Birth name | Sidney Ellis | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 13 March 1859 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Lewisham, [1] London, England | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date of death | 1 December 1937 78) | (aged||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of death | (registered in) Croydon | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
School | Dulwich College | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Sidney Ellis (1859-1937) was a rugby union international who represented England in 1880.
Sidney Ellis was born on 13 March 1859 in Lewisham. He attended Dulwich College.
Ellis made his international debut on 2 February 1880 at Lansdowne Road in the Ireland vs England match which was won by England. This was the only test he played in.
Sir Sidney Lee was an English biographer, writer, and critic.
Charles Barry Jr. (1823–1900) was an English architect of the mid-late 19th century, and eldest son of Sir Charles Barry. Like his younger brother and fellow architect Edward Middleton Barry, Charles Jr. designed numerous buildings in London. He is particularly associated with works in the south London suburb of Dulwich.
Augustus Mongredien (1807–1888) was a corn merchant, also known as a political economist and writer. He was a leading amateur British chess master.
George Uglow Pope, or G. U. Pope, was an Anglican Christian missionary and Tamil scholar who spent 40 years in Tamil Nadu and translated many Tamil texts into English. His popular translations included those of the Tirukkural and Thiruvasagam.
Sir James Fergusson, 6th Baronet was a British soldier, Conservative politician and colonial administrator.
Colin Blackburn, Baron Blackburn, was a British lawyer and judge. The son of a Scottish clergyman, he was educated in Scotland and England, before joining the English bar. He was little known to the legal world before he was elevated from the junior bar to a puisne judgeship in the Court of Queen's Bench by Lord Campbell in 1859, a position he held until 1876, when he was appointed to the Court of Appeal. In October of that year, he was the first person to be appointed as a law lord under the provisions of the newly enacted Appellate Jurisdiction Act. He retired in 1886 and died ten years later.
D. Appleton & Company was an American publishing company founded by Daniel Appleton, who opened a general store which included books. He published his first book in 1831. The company's publications gradually extended over the entire field of literature. It issued the works of contemporary scientists, including those of Herbert Spencer, John Tyndall, Thomas Huxley, Charles Darwin, and others, at reasonable prices. Medical books formed a special department, and books in the Spanish language for the South America market were a specialty which the firm made its own. In belles lettres and American history, it had a strong list of names among its authors.
William Digby Seymour (1822–1895) was a British lawyer and poet, and MP for Sunderland and Somerset.
Sir Alexander James Beresford Beresford Hope PC, known as Alexander Hope until 1854, was a British author and Conservative politician.
Dursley railway station served the town of Dursley in Gloucestershire, England, and was the terminus of the short Dursley and Midland Junction Railway line which linked the town to the Midland Railway's Bristol to Gloucester line at Coaley Junction.
Queen's House was a 19th-century rugby football club that was notable for being one of the twenty-one founding members of the Rugby Football Union, as well as producing a number of international players in the sport's early international fixtures.
Thomas Beecham was a British businessman who founded Beechams, a large pharmaceutical business. In 1859, he focused on marketing the business by advertising in newspapers and using a network of wholesale agents in northern England and in London, rapidly building up the business. In August 1859, he created the slogan for Beecham's Pills: "Worth a guinea a box", which is considered to be the world's first advertising slogan, helping the company become a global brand.
George Henry Kendrick Thwaites was an English botanist and entomologist.
George Edward Ellis was a Unitarian clergyman and historian.
Ellen Elizabeth Ellis was a New Zealand feminist and writer. She was born in England and moved to New Zealand in 1859.
Joseph John Scoles (1798–1863) was an English Gothic Revival architect, who designed many Roman Catholic churches.
Frederick Startridge Ellis (1830–1901) was an English bookseller, publisher and author.
Marratt & Ellis Opticians was a company established in 1828 in London, England. Initially known as J S Marratt, then Marratt and Short, this optician's was situated at 63 King William Street, the northern end of London Bridge where King William Street meets Gracechurch Street. Marratt and Ellis was at one time a large business engaged in sight testing, dispensing spectacles, making artificial eyes and a supplier of optical and scientific instruments. There are many examples of opera glasses, thermometers, barometers and meteorological instruments etc. which are engraved with the company name.
John William Ellis MBE was a New Zealand businessman and mayor of Hamilton from 1917 to 1918.