5,178 research outputs found
John Blaheney, Colonial Secretary’s Office, Melbourne, letters to Major Edward butler, Bally Adams, Athy, Ireland.
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/205145137292
Item: [1963.0020.00004] "John Blaheney, Colonial Secretary’s Office, Melbourne, letters to Major Edward butler, Bally Adams, Athy, Ireland.
John Blaheney, Colonial Secretary’s Office, Melbourne, letters to Major Edward butler, Bally Adams, Athy, Ireland.
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/205146Notes low ebb in Walter Butler’s fortunes137293
Item: [1963.0020.00005] "John Blaheney, Colonial Secretary’s Office, Melbourne, letters to Major Edward butler, Bally Adams, Athy, Ireland.
John W. Butler Oral History
An oral history interview of military veteran John W. Butler originally conducted under the auspices of the Library of Congress Veterans History Project
Captain Edward Butler, Greenville, to Major John Mills, Adjutant General
Butler lists the charges made by Captain Jeffres against Major Hughs.Mills, Joh
Reference to index of papers of Charles Butler, son of Gamaliel Butler, and his family.
Gamaliel Butler (1783-1852), an attorney of Kings Bench (admitted 1808), and his wife Sarah Paine (1787-1870) came to Tasmania in 1824, to settle business affairs after the death by drowning of Sarah's brother, Edward Paine, who had emigrated in 1820. The Butlers had left their six surviving children (three others had died in infancy) in London in the care of relatives and they joined their parents in the 1830s. Six more children were born in Tasmania. The eldest son, Edward Paine Butler (1811-1849) and another son Charles (1820-1909) also became lawyers and joined their father in partnership with R.W. Nutt. Butler also acquired extensive property. He died in 1852 at his Hobart home, Stowell House.
Charles Butler (1820-1909) came to Tasmania in 1835 at the age of fifteen and completed his education in Tasmania at Longford Hall School under William Gore Elliston for one year and then under W.H. Wilmot (d.1842) for another year. In 1838 he was articled to the solicitor Robert Pitcairn in Hobart and was admitted a lawyer of the Tasmanian Supreme Court in 1843 and after his brother Edward's death in 1849 became a partner with his father in Butler, Nutt and Butler. He was president of the Southern Law Society from its foundation in1888 until 1907. In 1847 he married Georgina Wilmot (1819?-1880), daughter of his old schoolmaster W.H. Wilmot and his wife Eliza (Best), and they had ten children: Kate Geogiana (1849-1929), Edward Henry (1851-1928), Lucy Madeleine (1852-), Charles William (1854-1937), Francis Leicester (called Leicester 1856-1385), Ida Mary (1858-1949), Leila Chalmers (1859-), May Maria (1861-), Herbert Maxwell (1863-• }, Montague Howard (1868-1895).
Charles William Butler (1854-1937) was educated at Hutchins School and gained an Associate of Arts, first class in 1871and was admitted a lawyer in 1877. He then took a trip to N.S.W and to England and later joined the law practice of his father, elder brother, Edward Henry (AA 1867, admitted 1872) and John McIntyre, Butler McIntyre and Butler. He was a keen cricketer and played for Australia. He was Chairman of the Board of Management of Hutchins School 1912 -1937. Charles William Butler married Beatrice Maria Travers in 1882 and they had seven children, including Geoffrey Travers (1890-1962) and Charles Travers (1887-1974) who followed their father in the law. Charles' younger brother Francis Leicester Butler gained an AA in 1872 and was awarded a Tasmanian Scholarship in 1874 and went to St. John's College Oxford to study law in 1875-8, but died when he went to London again in 1885.
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Correspondence from Edward Kennedy to John Lewis, October 26, 1971
Correspondence from Edward Kennedy to John Lewis about supporting the promotional campaign of the Voter Education Project after the 1969 Tax Reform Act
Letter to John Butler and Eliza (Smith) Butler from Edward Ground
Edward Ground discusses the conditions in Oregon, the discovery of gold mines on the Columbia River, and the price of crops
The Historye of the Bermudaes or Summer Islands /
Includes index.Capain John Smith "may have made large use of Sloane ms. 750 ... but clearly he was not the author of that manuscript, which was written apparently by a governor previous to Governor Butler: ? by Governor Tucker"--Capt. John Smith ... Works ... ed. by Edward Arber, Birmingham, 1884, p. 624."Attributed in the introduction to John Smith, Governor of Virginia but written by Capt. N. Butler"--Brit. Mus. Catalogue.Mode of access: Internet
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