Difference between revisions of "W.W. Stubbs"
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{{Infobox rai-fellow | {{Infobox rai-fellow | ||
| first_name = W.W. | | first_name = W.W. | ||
Latest revision as of 12:02, 22 January 2021
| W.W. Stubbs | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| File:Stubbs, W.W..jpg | |||||||
| Born | 1866 | ||||||
| Died | 1921 | ||||||
| Residence |
Assistant District Commissioner, Lagos [and, in 1917] 10 Bardwell Road, Oxford | ||||||
| Occupation |
administrative commissioner | ||||||
| |||||||
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
1908.05.04 proposed by R.E. Dennett, seconded by T.A. Joyce
death reported in Report of the Council for 1921
Notes From Elsewhere
possibly Walter William
William Stubbs (born in Knaresborough, Yorkshire in 1825) and Catherine Dellar (born in Navestock, Essex in 1838), who were married in the Ongar district of Essex on 20 June 1859. ... Helena Marian Stubbs, their second daughter, was born at Navestock on 6 October 1864, and her younger brother William Walter Stubbs was born there on 5 January 1866. Later In 1866 her father was appointed Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford, a position he was to hold until 1884.
... Catherine Stubbs was living at 37 Morpeth Mansions in Westminster in 1911 with Katherine (47) and just one servant; five of her nine sons were also still alive. She was probably the Mrs Stubbs who was living at 9 Bardwell Road in Oxford in 1936. She died in Oxford on 19 August 1942 at the age of 103 and was buried at Cuddesdon in the same vault as her husband on 22 August.