Bert Lyons may refer to:
Albert Thomas Lyons was a professional footballer who played at full-back for Port Vale, Walsall, Clapton Orient, Tottenham Hotspur and Colwyn Bay. One of four brothers, two of his siblings also played League football.
Charles Albert Lyons was General Secretary of the Transport Salaried Staffs' Association (TSSA) and a member of the General Council of the Trades Unions Congress.
Albert Harold Lyons was an American professional baseball player. He appeared in 39 Major League Baseball games as a pitcher in 1944 and from 1946 to 1948 with the New York Yankees, Pittsburgh Pirates and the Boston Braves. He also appeared in five games as an outfielder and 16 more as a pinch hitter, compiling a .293 MLB career batting average, with one home run, three doubles, and nine runs batted in.
Herbert Ernest Saxon Bertie Cordey Lyon, known as Bertie or Bert Lyon, was an English footballer. Although predominantly an inside forward or centre forward, Mosborough-born Lyon played in most positions throughout his career. He never stayed at the same club for more than two consecutive seasons; during his career he played for Overseal Town, Gresley Rovers, Leicester Fosse, Nelson, Watford, Reading, West Ham United, Brighton & Hove Albion, Swindon Town, Carlisle United, Blackpool, Walsall and Tredegar.
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De Benneville "Bert" Bell was the National Football League (NFL) commissioner from 1945 until his death in 1959. As commissioner, he introduced competitive parity into the NFL to improve the league's commercial viability and promote its popularity, and he helped make the NFL the most financially sound sports enterprise and preeminent sports attraction in the United States (US). He was posthumously inducted into the charter class of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Robert Walker may refer to:
Albert Smith may refer to:
Prior to the 1917 federal election in Canada, the Liberal Party of Canada split into two factions. To differentiate the groups, historians tend to use two retrospective names:
Bert is a hypocoristic form of a number of various Germanic male given names, such as Robert, Albert, Herbert, Gilbert, Norbert, Bertram, Berthold, Isanbert, and probably Colbert.
Bertram Hays Jones is a former American football quarterback who played in the National Football League (NFL) for the Baltimore Colts and the Los Angeles Rams. At Ruston High School in Ruston, Louisiana, he was given the nickname, "The Ruston Rifle." Jones played college football at Louisiana State University (LSU). He is the son of former NFL running back Dub Jones of the Cleveland Browns. He was named the NFL Most Valuable Player in 1976 with the Colts. In 2016, Jones was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.
Toft is a placename and surname of Norse origin. Place-names ending in -toft are usually derivations of the Old Norse word topt meaning ″site of a house, farm″. As a place-name and place-name particle, it occurs in Denmark and Scania, in England, Shetland and Schleswig-Holstein, Germany,, in Sweden, in Iceland and in Normandy, France,. Its root is Proto-Germanic *tumftō ″site of a house, farm″, itself from Indo-European *dm̥ptā́-, compound (*dm̥-pt-ā́-) with the roots *dm̥-, basis of *dem(ǝ)- « house » + *pt- < *pd- from *ped- « foot », related to Latin domus ″house″, dominus ″master″, dominium > domain.
Harrison Samuel "Sam" Francis was an American football player and coach, Olympic shot putter, and Army officer.
John Lyons may refer to:
Ron or Ronald Smith may refer to:
Albert Williams may refer to:
Thomas Walsh, Tom Walsh or Tommy Walsh may refer to:
Events from the year 1870 in Ireland.
Herbert Smith is a law firm based in London.
Carberry is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Albert Allen (1867–1899) was an English footballer.
Albert Richardson (1880–1964) was an English architect.
Albert, Alby or Bert Roberts may refer to: