Halifax Evening Courier: Monday 17th March 1924

Prospectus: Card Clothing and Belting Limited: … (long description of the company) … Solicitors for the Company: Messrs. Scholefield, Taylor & Maggs, Brunswick Street, Batley: for the Trustees: Messrs. Pinsent & Co., 6 Bennetts Hill, Birmingham. … (continues)


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Halifax Evening Courier: Tuesday 20th September 1932

“Painting the Place Red”: “It is outrageous that young visitors to Seaview should go about actually painting the place red.” said the presiding magistrate at Ryde, Isle of Wight., to-day, when Stephen Mackenzie, a Cambridge undergraduate, of Dorking. and Roger Pinsent, a public schoolboy, of Somerset, were charged with doing willful damage. It was alleged against them that late at night they painted statues of lions on the lodge gates of a large house at Seaview with blue and red paint and also daubed a Post Office pillar box with white paint. Through their parents, the boys apologized, and they were each fined 50s and 50s damage.

[see also Somerset Guardian and Radstock Observer: Friday 23rd September 1932]


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0754 Devonport: Roger Philip Pinsent: 1916 – 1997

Halifax Evening Courier: Wednesday 31st October 1934

Low Moor Foundry Withdrawn at Sale Works: With chequered career, when the Lowe Moor foundry Bradford, together with the plant and equipment, was in Bradford yesterday offered for sale by public auction a telegram was received which read: “In the event of no sale, prepared to purchase works and machinery complete for £6,000” … Pinsent and Co., Birmingham, were the solicitors concerned in yesterday’s sale. …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive
 

Halifax Evening Courier: Wednesday 19th September 1934

German Debt Negotiations: … The Anglo-German negotiations on Germany’s overdue debts, for imports of coal, textiles and other raw materials and unfinished goods, opened to-day at the Ministry of Economics. Sir Frederick Leith Ross, Chief Economic Adviser to the British Government, Mr. T. Q. Hill, of the Board of Trade, and Mr. H. G. S. Pinsent, Financial Counsellor to the British Embassy, represents Great Britain, Dr. Schacht, President of the Reichsbank, and Acting-Minister of Economics, is the principal German negotiator.


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

GRO0365 Devonport: Gerald Hume Saverie Pinsent: 1888 – 1976