Fellows of the Royal Society elected in 1732. [1]
John Lowther, 1st Viscount Lonsdale, PC,, known as Sir John Lowther, 2nd Baronet, from 1675 to 1696, was an English politician.
Manuel John Johnson, FRS was a British astronomer.
William Bernard Robinson King, OBE MC FRS was a British geologist.
The title of Lord Pittenweem is a Scottish title of nobility. It was created by James VI as a barony in 1609 for Frederick Stewart. Fredrick Stewart assigned the title and lands of the Lordship and Barony to Thomas Erskine, Viscount Fenton, later 1st Earl of Kellie, in 1614. Between 1631 and 1672 the Lordship and Barony was held by the Crown. It was held "in place of the late lords" so that when the Barony and Lordship later passed to the 3rd Earl of Kellie it was not as a new creation but by an assignation of the Lordship and Barony.
John Freeman Loutit CBE FRS FRCP Also known as 'Ian'. was an Australian haematologist and radiobiologist.
Royal Institute of Public Health merged in 2008 with the Royal Society for Health to form Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH).
George William Cooke CBE FRS was a British chemist. He was the deputy director of Rothamsted Experimental Station from 1962 until 1975. He was Chief Scientific Officer of the Agricultural Research Centre from 1975 until his retirement in 1981. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1969, CBE 1975. He was educated at Loughborough Grammar School.
William James Lewis F.R.S. was a Welsh mineralogist.
William Valentine Mayneord, CBE FRS was a British radiologist and pioneer in the field of medical physics.
Andrew Richard Lang FRS CBE was a British scientist and crystallographer.
Yelvertoft and Stanford Park railway station was a railway station serving the village of Yelvertoft in the English county of Northamptonshire and the stately home of Stanford Hall nearby in Leicestershire. It was opened as Stanford Hall on the Rugby and Stamford Railway in 1850.
Lubenham railway station was a railway station serving Lubenham in the English county of Leicestershire. It was opened on the Rugby and Stamford Railway in 1850.
William Lewis FRS was a British chemist and physician. He is known for his writings related to pharmacy and medicine, and for his research into metals.
Philip Packer FRS was an English barrister and architect. He was a courtier to Charles II, and friend to Christopher Wren.
Joseph Glynn, FRS was a British steam engine designer.
Francis "Frank" Edgar Jones MBE FRS, was a British physicist who co-developed the Oboe blind bombing system.
Denis Henry Desty FRS was a British scientist and inventor, known primarily for his work in the fields of chromatography and combustion science.
The Gateshead and District Tramways operated a tramway service in Gateshead between 1883 and 1951.
Sir Alexander Haddow FRS FRSE was a Scottish physician and pathologist at the forefront of cancer research in the 1940s. He served as Director of the Institute of Cancer Research from 1946 to 1969. He was also President of the Universal Union Against Cancer.