Hull Daily Mail: Wednesday 4th September 1912

Mr. Philip Lloyd-Greame’s Marriage: The marriage of Mr. Philip Lloyd-Greame, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Greame, of Sewerby House, and Miss Mary Constance Boynton, only daughter of the Rev. Ingram and the late Hon. Mrs. Boynton, and niece of Sir Griffith Boynton, will take place at St. Mary’s Priory Church, Bridlington, to-morrow. The bride will be attended by Miss Frances Armytage, the Misses Gladys and Constance Boynton, the Misses Evelyn and Madeline Pedder her cousins), Miss Nancy Lloyd-Greame (niece of the bridegroom), Miss Violet Saville, Miss Nancy Coates, and one little girl, Miss Mary Wright. Mr. Roy Pinsent will be best man. 

[see additional, Hull Daily Mail: Thursday 5th September 1912 and Yorkshire Evening Post: Thursday 5th September 1912]

[see similar Yorkshire Evening Post: 5th September 1912]


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

GRO0768 Devonport: Roy Pinsent: 1883 – 1978

Hull Daily Mail: Tuesday 23rd February 1937

Prospectus: Smith & Nephew Associated Companies Limited: … 1,000,000 Ordinary Shares of 4s each at 8s 6d per share … … Solicitors: … To Seton Trust Limited: Pinsent & Co., 6 Bennetts Hill, Birmingham, and London.


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.


Hull Daily Mail: Tuesday 20th September 1932

Statues Painted: Magistrates and Youths’ Outrageous Conduct: “It is outrageous that young visitors to Seaview should go about actually painting the place red,” said the presiding magistrate at Ryde (I.O.W.) to-day when Stephen Mackenzie, a Cambridge undergraduate, of Dorking, and Roger Pinsent, public schoolboy, of Somerset, were charged with doing wilful damage. It was alleged against them that late at night they painted the statues of lions on the lodge gates of a large house at Seaview with blue and red paint and daubed a Post Office pillar box with white paint. Through their parents the boys apologised, and they were each fined 50s and 50s damage.

[see also Derby Daily Telegraph: Tuesday 20th September 1932, Evening Telegraph: Wednesday 21st September 1932 and Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette: Saturday 24th September 1932 and Portsmouth Evening News: Tuesday 20th September 1932]

[see also Sheffield Daily Telegraph: Wednesday 21st 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

Hull Daily Mail: Friday 16th October 1931

Hull College Lecture:  A lecture demonstration on the staining of leather was given in the design department at the Hull College of Art and Crafts, yesterday evening, before an audience composed mainly of teachers and college students. The lecturer, Mr. Pinsent, introduced an entirely new method of colouring leather, namely, the application of pigment finish in the place of aniline dye. A vote of thanks was accorded the lecturer upon the motion of Mr. F. Mayor, M.A., headmaster of the Grammar School, and R. Somerscales. The chair was taken by the principal (Mr. E. A. Sallis Benny).


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

GROxxxx Tiverton (?)

Hull Daily Mail: Wednesday 10th July 1895

Mr. Tasker as “McGoosley”: Further Evidence To-day: The hearing of the Tasker Divorce suite was resumed this morning, Mr. Tasker cross-examined, said he taunted his wife with being a butcher’s daughter, because she wanted to make out she had so many swell friends. He accompanies his wife to one of the masquerade balls, dressed as Mr. McGoosley, in Ally Sloper (laughter). Miss Tasker deposed to stopping at hotels with Mrs. Tasker when Paton was there. Mrs. Tasker was always about with one man or the other. Witness never saw any act of familiarity or impropriety either with Mr. Paton or Lowe. Ellen Pinsent, formerly a chambermaid at a Plymouth hotel, said that when the parties stayed there, Mr. Paton occupied a bedroom opposite Mrs. Tasker’s. Two- or three-nights Paton’s bed was not occupied, and Mrs. Tasker’s looked as if two had slept there. She once saw Mr. Paton coming out of Mrs. Tasker’s bedroom, and thought they were married people. Cross-examined: She did not know that the gentleman some nights went to Torquay.

[see similar Dundee Courier: Thursday 11th July 1895: & Nottingham Evening Post, Wednesday 10th July 1895] [see also South Wales Daily News: 11th July 1895]


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

GRO0247 Hennock: Ellen Maud Pinsent: 1872 – xxxx (?)