the purchase of collectibles ranging from vintage furniture, antiques, and advertising to all things Canadiana in hopes of making a profit upon their resale. Scott Cozens is a former electrician turned full-time attorney practicing in Calgary, Alberta. He can be found spending his free time traveling across Canada pursuing his childhood passion as a picker.
After bringing his action, Mr Osborne was expelled from the union. He brought a further claim that his expulsion was wrongful.[1911] 1 Ch 540 The Court of Appeal held that he was wrongfully excluded. Lord Cozens-Hardy MR noted that the union was, at common law, a lawful association.
Cozens-Hardy, B.: The Diary of Sylas Neville; Oxford University Press, 1950; pp.74. From 1949 to the mid-1980s, the home and estate served as Duncan Hall School.A G Overill, Secretary, Old Duncanians Association, Great Yarmouth Mercury, 2009-08-20. In 1989, a fire damaged 40% of the 11 bedroom country house.
Dylan Cozens (born February 9, 2001) is a Canadian junior ice hockey centre who currently plays for the Lethbridge Hurricanes of the Western Hockey League (WHL) as a prospect to the Buffalo Sabres of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was selected seventh overall by the Sabres in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft.
He probably also met Thomas King at this time when King was master on ships owned by Camden and Calvert. The three men first partnered as Camden, Calvert and King for the 1773 voyage of the Three Good Friends to St Vincent via Cape Coast Castle in 1773.Cozens, pp. 21–22 & 83.
Watercolour in the English tradition, John Robert Cozens, Lake of Vico Between Rome and Florence, c. 1783 In the 18th century, watercolour painting, mostly of landscapes, became an English specialty, with both a buoyant market for professional works, and a large number of amateur painters, many following the popular systems found in the books of Alexander Cozens and others. By the beginning of the 19th century the English artists with the highest modern reputations were mostly dedicated landscape painters, showing the wide range of Romantic interpretations of the English landscape found in the works of John Constable, J.M.W. Turner and Samuel Palmer. However all these had difficulty establishing themselves in the contemporary art market, which still preferred history paintings and portraits.
She was taught about art by James Basire and Alexander Cozens, and about etching by James Bretherton. Her own prints are kept in the British Museum. She wrote about political matters, and had she been male, she would have served in the House of Lords as a Whig. She wrote particularly about the French Revolution.
Cozens Spencer also produced Marvellous Melbourne in 1910, the oldest surviving complete documentary on Melbourne. It features a VFL match between Collingwood and Fitzroy at Victoria Park. Another early surviving film shows the 1911 Tasmanian State Premiership match between North Launceston and decisive winners Cananore.Tasmania's Earliest Football Film Uncovered, NSFA Blog. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
Scratby Hall was built in 1750 by John Fisher, a Yarmouth merchant and Mayor in 1767. He let it to the diarist Sylas Neville in 1769.Cozens-Hardy, Basil, The Diary of Sylas Neville, OUP, 1950, p 74. Neville left in 1772; he returned in 1783 and commented that the building was much changed.
In 1995, McShee formed a trio with Conway on percussion and Spencer Cozens on keyboards. The trio's first album, About Thyme, featured guests Ralph McTell, Albert Lee, Mike Mainieri, and John Martyn. The album reached the top of fRoots magazine's British folk chart. The album was released on their own label – GJS (Gerry Jacqui Spencer).
He composed several anthems for the MUC's choir, 12 of which were published together under the title Metropolitan Series of Choral Music in 1946. He also published two solo organ works around this time: Prelude on Greensleeves (1946) and Festival Fanfare (1950). In 1951 he co-founded the Orpheus Choir of Toronto with John Cozens.
The Life of Rufus Dawes is a 1911 Australian silent film based on Alfred Dampier's stage adaptation of the novel For the Term of His Natural Life produced by Charles Cozens Spencer.Vagg, S., & Reynaud, D. (2016). Alfred Rolfe: Forgotten pioneer Australian film director. Studies in Australasian Cinema, 10(2),184-198. doi:10.1080/17503175.2016.
Akhurst attended the Miss. E. Tildesley's Normanhurst School, followed by the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. On 26 February 1930 at St Philip's Church of England, Sydney, Daphne Akhurst married Royston Stuckey Cozens, a tobacco manufacturer, and retired from serious competition soon after winning the Australian ladies' doubles championship in 1931. They had one son, Don.
A book, The Stuckists Punk Victorian, was published to accompany the exhibition. Daily Mail journalist Jane Kelly exhibited a painting of Myra Hindley in the show, which may have been the cause of her dismissal from her job.Wells, Matt and Cozens, Claire. "Daily Mail sacks writer who painted Hindley picture", The Guardian, 30 September 2004.
The only known occupants of the house and the last people to live in it were the Cozens family. The house itself was apparently pulled down in 1750. Further to the east, behind where Warwick Road is today, opposite the end of Kimberley Gardens was 'Hangers Barne'. The first record of the building is on Dorset's 1619 map.
She made one voyage to the Gold Coast to gather slaves that she delivered to Jamaica.Thomas Cozens: London Slave Ship Voyages Database Lloyd's Register for 1786 show a change of ownership from Scott & Co. to St Barbe & Co., London. Her trade changed from London-Africa to London-Smyrna. Her master's name changed too, but is illegible.
Charles Cozens Spencer (12 February 1874 – 1930) was a British-born film exhibitor and producer, who was a significant figure in the early years of the Australian film industry. He produced films under the name Spencer's Pictures and was an early backer of the films of Raymond Longford. He was also instrumental in the creation of "The Combine".
He was a racist thug, who often tried to lead other young characters astray. When all the characters had been created, Smith and Holland set about casting the actors for the show, which also involved the input of the series' lead director, Matthew Robinson, who supervised auditions with other directors such as Vivienne Cozens and Peter Edwards.
An 18th-century depiction of Lake Nemi as painted by John Robert Cozens Diana's worship may have originated at an open-air sanctuary overlooking Lake Nemi in the Alban Hills near Aricia, where she was worshiped as Diana Nemorensis, or ("Diana of the Sylvan Glade").Porteous, A. (2001). The Forest in Folklore and Mythology. Courier Corporation.
Cozens-Hardy was a pioneer of motoring. In the early days of his marriage he and his wife would undertake long and hazardous trips around continental Europe.The Times, 19.10.57 This love of cars was the cause of his death as he was killed in a motor accident at Bucchof, Starnberg in Bavaria on 25 May 1924 aged 55.
In 1746 he sailed from St Petersburg to Italy, where he spent two years before travelling onward to England. While in Rome, he worked in the studio of the French landscape painter, Claude-Joseph Vernet. Between 1750 and 1754, Cozens was drawing-master at Christ's Hospital, and in the same decade also began to take private pupils.
Many people have taken the role of assistant manager at Cambridge United in its long history. These include, in recent times: John Cozens, Malcolm Webster, John Beck, Gary Johnson, Brian Owen, Tommy Taylor, Paul Clark, Danny O'Shea, David Preece, Shane Westley, Rob Newman, Tony Spearing, Steve Castle, Alan Lewer, Willy Wordsworth Paul Carden and Nolan Keeley.
In 1906 he was elected to Norfolk County Council, in 1914 he became a magistrate, and in 1918 he became a county alderman. During the war he served on various committees and was given the OBE. He contested the South Norfolk constituency at the 1918 general election. He won 26% of the votes, losing to the Liberal Party candidate William Cozens-Hardy.
A preparatory sketch for these paintings (now in Derby Museum and Art Gallery). The unusual trees are said to be after Alexander Cozens. Dovedale is a very popular dale in Staffordshire and Wright's home county of Derbyshire. Admired in Wright's time, it has been owned by the National Trust since 1924 and made available to the many Peak District visitors.
He held the post of chief of protocol for the Ontario government from 1960 to 1972 and later worked in a similar capacity for the Canadian National Exhibition. During his life Cozens also was a frequent guest lecturer on sacred music. He was named an Honorary Life Member of the Royal School of Church Music in 1987. He was also a heraldic artist.
Cheap wanted to head north along the Chilean coast to rendezvous with Anson at Valdivia. His warrant officers had warned him against some of his actions, which would reflect badly on him when the Admiralty investigated the loss of his ship. This impasse led to the mutiny. The mutineers justified their actions based on other events, including Cheap shooting Cozens.
The event went live across the Capital FM network for the first time in 2010. The build-up was presented by James 'The Bassman' Bassam, Greg Burns, Will Cozens and Rich Clarke. James Barr was on air during the event with Luke Smith on the after party. Neil 'Roberto' Williams presented online interactive content whilst Kat Shoob was a backstage reporter.
John Vane was the last surviving member of Ben Hall's gang. His memoirs had been published posthumously in 1908.John Vane biography accessed 4 September 2013 It was the first dramatic film from Charles Cozens Spencer who had established a production unit in June 1908 which made newsreels and scenic short films. This unit was headed by Ernest Higgins who shot John Vane.
Howarde made the film in collaboration with actor Charles Villers. The adaptation turned the story into a more serious melodrama rather than a broad comedy. It was shot at the Rushcutter's Bay studio established by Charles Cozens Spencer. Many of the cast had appeared in the original stage production, including Howarde and her daughter Leslie Adrien, who played the female lead.
The Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup Daphne Jessie Akhurst (22 April 1903 – 9 January 1933) known also by her married name Daphne Cozens, was an Australian tennis player. Akhurst won the women's singles title at the Australian Championships five times between 1925 and 1930. According to Wallis Myers (The Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail), she was ranked World No. 3 in 1928.
He has also composed and produced more than 200 jingles for national brands. Career highlights include being the arranger for a Command Performance for Queen Elizabeth II in 1984, (London, England) with the Ontario Youth Concert Band, conducted by George Houselander. Cozens was the also the arranger for the Hamilton Sesquicentennial Celebration for Prince Charles, broadcast by CBC Radio in 1996.
Advanced Perl Programming is a 1997 book by Sriram Srinivasan which covers complex techniques needed in production level Perl. The second edition, by Simon Cozens and edited by Allison Randal, was published in 2005. It contains a different set of high-level programming techniques intended for practical use, and is described at www.oreilly.com. Related books include Programming Perl, Perl Cookbook, and Perl Hacks.
He was rapidly promoted to chief engineer, and reorganised the company's factory near London before being sent to Paris in 1895 to set up a new cable factory for a French company; in 1896 he became Fowler Waring's general manager. In 1898 Fowler Waring became part of Western Electric and O'Gorman left the company and started an engineering consultancy at 66 Victoria Street, London in partnership with E. H. Cozens-Hardy. The partnership was brought to an end in October 1908 when Cozens-Hardy left London for St Helens to take a place on the board of the glass manufacturers Pilkingtons. O'Gorman was a keen motorist, being an active member of the Automobile Club of Great Britain and Ireland, and he published a book on the subject, O'Gorman's Motoring Pocket Book, in 1904; he also wrote articles on motoring for The Times.
"Denis Welch, "The disarming of New Zealand", The Listener, 29 April 2006 As a former Executive Director of the Centre for Strategic Studies, Cozens' duties include directing research, giving speeches, providing media commentary and contributing to the School of Government's Masters of Strategic Studies degree. He managed several full-time staff members, and also oversaw a number of the Centre's Senior Fellows, including former director Terence O'Brien, University of Auckland academic Stephen Hoadley, and Lance Beath. Cozens has outlined his own views on strategic policy and security issues in numerous papers and books on terrorism, security and maritime cooperation in the Pacific-Asian region. In a 2005 newspaper interview, he called for a "softly softly, catchy monkey" approach to counter- terrorism, saying it would "reward authorities more than a 'reds under the bed', or 'terrorist under the bed' approach.
Anthony Cozens (born 1978) is an English television and film actor, known for appearing in the film Van Wilder: The Rise of Taj. He has Scottish, Cockney, English, Irish, Midwest, Australian accents. He was educated and trained at the Oxford School of Drama for a 3-year Diploma for acting. He is also skilled in football, athletic skills and his performance skills are voiceover, singing and improvisation.
Flying the Vickers Vernon transport aircraft. He flew as co-pilot for the then Squadron Leader Arthur Harris, when the latter developed a locally improvised bombing capability for the Vernon.Johnson Brian & Cozens H. I. Bombers The Weapon of Total War London Methuen 1984 p38 April 1922 was Saundby's first flight to Baghdad. In February, March, November and December 1923 he participated in bombing operations.
She won an award for Child Washing.Nudelman, 1990, p. 26. Green, Smith, and Oakley became known as "The Red Rose Girls" after the Red Rose Inn in Villanova, Pennsylvania, where they lived and worked together for four years beginning in the early 1900s. They leased the inn where they were joined by Oakley's mother, Green's parents, and Henrietta Cozens, who managed the gardens and inn.
In 1885, Cozens-Hardy was returned as the Liberal Member of Parliament for North Norfolk, keeping the seat until 1899. He frequently spoke on legal matters, although he was never a prominent figure. His most important achievement was the passage of the Law of Property Amendment Act 1860 (23 & 24 Vict. c. 38) relating to the law of mortmain, sometime known as Cozen Hardy's Act.
Cellist Liza McLellan joined at about that same time and then left in 2018. Accordionist Alexander Sevastian, who had joined the ensemble in 2004, died suddenly on Friday, February 16, 2018 while on tour with the ensemble in Ajijic, Mexico."Quartetto Gelato Accordionist Passes Away Suddenly" Wah Keung Chan La Scena Musicale Feb 19, 2018 Cellist Kirk Starkey and accordionist Charles Cozens joined in May 2018.
"Cog" was first aired on British television on Sunday 6 April 2003. It filled an entire commercial break in ITV's coverage of the Brazilian Grand Prix. The release was widely remarked upon by the media, with articles appearing in both broadsheets such as The Daily Telegraph, The Independent and The Guardian;Cozens, Claire; Never work with cars, The Guardian, 15 April 2003. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
Australasian Films were reluctant to enter feature film production but were persuaded to do so by Charles Cozens Spencer. Spencer imported the key creative talent: Stanley Twist and Nell Shipman were from Hollywood and Alexander Butler was established in British cinema. Shipman was only eighteen at the time.Jeannette Delamoir review of Kay Armatage, The girl from God's country: Nell Shipman and the silent cinema.
Given the small number of surviving impressions, it is unlikely that prints were a major source of income for him. His Pile of books (see Rijksmuseum link) is an unusual still-life subject for a 17th-century print. He seems to have invented the "sugar-bite" aquatint technique, which was rediscovered in England over a century later by Alexander Cozens (it is also called lift-ground etching).
Cozens, p. 83. He became close friends with Anthony Calvert and named one of his sons Anthony Calvert King.Cozens, p. 32. In 1771, while he was master of the Surrey (or Surry), owned by Anthony Calvert, he was involved in an incident that saw him charged with the murder of a sailor, John Warren, for which he stood trial at the Old Bailey in 1776.
"A meeting at Trinity House" from The Microcosm of London; or, London in Miniature, 1810 In 1771, King was one of the founding subscribers of Lloyds of London. He was also a governor of the Foundling Hospital. He was elected a younger brother of Trinity House in October 1780Cozens, p. 62. on the recommendation of Timothy Mangles, a ship owner in Wapping,Cozens, pp. 60–61.
The series featured works by Leon Griffiths, Roy Minton, Alun Owen, Dennis Potter (Shaggy Dog), and C. P. Taylor.W. Stephen Gilbert The Life and Work of Dennis Potter, Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 1998 [1995], p.162-63 In 1970, as Director of Programming at LWT, she was the first woman to be appointed to the board of an ITV contractor.Claire Cozens "TV's first woman programme controller dies aged 79", mediaguardian.co.
The main medium used by Goya was oil but he was also commissioned for pencil miniatures. Between 1824 and 1825, Goya recorded over 40 miniature commissions on ivory while most portrait miniature artists dotted color onto the ivory, Goya shaped the lines of miniatures using water. Goya claimed his shaping technique was innovative and far different from the 'accidental' ink wash technique developed n 1800 England by Alexander Cozens.
Before the jury made their decision, which took longer than any judging session in the history of the festival,Cozens, Claire; "Cog slips into third place as Jonze ad triumphs at Cannes", The Guardian, 23 June 2003. Lamp was seen as a long-shot for the award at best.Whitehead, Jennifer; "Looking forward to Cannes ads that are tipped to win", Brand Republic, 9 June 2003. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
Cozens was secretary of the Canadian Music Council from 1944 to 1976. Upon his retirement from that position he was awarded the Canadian Music Council Medal for outstanding service to Canadian music and was named honorary secretary. He served as the publicity director of the Toronto Conservatory of Music from 1945 to 1949. He was manager of the Toronto branch of the Western Music Co. from 1949 to 1952.
Cozens-Hardy also followed his father in his political affiliation. While at Oxford University he was involved in Liberal politics, being a member of the Russell Club and he was President of the Union.The Times, 29 May 1924 He was elected as Liberal MP for South Norfolk at the 1918 general election. Although he stood as a Coalition Liberal at that election he did not receive the Coalition coupon.
Maypole was one of the first web application frameworks for the Perl programming language that was based on the MVC pattern; its principal author was Simon Cozens. Catalyst started as a fork of Maypole, intended to become Maypole 3.0. Development ceased on Maypole, however, with its most recent release in April 2008, and Catalyst became its modern supported equivalent. The first development release of Catalyst took place on 28 January 2005.
Cozens began exploring music as a young child. He was playing the piano by ear when he was 3 years old and started music lessons at 11. Cozen's formal musical education included study in composition, arranging, orchestration, and film scoring at The Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA with George Monseur. Additional composition studies were with Ted Pease, George Cordeiro, John Bavichii and Lother Klein at The University of Toronto.
John "Matson" received a letter of marque on 29 June 1798. (Matson appears to be a transcription error for Watson.) Between 1799 and 1804 Christopher undertook five slaving voyages, almost one per year.Thomas Cozens: Liverpool Slave Ship Voyages Database A database of voyages by Liverpool-based slavers has John Watson gathering slaves on the Gold Coast in 1799 and carrying them to what is now British Guiana. Watson gathered 390 slaves.
In the East, Ernest Cozens of Penn was "one of the first of the roving centers," another, archaic term for the position, supposedly coined by Hank Ketcham of Yale. Walter E. Bachman of Lafayette was said to be "the developer of the "roving center" concept". Edgar Garbisch of Army was credited with developing the "roving center method" of playing defensive football in 1921. In professional football, Cal Hubbard is credited with pioneering the linebacker position.
Ken Barrington met his future wife Ann Cozens at a dance in Reading in 1952. She was a secretary for the local Education Department, taught at Sunday School and played netball. He proposed to her on a train to Reading and her father agreed to the marriage if they saved £500. As a result, they married on 6 March 1954 and honeymooned in Devon until Ken was called up for the Territorial Army at Salisbury.
As was her habit, Armatrading embarked on a tour to promote the album after its release. It was this tour that gave rise to her second live album, Live: All the Way from America, when a concert from the tour was recorded in Saratoga, California in June 2003. The band for the tour featured Armatrading on vocals and all guitars, Gary Foote on reeds, woodwinds, and percussion; and Spencer Cozens on keyboards.
Lorrimer travelled to Los Angeles to meet Terry Nation – who was now working as a Hollywood producer – to discuss the series' new format. Nation approved the changes but played little part in the development of this series. Director Mary Ridge returned, directing the first episode to ensure continuity with Series Three's closing episode Terminal. The other directors hired for the series were David Sullivan Proudfoot, Vivienne Cozens, Brian Lighthill and Viktors Ritelis.
He concluded that the loss should be borne with "rateable equality" between the two classes of beneficiaries. He approved the statement in Re Moore (1885) 54 LJ Ch 432 at 434: Romer LJ gave a concurring judgment, in which he also summarised the relevant legal authorities and agreed with the ultimate conclusion of Vaughan Williams LJ. Cozens-Hardy LJ confined himself to indicating he agreed with the earlier judgments and those principles.
The company was founded in the 1970s by Alan Cozens in a shed in his back garden in Rowlands Castle, Hampshire, England. The first product which proved very popular was the Trailing Log, a portable battery powered instrument that measures boat speed and distance run. Thousands of these early instruments are still in use today. Over the course of the 1980s and 1990s Stowe extended its activities into Integrated Instruments, Autopilots and Navigation Plotters.
William Thomas George Divers (1 September 1896 - 29 June 1978) was an Australian politician. He was born in Collingwood to brushmaker William Clinton Divers and Annie May Cozens. He attended the local state school and was a child actor until 1910. From 1910 to 1914 he was in the merchant navy; he served in the Royal Australian Navy from 1914 to 1918 during World War I and then returned to the merchant navy until 1920.
Quartetto Gelato is a Canadian classical crossover quartet with current members Colin Maier, Charles Cozens, Kirk Starkey, and Tino Konstantin Popovic, and based in Hamilton, Ontario. Their musical repertoire consists of a mix of classical masterworks with tangos, gypsy, klezmer, jazz, and folk songs from around the world. They usually play without musical scores and their performances include elements of humour and dance." Quartetto Gelato brimming with humour as well as fine musicianship".
In that year he began a correspondence with Selwyn Pearce Higgins about the discovery of historical records of the Tramway. This led to the publication of Cozens' 1955 book on the Plynlimon and Hafan. In 1949, he published the first of his histories on Welsh railways, about the Talyllyn Railway. These early books were self- published and were slim volumes, as printing paper was still rationed in the immediate post-war years.
He received bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of California in 1915 and 1918, respectively, and a Ph.D. at the University of Oregon in 1928. Cozens was employed by the University of California for nearly 40 years. He began as a teaching fellow and physical education instructor at Berkeley from 1915 to 1919. In June 1917, he was employed as an instructor of physical education at the University of California at Berkeley, California.
John Spurrell (1681/1682–3 January 1763) was mayor of Norwich in 1737. He served as alderman of South Consiford ward for nearly 40 years and was also sheriff of Norwich in 1728. Cozens-Hardy B. and Kent E. A., The Mayors of Norwich 1403 to 1835: being biographical notes on the Mayors of the old corporation (1938). His portrait by William Smith, dated 1758, hangs at St. Andrew's and Blackfriars' Hall in Norwich.
After the Missouri Compromise led to Missouri's admission as a slave state, Strother moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where Strother became receiver of public money.Encyclopedia of American Biography (1902) p. 902 Strother practiced law in St. Louis for many years. A nephew with the same name caused a sensation by stabbing a fellow lawyer from Virginia named Horatio Cozens to death in the courthouse over a political dispute on behalf of this George Strother.
Outside of academia, Pinker sat on the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) from 1991 to 2004 and as a Privacy Commissioner for a decade from 1994; he was acting chair of the PCC for the last year of his tenure. In 2005, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in recognition of his public service.Clare Cozens, "Pinker to step down at PCC", The Guardian, 29 July 2004. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
In collaboration with his keyboard player Spenser Cozens, Martyn wrote and performed the score for Strangebrew (Robert Wallace 2007), which won the Fortean Times Award at the London Short Film Festival in the same year. The film concept being a strong influence of the album design of Martyn's Heaven and Earth (2011). On 4 February 2008, Martyn received the lifetime achievement award at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards. The award was presented by his friend Phil Collins.
Methodist (Cozens-Hardy Collection) Mary Hardy resembled Woodforde in being a loyal adherent of the Church of England, until in the mid-1790s she adopted Methodism as well. For a while she attended both church and meeting house. A few years before her death she ceased Anglican worship and became a fervent follower of John Wesley — not in purpose-built chapels but in cottage meetings. In 1808 she opened a meeting house in her washerwoman’s small cottage.
The Burns-Johnson Fight (or Burns-Johnson Contest) is a 1908 documentary film of the boxing fight between Tommy Burns and Jack Johnson at Sydney Stadium, Rushcutters Bay, on 26 December 1908 for the World Heavyweight Championship title, which Johnson won. It was produced by Charles Cozens Spencer at the behest of the fight's promoted Hugh D. McIntosh. Some footage from the film survives today, chiefly of that showing some of the middle rounds of the 14-round fight.
In 1912, West's Pictures merged into Amalgamated Pictures, and then Amalgamated Pictures merged with Spencer's Pictures to create the General Film Company of Australasia. The following year this company combined with the Greater JD Williams Amusement Co, a large exhibition and film supply outfit, to create Union Theatres and Australasian Films.'A Brief History of the Greater Union Organisation' Greater Union website The company had a capital of £300,000; its first directors included William Gibson and Charles Cozens Spencer.
The writer William Fotheringham said: "The Scot was riding strongly but he was a member of the Viking team, Hercules' big domestic rival. When Cozens ordered him to drop back from the main group to support a team-mate during a mountain stage, Steel protested that he was not willing to sacrifice his own chances. He was threatened with expulsion and duly went home, his morale in tatters."Fotheringham, William (2005, Roule Britannia, Yellow Jersey (UK), , p.
However, his father is more likely to have been Thomas Bisse (d.1766) Drawing master of Christ's Hospital from 1754 to 1766, successor to Alexander Cozens, who mentions a son Thomas, a brother William, niece Joan, and late wife Susanna in his will.Prerogative Court of Canterbury PROB 11/916/349 (Bernard Lens II was also a Christ's Hospital Drawing Master). Dr. and Bishop Bisse were sons of Rev. John Bisse, Rector of Oldbury from 1659/60, co.
Jacob More, John Robert Cozens and Thomas Banks were among the fellow expatriate artists with whom Jones was friendly. His first commission in Italy was a landscape entitled Lake Albano – Sunset for the Earl-Bishop of Derry, who became Jones's most important patron. Jones made his first visit to Naples in September 1778, staying there for five months. He returned to Rome for a time, living in a house near the Spanish Steps built by Salvator Rosa.
Adolph Paul Oppé, (22 September 1878 – 29 March 1957) was an English art historian, critic, art collector and museum official.Oppé, Paul. Dictionary of Art Historians, "Oppé, Paul. Dictionary of Art Historians" Born in London, the son of a silk merchant, he was educated at Charterhouse, the University of St Andrews, and New College, Oxford. From 1902–5 he taught Greek and ancient history at the universities of St Andrews and Edinburgh, and from 1905–38 worked as a civil servant in the Board of Education. He also served (1906–7 and 1910–13) as Deputy Director of the Victoria & Albert Museum. Oppé was elected as a Fellow of the British Academy in 1952. Oppé was a distinguished collector of drawings, and monographs on Raphael and Botticelli, but subsequently concentrated on British art, particularly works on paper including those by William Hogarth, Alexander Cozens, John Robert Cozens, and Thomas Rowlandson, and wrote important catalogues on the English drawings in the Royal Collection at Windsor including those by Paul and Thomas Sandby.
An 18th-century depiction of Lake Nemi as painted by John Robert Cozens Diana NemorensisShe is Diana nemoralis in the poets: Ovid, Fasti 6.59; Lucan, 6.75; Martial, 13.19.1 and elsewhere. ("Diana of Nemi"), also known as "Diana of the Wood", was an Italic form of the goddess who became Hellenised during the fourth century BC and conflated with Artemis. Her sanctuary was to be found on the northern shore of Lake Nemi beneath the cliffs of the modern city Nemi (Latin nemus Aricinum).
During the Great Depression, Cozens and his wife, singer Winnifred Pitman, founded and directed the Toronto's Council Choir. He served as the conductor of several other Toronto-based choirs, including the Tallis Choir, which specialized in polyphonic music, from 1935 to 1965. In 1951 he and S. Drummond Wolff co-founded the Orpheus Choir of Toronto which performed for four seasons. In 1972 he began conducting the Ontario Civil Service Choir with whom he was still active in the 1990s.
In 1789 he published a set of Delineations of the General Character ... of Forest Trees. He submitted his work to the Royal Academy but it was entirely rejected, being judged as "not proper art". At the age of 42, three years before he died, he suffered a nervous breakdown and was committed to the Bethlem Royal Hospital asylum. The chief physician there was Dr. Thomas Monro who, also being a keen art collector, recognised Cozens' brilliance and bought his collection.
In this case I will, with your approbation, assume > command. Then our affairs will be concluded to the satisfaction of the whole > company, without being any longer liable to the obstruction they now meet > from the Captain's perverseness and chicanery.Pack, S (1964), p. 88 Cheap refused to sign Bulkley's letter, and armed seamen entered his hut on 9 October and bound him, claiming that he was now their prisoner and they were taking him to England for trial for the murder of Cozens.
Peter Cozens grew up and attended school in the United Kingdom. From 1964 to 1972 he served in the British India Steam Navigation Company. He saw service in the company's cadetship, general cargo ships, passenger and cruise liners and consequently visited many ports of call in the Indian Ocean and in Asia. From 1972 to 1993 he served in the Royal New Zealand Navy and saw service in both the Pacific and Indian Oceans, retiring at the rank of Commander.
In the Mishmi Hills In 1921 Bailey married Hon. Irma, daughter of Baron Cozens-Hardy. He was the Political Officer for Sikkim and Tibet, stationed in Gangtok (Sikkim) from June 1921 to October 1928, and he made annual visits to Tibet to inspect the Gyantse Trade Agency and visited Lhasa from 16 July to 16 August 1924, accompanied by the Medical Officer, Major J. Hislop IMS. He helped Frank Kingdon-Ward and Lord Cawdor in 1924 when he was a Political Officer in Gangtok, Sikkim.
In November 1724, Lord Tyrawley and Kilmaine married Mary Stewart, daughter of The 2nd Viscount Mountjoy. He had no children by this marriage but had at least two illegitimate children including Charles O'Hara, who followed him into the Army, and George Anne Bellamy, who became an actress. The diarist Sylas Neville mentions meeting a naval officer stationed at Great Yarmouth in 1771 "whose name is O'Hara, a natural son of Lord Tyrawley". Cozens-Hardy, B.: The Diary of Sylas Neville; Oxford University Press, 1950; page 93.
This painting was the only oil that Cozens exhibited at the Academy and was the inspiration for J. M. W. Turner's famous painting of 1812.C.R.Leslie "A Handbook for Young Painters" (1855) Between 1776 and 1779 he spent some time in Switzerland and Italy, where he drew Alpine and Italian views, and in 1779 he returned to London. In 1782 he made his second visit to Italy, accompanied by the author William Beckford, spending much time at Naples. In 1783 he returned to England.
In 1911 both of her parents and her former teacher Howard Pyle died and Elizabeth Shippen Green was married to Huger Elliott.Nudelman, 1990, pp. 36–37. Oakley had a major mural project in Harrisburg, the Pennsylvania state capitol, that kept her away from Cogslea for extended periods.Nudelman, 1990, p. 37. Smith had a 16-room house and studio that she called Cogshill built on property near Cogslea. She lived in what was her final homeNudelman, 1990, pp. 34–37, 141. with Cozens, her aunt, and her brother.
Robert John Pinsent (1797 in Newfoundland – 1876 in London, United Kingdom) magistrate and politician ran in the first general election held in Newfoundland in 1832 to represent the district of Conception Bay. He had lost to Charles Cozens, Peter Brown and Robert Pack in an election that took 4 days to complete the balloting. Pinsent, son of William Pinsent was born in the Conception Bay area into a wealthy merchant class. He was appointed magistrate in Brigus in 1836 then magistrate of Harbour Grace shortly after.
Wragg, David Airlift A History of Military Air Transport Shrewsbury Airlife Publishing 1986 p13Johnson, Brian & Cozens, H. I. Bombers The Weapon of Total War London Methuen 1984 p. 38 Vickers Victorias played an important part in the Kabul Airlift of November 1928 – February 1929, when they evacuated diplomatic staff and their dependents together with members of the Afghan royal family endangered by a civil war.Andrews and Morgan 1988, pp. 158–159. The Victorias also helped to pioneer air routes for Imperial Airways' Handley Page HP.42 airliners.
Marjorie Cox Crawford (née Cox; 1903–1983) was an Australian tennis player who reached at least the singles quarterfinals at the Australian Championships seven out of the nine times she played the event. Her best result was a runner-up finish in 1931, losing to Coral McInnes Buttsworth in three sets. Crawford teamed with Buttsworth in 1932 to win the women's doubles title at the Australian Championships. Crawford was the runner-up in that event in 1926 (teaming with Daphne Akhurst Cozens) and 1930 (teaming with Sylvia Lance Harper).
Wolf attended Chaparral High School, where he played on the Firebirds alongside among others future major leaguer and fellow outfielder Dylan Cozens, as the team won the Division I Arizona state title. He attended college at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, graduating with a bachelor's degree in Communications in 2016. In 2015 Wolf was named a Jewish Sports Review College Baseball All-American with, among others, first baseman Simon Rosenbaum and designated hitter/pitcher Jake Fishman. With Wolf playing in the outfield, the team won the 2016 NCAA Division III Baseball Championship.
Squadron Leader Cozens leading a formation of six new Spitfire Mk.Is of No. 19 Squadron, 31 October 1938 No. 19 Squadron was disbanded after the First World War on 31 December 1919.Rawlings 1978, p. 47. On 1 April 1923, the squadron was reformed at RAF Duxford with the Sopwith Snipe, initially operating as part of No. 2 Flying Training School (No. 2 FTS). After becoming independent No. 2 FTS, No. 19 Squadron remained at Duxford flying number of different fighters such as the Gloster Grebe, Armstrong Whitworth Siskin Mk.IIIa and the Bristol Bulldog Mk.IIa.
J.P., Thurning hall, Rev. John Fenwick, B.D., J.P., rector, Robert Brownsell, William Brownsell, Frederick Faircloth, Henry Hall, and Alfred Clark of Wood Dalling, farmers, George Burton, gamekeeper, William Harvey, farm bailiff, and Edwd. Poynton of Cray mere, blacksmith. At the census of 1891, the following surnames are recorded in the parish: Adams, Aldis, Allen, Barnes, Baxter, Breeze, Brownell, Clitheroe, Cottrell, Cozens, Faircloth, Frances, Frost, Gay, Girling, Hall, Hardingham, Hazelwood, Hipkin, Howell, Hubbert, Keeler, Knowles, Ladell, Lease, Meadows, Partridge, Plane, Plattan, Poynton, Ray, Scarff, Sexton, Shave, Shuton, Southgate, Strutt, Twiddy, and Wright.
Dovedale is named for the River Dove and it is long. Wright's paintings appear to be from nature, but in a letter of 1787 he said that he had observed moonlight and firelight only once at night and this was some time before he decided to create this series of paintings. However his preparatory sketches show that he was using a mixture of studies and chance. The unusual reversal of light and shade in the trees in the sketch of Dovedale is said to be after using techniques created by the Russian born Alexander Cozens.
Born in Tottenham, London, Cozens moved with his family to Canada in 1913 at the age of 7. At the age of 12 he began singing on the radio and performing as a church soloist; pursuits he was actively involved in from 1918 to 1950 in Toronto. At the age of 18 he entered the Toronto Conservatory of Music where he was a voice and conducting student of Francis Combe from 1924 to 1929. After graduating he pursued further studies privately with Nina de Gedeonoff from 1930 to 1935.
In 2002, Thomson and his father paid a world record price of $76.7 million to acquire Rubens' "Massacre of the Innocents", now the centrepiece of the Thomson Collection at the Art Gallery of Ontario. In 2012, Thomson shattered records buying a painting by Danish artist Vilhelm Hammershøi, "Ida Reading a Letter", paying the highest price ever for a Danish artist. In 2012, Thomson broke the record for the most expensive 18th-century British watercolour when he paid £2.4 million for a small landscape by John Robert Cozens. Thomson is an active acquirer of Canadian art.
Miss Lily Dampier and Mr Alfred Rolfe figured to much > advantage... a long series of beautiful bush spaces... gave realism and > distinction to the story. Charles Cozens Spencer would later make three other films based on Alfred Dampier play adaptations of novels set in colonial Australia, Captain Starlight, or Gentleman of the Road (1911), The Life of Rufus Dawes (1911) and The Romantic Story of Margaret Catchpole (1912). The first two were directed by Alfred Rolfe, but the third was made by Raymond Longford, whose early career was sponsored by Spencer.
1170950 It was also known as The Story of Rufus Dawes, or the Term of His Natural Life or The Convict Hero.The Convict Hero at IMDb The film was the third produced by Charles Cozens Spencer, based on a popular stage adaptation by Alfred Dampier and starring Alfred Rolfe, his wife Lily Dampier and Raymond Longford. ItThe others were Captain Midnight, the Bush King (1911) and Captain Starlight, or Gentleman of the Road (1911). Rolfe then left Spencer to work for the Australian Photo-Play Company under Stanley Crick.
In 1939, his father a civil servant also died, leaving Lewis £150 in his will. The unusual declaration in the will was reported in the Birmingham Daily Post, it said the bequest was "in view of the fact that I paid no premium for his career and he was no charge to me from the age of eighteen". During his holidays in Wales before and after World War Two, he explored the many minor railways of mid Wales. As early as 1944, Cozens was actively researching the history of the Plynlimon and Hafan Tramway.
He studied at the Royal Australian Naval Staff College and later at Victoria University of Wellington where he researched Asian culture and civilisation, graduating with a Master of Arts. In 1995 he was appointed as Administrator (or in some references Operations Manager) at the Centre for Strategic Studies under original Director Terence O'Brien. Following the departure of David Dickens in 2002, Cozens was promoted to Director. He also served as Executive Director of the New Zealand Membership Committee of the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific (CSCAP).
In 1760 he was among the contributors to the first public exhibition in London of works by living artists, held in the great room of the Society of Arts. The exhibition was organised by a body of artists who afterward divided into the "Free Society" and the "Incorporated Society of Artists". Cozens contributed to the exhibitions of both societies. In 1761 he obtained a prize from the Society of Arts at the exhibition in the Strand of the former, but he was one of the original members of the latter, incorporated in 1766.
Brooks née Kline was born in 1883 in Cleveland to Virgil P. Kline and Minerva E. Cozens Kline. She attended Hathaway Brown School and graduated from Vassar College in 1903. Her mother died during her early childhood, and her father married secondly Effie Hinckley Ober, a real estate investor and founder-manager of the Boston Ideal Opera Company. The summers of Brooks' youth were spent in Blue Hill, Maine, where her father and stepmother had founded a summer colony which attracted a number of prominent Clevelanders, including Walter Teagle.
Anthony Green was born on 30 September 1939 in Luton, Bedfordshire, and educated at Highgate School, London (where he was taught by Kyffin Williams) and the Slade School of Art (where he first met lifelong friend and fellow RA Ben Levene). In 1960 he moved to Paris and Châteauroux on a scholarship from the Government of France. He returned to England in 1961 and married Mary Cozens-Walker, with whom he has had two daughters, Kate and Lucy. His first one-man exhibition was held at the Rowan Gallery in 1962.
Charles Cozens Spencer eventually withdrew from Australian film production due to the formation of "the Combine" (which absorbed Spencer's old company). This left Longford without his main backer and he found it increasingly difficult to secure funding for a time. He went to work for the Fraser Film Release and Photographic Company for who he made a feature and a number of shorts, however they eventually ended the contract after Longford became involved in a lawsuit following the making of the highly popular The Silence of Dean Maitland (1914). Longford had an operation in March 1915.
In March 2013, Humes began hosting his own radio show, #FridayNightCapital on the Capital network on Friday evenings between 7pm and 10pm as the official start of "The Weekend Lives on Capital". On 5 January 2014, Humes replaced Rich Clarke on The Vodafone Big Top 40 with Kat Shoob, which airs on Sundays from 4pm to 7pm on Capital, Heart, and over 100 commercial music radio stations. He left the show in 2018. On 11 March 2016, Global announced that Humes would take control of the Capital Late Show, which runs Monday-Thursday 10pm-1am, to replace Will Cozens.
Sir Edward's first wife was Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Lord Brook of Cobham. There is a tablet in the same church in Norfolk, the same church where her mother rests, to Audrey: > Audrey daughter of William Hare, His only heir by law, and right, Of Thomas > Hobart, a wife very rare, And then to Sir Edward Warner, Knight. And last to > William Blenerhasset, Three cozens Germans, by God so assigned, Where - - - > - - - and lovely marriage was met, To live all in one, a rare thing to find. > Full ty's to them, a wife most true, To these a most good and loveing > mother;St.
She was appointed Commandant of the Army Nursing Corps Training Centre, Aldershot in 1955, awarded the Royal Red Cross in the 1958 New Year Honours, and served as Assistant Director of Army Nursing Services Eastern Command from 1958. Cozens was appointed Matron-in-Chief/Director of Army Nursing Services from 1960. On 23 July that year she was appointed Honorary Nursing Sister to The Queen. She was appointed a Commander of the Order of St John of Jerusalem July 1961, and a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1963 New Year Honours.
Spencer encouraged Australasian to enter feature production with The Shepherd of the Southern Cross but the film was not a success at the box office and Spencer was forced out of the company.Charles Cozens Spencer at Australian Dictionary of Biography Thereafter Australasian only produced movies sporadically until the mid-1920s when the company came under the stewardship of Stuart F. Doyle. In 1925 they purchased the Centennial Roller Skating Rink site at 65 Ebley St, Bondi Junction and converted it into a £60,000 film studio. They used it as a skating rink during the night and a studio during the day.
Though this is unlikely, the notion that he did so encouraged many later travelers to visit the place, including William Beckford, J. R. Cozens, William Wordsworth, Crabb Robinson, Frances Trollope, Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and Friederich Nietzsche. The Anglo-Italian monk, Enrico Hugford, became Abbot of Vallombrosa in 1743 and fellow Catholic, John Talman, seems to have visited even earlier. Derek Walcott also mentions Vallombrosa in chapter 33 section 2 of his Omeros. Derek Walcott has allusions to several historical moments and other literary works throughout the Omeros, and Shmoop suggests that this reference was inspired by John Milton.
In 1850, Sarah and Isaac Cozens arrived in Detroit and moved into a house near the corner of Congress and St. Antoine streets. At the time, there were only 60 Jews in Detroit (out of a population of over 21,000) and no synagogues. Sarah urged her co-religionists to establish a congregation, and on September 22, 1850, twelve Jewish families came together at the Cozens's home to found the "Beth El Society" (a Michigan Historical Marker now commemorates this siteMichigan Historical Marker : First Jewish Religious Services Informational Designation.). The congregation engaged the services of Rabbi Samuel Marcus of New York.
He was appointed a Judge of the High Court of Justice (Chancery Division) in November 1901, and knighted the following month. He held this office until 1913, when he was appointed a Lord Justice of Appeal, serving until 1918. The latter year he succeeded Lord Cozens-Hardy as Master of the Rolls. However, Eady's health soon began to decline and he resigned in the autumn of 1919. He had been admitted to the Privy Council in 1913 and on 1 November 1919 was raised to the peerage as Baron Swinfen, of Chertsey in the County of Surrey.
Both Blatt and Beck have developed measures to assess self- criticism and the experience of depression. In addition to the fact that many personality theorists classified self-criticism as marking a certain "type" of depression, it has been shown to be a risk factor for the development of depression. There has been a great deal of research assessing whether certain personality characteristics can lead to depression, among them self-criticism. In one study self-criticism was a significant predictor of depression in medical students, who go through extreme stress during and after medical school.Brewin, C.R., Firth-Cozens, J., Furnham, A., & McManus, C. (1992).
The notion that an old Tudor House had reputedly stood at the top of the hill between present-day Allison and Hewitt Roads and was apparently demolished in 1750 is most likely a misunderstanding: no historical evidence exists for an older building. Whilst Sherrington cites William Keane (see reference note below) as his reference for evidence of a Tudor House, Keane himself mentions only the fancy of a Norman castle on the site. Sadly, whether in maps or texts, no evidence exists for either. The last owners of the land, the Cozens family, sold it in 1789 to Edward Gray, a linen draper of Cornhill.
LouieHer name is commonly misspelt as "Louise" Mildred Bickerton Cozens (née Bickerton) (11 August 1902 – 6 June 1998) was a female tennis player from Australia. She was born in Clifton Hill, Victoria, Australia and won the women's doubles titles at the 1927, 1929, and 1931 Australian Championships. She won the mixed doubles title at those championships in 1935 and was the runner-up in the 1929 singles and 1935 women's doubles at that tournament. Perhaps Bickerton's biggest singles victory outside of Australia was her first round defeat of 44-year-old and eight time U.S. champion Molla Bjurstedt Mallory in the first round of Wimbledon in 1928.
Lord Reading CJ, Cozens- Hardy LJ, Phillimore LJ, Pickford LJ and Kennedy LJ, affirmed the decision too, holding there would be no offence.[1915] 1 KB 893, decided on 15 January 1915 They held the company did not change its character because of the outbreak of war. The say it, "remains an English company regardless of the residence of its shareholders or directors either before or after the declaration of war." Mr Gore-Browne argued, for Daimler Co Ltd, that the technicality should be swept aside in time of war. But Lord Reading CJ replied that the fact of incorporation was not just a ‘technicality’.
It includes watercolours by Alexander and John Robert Cozens, John Downman and Francis Towne and oils by Thomas Jones. From the nineteenth century there are works by John Constable, John Sell Cotman, George Richmond, J.M.W. Turner and John William Inchbold."Gifts & Bequests: Oppé Collection", "Gifts & Bequests: Oppé Collection", accessed 5 September 2017. In 1915 he catalogued a previously undocumented collection of watercolours by the artist Francis Towne that were inherited by Maria Sophia Merivale (1853–1928) and Judith Ann Merivale (1860–1945),Paul Oppé, Barton Place Catalogue, 1915, "Francis Towne catalogue raisonnée" which has formed the basis of a subsequent catalogue raisonné on the artist.
Capital FM produced three programs dedicated to this event: on 10 June 2017, it broadcast live backstage from 6am to 3pm with Rob Howard, Will Cozens and Jimmy Hill, then live coverage from Wembley from 3pm to 11pm by three presenters in order: Ant Payne, Vick Hope and The Bassman, and finally JJ ran an "Afterparty" edition until 2am at night; on the next day, JJ reviewed every best moment from the event on his slot 7-10pm. After this, the network moved back to normal programming. Highlights of the event were aired on Capital TV from 7:00pm to 10:30pm on the day of the ball.
Death, Frankie and Photon Belt (Musical group) Soundtrack for the film Future unseen Subversive Records, Port Melbourne, Vic, AUS, 1998 It includes contributions by musicians such as Gideon Cozens (Compost, Goat, Buttered Loaf) , Richie Poate (Dreadnaught) and Brad Herdson (Gerling, Sonic Emotion Explosion, Little Sky). Geoff Towner, in Revolver Street press, described it as 'acoustic space-folk, hip hop beats and electronic minimalism' saying that 'the production has a 70's T-Rex feel'.Geoff Towner, Revolver Street press, Sydney, Australia, 10 August 1998 A video clip was made by Simon Castelow (Sidesign) for the track 'Lovekult' and broadcast on ABCs' music video program rage on 8 May 1998.
Elizabeth Ryland-Priestley, still seething from William's remarks, contrived to believe that William had poisoned them by adding arsenic to the flour. This was impossible, of course, because William hadn't been near the house for a week, and the flour had been used every day; and all the family had fallen ill on the same evening. Elizabeth persuaded a local physician, Dr William Cozens (1760-1836) to examine their oral discharges, and the flour boxes in the kitchen. He found no trace of poison, and could only surmise that if the family's food had become adulterated, it could not have been by anything worse than an emetic such as tartar emetic.
As an accordionist, Cozens twice won the Open Canadian Accordion Championship in 1968 and 1969, and subsequently represented Canada in the Coupe Mondiale in 1969 in New York City, where he placed among the top ten concert accordionists in the world (Category 4). As a pianist, he has performed many recitals in both classical and jazz genres, including symphonic pops concerts with Henry Mancini, Ertha Kitt, and Cab Calloway. In 2018, Charles joined the world-touring Canadian classical crossover ensemble Quartetto Gelato as their regular accordionist and the duo JoyRide with oboist Colin Maier. JoyRide has been invited to perform at the 2020 International Double Reed Society conference in Iowa.
But, only three buildings were recorded in all Harringay up till nearly the end of the eighteenth century. On the site where Harringay House was to be built in 1792 (at the top of the hill between present-day Hewitt and Allison Roads) a fine Tudor mansion reputedly stood Whilst Sherrington cites William Keane (see reference note 14 in History of Harringay (1750–1880)) as his reference for evidence of a Tudor House, Keane himself mentions only the fancy of a Norman castle on the site. Sadly scant evidence exists for either. The last owner of the land, Ida Cozens, sold it in 1789 to Edward Gray, a linen draper of Cornhill.
Many of the greatest watercolourists of the period are represented, including John Robert Cozens, David Cox, Peter De Wint, John Sell Cotman, John Varley and Edward Lear as well as J. M. W. Turner's watercolours The Passage of Mount St. Gotthard and Windermere (1821). In 2011 a triptych of Lady Anne Clifford, entitled The Great Picture (currently (2011) in the ownership of the Lakeland Arts Trust) went on display. The Victorian art critic and social commentator, John Ruskin, lived in the Lake District and the gallery has one of the most comprehensive collections of his drawings and watercolours. The modern collection concentrates more on painting but has sculptures by Barbara Hepworth, Jean Arp, and Elisabeth Frink.
The line turns to the north through the cutting and emerged to cross the Twymyn on a wooden bridge. On the north side of the bridge, the line continued to head north east and climbed uphill at 1 in 83 to arrive at just over a mile from Cemmes Road. On the north side of the station the railway crossed the Afon Dyfi on a low bridge and continued straight across the floodplain of the river. As it passed Dol-y-fonddu Farm the line turned to run due north along the valley. Cozens 2004, page 11 As the valley narrowed, the line kept to the west bank of the Dyfi, curving to follow the meanders of the river.
The exterior face of West Gate Canterbury's city walls in the 21st century are a mixture of survivals from the multiple periods of building, from Roman to the 20th century, but the majority of the visible walls are medieval in origin. Over half the original circuit survives, and archaeologists Oliver Creighton and Robert Higham consider it "one of the most magnificent in Britain". Of the original 24 medieval towers along the walls, 17 remain intact, and one entranceway into the city, the West Gate, also survives. North Gate was destroyed in the 19th century, but its former location is marked by a "Cozen Stone", a marker laid down by amateur archaeologist Walter Cozens in the interwar years.
Huquier 1785 (Cozens-Hardy Collection) The Hall, malthouse and malt-kilns stood on the riverbank. William Hardy made the bold decision in 1784 to convert his maltings and brewery to water power, all the stages of the work being recorded in his wife’s diary. Until then the malt had been crushed by an elderly horse harnessed in a horse gin. The brewer cut a brick-floored channel from the River Glaven to run under his malthouse, through the brewery yard, and under the main Cromer road to rejoin the river flowing north at the point just downstream of the road bridge built in 1818 by his son William Hardy junior (1770–1842).
Elizabeth Ryland-Priestley's ridiculous and spiteful outburst was reported in the Reading Advertiser on Saturday 26 April 1800, preceded by gory accounts of cases of parricide in France by children anxious to demonstrate their revolutionary zeal.Extracted from William Cobbett's The bloody buoy (Philadelphia, 1796). Gotlobb Jungmann published a German edition: Die Blut-Fahne (Reading PA, 1797). The story was a flash in the pan and soon forgotten, however, although Dr Cozens did not find any tartar emetic, nor had he the means to test for it, some modern historians, misreading contemporary accounts, have either repeated Elizabeth's allegation,Jenny Graham, "This unhappy country of ours; Extracts of letters, 1793-1801, of Theophilus Lindsey"; 'Enlightenment & Dissent', no.
Her meticulous recording lifts her from the obscurity in which she and her extended circle lived and gives insight into the forces to which they were exposed. Huquier (Cozens-Hardy Collection) Her husband William Hardy was born on 26 January 1732 at Scotton, near Knaresborough, in the West Riding of Yorkshire; he died 18 August 1811 at his daughter's farmhouse at Sprowston, near Norwich, Norfolk. He probably met his future wife while posted to East Dereham, a few miles from Whissonsett, during his years as an excise officer 1757–69. His official duties brought him into contact with maltsters, brewers, tanners and other rural manufacturers; his wife seems to have been most at ease with this "middling-sort" class, and they had few gentry friends.
Anna Lea Merritt, a member of The Plastic Club, wrote in Lippincott's Magazine, that "The chief obstacle to a woman's success is that she can never have a wife... It is exceedingly difficult to be an artist without this time-saving help." Alice Carter, author of The Red Rose Girls: An Uncommon Story of Art and Love describes their work and relationships in detail. The activities of Henrietta Cozens, who took on the role of "wife" in the day-to-day management of the household, were both important and recognized by the other members of the group. Throughout their years together the four women formed intimate bonds of friendship and love and enriched each other's professional lives by sharing ideas and inspiration.
Korean version of the Chinese literati style by Jeong Seon who was unusual in often painting landscapes from life. Most early landscapes are clearly imaginary, although from very early on townscape views are clearly intended to represent actual cities, with varying degrees of accuracy. Various techniques were used to simulate the randomness of natural forms in invented compositions: the medieval advice of Cennino Cennini to copy ragged crags from small rough rocks was apparently followed by both Poussin and Thomas Gainsborough, while Degas copied cloud forms from a crumpled handkerchief held up against the light.Clark, 26 The system of Alexander Cozens used random ink blots to give the basic shape of an invented landscape, to be elaborated by the artist.
The Hay Wain by John Constable is an archetypal English painting. In England, landscapes had initially been mostly backgrounds to portraits, typically suggesting the parks or estates of a landowner, though mostly painted in London by an artist who had never visited his sitter's rolling acres. The English tradition was founded by Anthony van Dyck and other mostly Flemish artists working in England, but in the 18th century the works of Claude Lorrain were keenly collected and influenced not only paintings of landscapes, but the English landscape gardens of Capability Brown and others. In the 18th century, watercolour painting, mostly of landscapes, became an English specialty, with both a buoyant market for professional works, and a large number of amateur painters, many following the popular systems found in the books of Alexander Cozens and others.
John Philip Cozens Kent, (28 September 1928 – 22 October 2000) was a British numismatist. He was born the son of a railway official in Hertfordshire and educated at Minchenden Grammar School and University College, London, where he was awarded a BA in 1949 and a PhD in 1951. After two years National Service he was appointed Assistant Keeper in the British Museum’s Department of Coins and Medals. There his main interest was the coins of the late Roman Period, contributing to the reference book on Late Roman Bronze Coinage which was published in 1960. Other work covered the reclassification of imitative coins of the Dark Ages in the 5th century, assisting on the dating of the Sutton Hoo burial ship and the use of gold coinage in the late Roman Empire.
Cozens-Hardy and Henry Mason Bompas secretaries. After the president's inaugural address Ranyard read the first paper, 'On Determinants'. The new association received the support of eminent mathematicians, and ultimately developed into the present London Mathematical Society. Proceeding to Cambridge, Ranyard entered Pembroke College in October 1865, and graduated M.A. in 1868. Adopting the law as his profession, he was called to the bar (Lincoln's Inn) in 1871; but his tastes lay in the direction of science, and his means enabled him to devote much of his time to astronomy. He became a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1863, was a member of the council (1872–88 and 1892–4), and was secretary (1874–80). He was assistant secretary of the expedition for observing the total solar eclipse of 1870, and made a successful series of polariscopic observations in Sicily.
225 Upon securing the main players, trial was set for Tuesday 15 April 1746, presided by Vice Admiral of the Red Squadron James Steuart. Much of what happened on the day land was first sighted off Patagonia as recounted here came out in sworn testimonies, with statements from Cheap, Byron, Hamilton, Bulkley, Cummins and King (who had also returned to England, under unknown circumstances) and a number of other crew members. Cheap, although keen to charge those who abandoned him in the Speedwell with mutiny, decided not to make any accusations when it was suggested to him that any such claims would lead to his being accused of murdering Midshipman Cozens. None of the witnesses was aware at this point that the Admiralty had decided not to examine events after the ship foundered as part of the scope of the court martial proceedings.
Born in Great Dunmow, Essex, he was the only surviving child of the landowner Sir George Beaumont, 6th Baronet, from whom he inherited the baronetcy in 1762 (see Beaumont baronets) and Rachel [nee Howland] daughter of Michael Howland of Stone Hall, Matching Green. Beaumont was educated at Eton College, where he was taught drawing by the landscape painter Alexander Cozens. Claude, 1646), Beaumont's favourite painting The first paintings to enter Beaumont's collection were by artists he knew, but a Grand Tour which he undertook in 1782 with his wife Margaret (the daughter of John Willes M.P., of Astrop, Oxon and granddaughter of Sir John Willes M.P., Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas) widened his taste to include the Old Masters. On his return he began to assemble a collection of Old Master paintings despite his relatively modest means.
From the mid-1920s to the time of the 1936 fire the complex was rented and used by a motor haulage firm, Warne & Bicknell; two of their lorries and a steam wagon were destroyed in the fire. The Cozens-Hardys bought the site back in 1943, when it had recently been reduced on the northern side as part of road-widening to ease the dangerous bend by the brewery. From 1992 various development plans were projected by successive owners, culminating in the restoration of the deteriorating buildings and the conversion to domestic housing of all the parts of the maltings and brewery, except the kilns, by D. and M. Hickling Properties Ltd from 2013 to 2015. The channel from the river to the tunnel for the former waterwheel can still be seen in the yard by the malthouse west wall as an ornamental water feature.
Cozens has guest conducted many of Canada's symphony orchestras including The Victoria Symphony, Vancouver Symphony, Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, Calgary Philharmonic, Regina Symphony Orchestra, Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony, Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra, Mississauga Symphony, Symphony Nova Scotia, as well as the National Arts Centre Orchestra and members of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. He has also conducted and recorded in Russia with the Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Russian National Cinema Orchestra, and members of the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra. In April 2013, he made his Cuban debut, guest-conducting the Orquesta de Villa Clara (Villa Clara Symphony Orchestra in Santa Clara, Cuba) in a program of orchestral dance music that included two of his own original compositions, Czardahora and Celtic Fantasia, and his compilation of works by Astor Piazzolla entitled Hommage à Piazzolla, for violin and orchestra."Accordion Champ to Conductor: Hamilton Man Leads Cuban Orchestra".
Founded in 1983 to rival Thrasher magazine with a slogan of "skate and create" as opposed to "skate and destroy", TWS was intended as a more accessible alternative to Thrasher Magazine. For example, a December 1982 Thrasher article, "Skate and Destroy" written by C. R. Stecyk III under the pen name "Lowboy", was criticized. A February 1983 advertisement for Independent Trucks, featured a topless female model with the brand's decals displayed on her breasts. The public release of Transworld Skateboarding occurred under the ownership of Peggy Cozens and Larry Balma, owner of the Tracker Trucks brand. Initially, the magazine's editorial teams were known collectively as the "United Skate Front", and Balma later spoke of the magazine’s beginnings as a reaction to Thrasher, explaining in a 2003 Union-Tribune interview: "They were pretty harsh, sex and drugs and using four-letter words and all that and in the early '80s, the sport started growing and [Thrasher] wasn't the best magazine for young kids".
Once the schooner was ready, however, events happened quickly. Bulkley set the wheels in motion by drafting the following letter for the captain to sign: > Whereas upon a General Consultation, it has been agreed to go from this > Place through the Streights of Magellan, for the coast of Brazil, in our way > for England: We do, notwithstanding, find the People separating into > Parties, which must consequently end in the Destruction of the whole Body; > and as also there have been great robberies committed on the Stores and > every Thing is now at a Stand; therefore, to prevent all future Frauds and > Animosoties, we are unanimously agreed to proceed as above-mentioned.Pack, S > (1964), p. 87–88 Baynes was presented with the letter to read, after which he said: > I cannot suppose the Captain will refuse the signing of it; but he is so > self-willed, the best step we can take, is to put him under arrest for the > killing of Mr. Cozens.
The Riot Compensation Act 2016 entitles victims who suffer damage from rioting to compensation for uninsured property. Second, using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour, including on signs, is an offence if this could make people believe they will suffer immediate unlawful violence,Public Order Act 1986 s 4 or if it causes or is likely to cause "harassment, alarm or distress."Public Order Act 1986 s 4A-5 Insults did not include anti-apartheid protests at Wimbledon that spectators resented,Brutus v Cozens [1973] AC 854 and did not include books, such as Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses where the immediacy of any result is lacking.R v Horseferry Road Magistrate, ex p Siadatan [1991] 1 QB 260 Third, harassment is an offence under the Protection from Harassment Act 1997 section 4 if it causes someone to fear on two or more occasions that violence will be used against them.Oxford University v Broughton [2004] EWHC 2543, injunctions against animal rights activists.
His son, Sir John Witt, later gave more English watercolours and drawings to the Gallery. In 1958 Pamela Diamand, the daughter of Roger Fry (1866–1934), the eminent art critic and founder of the Omega Workshops, donated his collection of 20th-century art including works by Bloomsbury Group artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant. In 1966 Mark Gambier- Parry, son of Major Ernest Gambier-Parry, bequeathed the diverse collection of art formed by his grandfather, Thomas Gambier Parry, which ranged from Early Italian Renaissance painting to majolica, medieval enamel and ivory carvings, and other types of art (see section below). Dr William Wycliffe Spooner (1882–1967) and his wife Mercie added to the Gallery's collection of English watercolours in 1967 with a bequest of works by John Constable, John Sell Cotman, Alexander and John Robert Cozens, Thomas Gainsborough, Thomas Girtin, Samuel Palmer, Thomas Rowlandson, Paul Sandby, Francis Towne, J. M. W. Turner, Peter De Wint and others.
One source indicates this was because he was late entering the field.Trevor Wilson, The Downfall of the Liberal Party, 1914-1935; Cornell University Press, 1966 p158 He then chose to take the Coalition whip in Parliament. William's political stance in the election has been described as a "...conventional Coalition programme: support for Lloyd George and harsh peace with Germany, jobs and houses for the returning soldiers all topped off with expressions of concern about agriculture and repeated references to his own Norfolk roots." David Cannadine, Aspects of Aristocracy: Grandeur and Decline in Modern Britain, Chapter 8: Landowners, Lawyers and Litterateurs, the Cozens-Hardys of Letheringsett; Penguin, 1994 pp 193-194 When William succeeded his father to the peerage he had to stand down from the House of Commons and in the by-election of 27 July 1920 which followed, his seat was won by George Edwards, the Labour candidate with the Liberal vote split between Lloyd George Coalition Liberal and Asquithian Independent Liberal candidates.
A landscape artist, Waterloo also produced many etchings which increased his popularity and extended his influence into the next century and beyond to the French Barbizon painters of the mid-19th century. While many of Waterloo's larger etchings and drawings (some almost the size of his paintings) are careful in their depiction of the smallest, individual detail, his smaller drawings of mountain valley views often feature an impressionistic group of forms as atmospheric perspective leads the eye into the hilly distance along a characteristically Baroque zig- zag course.Mountain Valley Landscape which in 2009 entered the collection of Columbia Museum of Art in South Carolina Such drawings may have been known to the English landscape etcher John Robert Cozens and, in turn, may have had a stylistic impact upon the young J.M.W. Turner. His art dealership exposed him to the work of a number of respected contemporary landscape artists such as Jacob van Ruisdael, Simon de Vlieger, Roelant Roghman, and Caesar van Everdingen, from whom he absorbed a variety of influences.
In 1953 the BSA Professional Cycling Team was managed by Syd Cozens. Successes were 5/6 April Bournemouth Two Day Road Race, 1st Bob Maitland, 12 April Dover to London 63 Miles Road Race, 1st Stan Jones, 31 May Langsett 90 Miles Road Race, 1st Bob Maitland and “King of the Mountains”, 7 June Tour of the Wrekin, 1st Bob Maitland, 12 July Severn Valley 100 Miles Road Race, 1st “Tiny” Thomas, 19 July Jackson Trophy, Newcastle, Team Prize, 9 August Les Adams Memorial 80 Miles Road Race, 1st Alf Newman, Team Prize, “King of the Mountains” Arthur Ilsley, 30 August Weston-Super-Mare 100 Miles Grand Prix, 1st Bob Maitland, Team Prize. The team also competed in the 1,624 mile, 12 stage, 1953 Tour of Britain Road Race. The 1953 line up had changed as Arthur Ilsley replaced Pete Proctor in the team. “Tiny” Thomas won the overall individual classification, the Team were runners-up in the team competition and Arthur Ilsley was 3rd in the “King of the Mountains” competition.
Horne's friend, Barry Took, considered that "Horne's rich, fruity voice and warm patrician manner made him the ideal link man and that, coupled with a mischievous sense of humour, ensured that any programme in which he was involved was the better for his presence". Horne attributed his voice and delivery "to 'the Grace of God', his grandfather Lord Cozens-Hardy, the former Master of the Rolls, and the hard training of being 'a jovial chap among the golf and motoring fraternity'." The obituarist for The Times highlighted Horne's "remarkably skilful but very personal comic technique" of playing "a friendly good-natured old buffer who was simply doing his best, apparently lost in wonder, at the glossier, more spectacular talents of those among whom he found himself". The media analysts Frank Krutnik and Steve Neale see a similar role, and consider that "Horne functioned, like [Jack] Benny, [Fred] Allen and [Tommy] Handley before him, as a 'stooge' rather than a joke- wielder, frequently switching roles between announcer and in-sketch performer".
Portrait of Walther von der Vogelweide from the Codex Manesse (Folio 124r) Ir sult sprechen willekomen is a poem by Walther von der Vogelweide. Thematically, it does neither fully belong to the Minnesang nor to the Sangspruchdichtung, but it commingles both forms. In the 19th century, the poem was rediscovered by German nationalists and even served as an inspiration for Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben and his "Deutschlandlied". Since 1973, Alois Kircher's theory that Walther in this poem was repudiating an attack by Peire Vidal, who had denigrated the Germans in his 37th ChansonAlamans trob deschauzitz e vilans ; E quand negus si feing esser cortes, Ira motals cozens et enois es ; E lor parlars sembla lairar de cans… "I find the Germans undistinguished and crude; when one of them makes pretensions to be courteous, It is a mortal punishment and a painful sorrow, and their speech is like the barking of dogs." and had praised Provence as the land "from the Rhône to Vence, and from the sea up to the Durance," has gained general acceptance.
Blake's artist friends included neoclassicist John Flaxman (1755-1826), and Thomas Stothard (1755-1834) with whom Blake quarrelled. In the popular imagination English landscape painting from the 18th century onwards typifies English art, inspired largely from the love of the pastoral and mirroring as it does the development of larger country houses set in a pastoral rural landscape. Two English Romantics are largely responsible for raising the status of landscape painting worldwide: John Constable (1776-1837) and J. M. W. Turner (1775-1851), who is credited with elevating landscape painting to an eminence rivalling history painting. Other notable 18th and 19th century landscape painters include: George Arnald (1763-1841); John Linnell (1792-1882), a rival to Constable in his time; George Morland (1763-1804), who developed on Francis Barlow's tradition of animal and rustic painting; Samuel Palmer (1805-1881); Paul Sandby (1731-1809), who is recognised as the father of English watercolour painting; and subsequent watercolourists John Robert Cozens (1752-1797), Turner's friend Thomas Girtin (1775-1802), and Thomas Heaphy (1775–1835). The early 19th century saw the emergence of the Norwich school of painters, the first provincial art movement outside of London.
The magazine’s recent history has been troubled with a succession of editorial makeovers, relaunches and sudden departures. The magazine was left without an editor for five months from September 2006, following the abrupt resignation of Elsa McAlonan, just a few months after her second revamp of the title during her four years in charge. In 2007, Karen Livermore was brought in from Family Circle, another magazine within the IPC stable. Her £2 million facelift failed to stem a long-term slide in circulation that saw weekly sales slipping towards 340,000 by the end of 2007, down from 450,000 in 2005 and well behind the market leader, Take A Break, circulation over 1 million.Chris Tryhorn "Bella sales hit a flat note", The Guardian, 14 February 2008Claire Cozens "Celebrity mags still on the rise", The Guardian, 17 February 2005[] In 2008, the accuracy of the magazine’s health and medical reporting was the subject of a Press Complaints Commission enquiry with its journalistic ethics and its treatment of case studies questioned in the mainstream press. ("Jackie’s tale sets alarm bells ringing: how Woman’s Own sexed up Addison’s disease for its own ends.").
Until the end of the 19th century, it seems to have been generally assumed that the general meeting (of all shareholders) was the supreme organ of a company, and that the board of directors merely acted as an agent of the company subject to the control of the shareholders in general meeting.Gower, Principles of Company Law (6th ed.), citing Isle of Wight Rly Co v Tahourdin (1884) LR 25 Ch D 320 However, by 1906, the English Court of Appeal had made it clear in the decision of Automatic Self-Cleansing Filter Syndicate Co Ltd v Cuninghame [1906] 2 Ch 34 that the division of powers between the board and the shareholders in general meaning depended on the construction of the articles of association and that, where the powers of management were vested in the board, the general meeting could not interfere with their lawful exercise. The articles were held to constitute a contract by which the members had agreed that "the directors and the directors alone shall manage."Per Cozens-Hardy LJ at 44 The new approach did not secure immediate approval, but it was endorsed by the House of Lords in Quin & Axtens v Salmon [1909] AC 442 and has since received general acceptance.

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