'To Do' list for Northernhenge
  • Find out about todo lists
  • Charlotte Mason College
  • Gilbert Colville
  • Waterfalls by name (force etc)
  • Plymouth redevelopment

Do not delete

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Other sandbox pages

Fairy tales without ATU categories

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To here

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Lizzy Watts

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Chart (data changed to fit)

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Previews ok but published display mangled at bottom

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Top
High
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  •   Featured articles
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Wampool

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This section contains an OSM Location map template

River Wampool
 
 
5km
3miles
 
Biglands
 
Wampool
 
Micklethwaite
 
Angerton
 
Chalkfoot
 
Anthorn
 
Wavergillhead
 
Cardew Mires
 
The Chalk from Wavergillhead becoming the Wampool north of Chalkfoot. Inset is the former Allerdale district.

Karen Archer

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Also

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Kate Kennedy

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Eva Amaral

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https://elpais.com/cultura/ruta-norteamericana/2023-08-10/eva-amaral-la-frontwoman-que-marco-al-pop-espanol-en-el-siglo-xxi.html

How to do stuff

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List from categories

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Replying to comments

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Here is a comment

here is a reply
and another
and another
Here is a term to define
and a definition
and another
and another

Tabular data

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Variables

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Tests

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  • True result from a condition.
  • incategory:"Pages containing cite templates with deprecated parameters" insource:/\|\s*month\s*=\s*[A-Z\d]/

Conversions

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  • fifteen kilometres (9 miles)

Maths notation

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CheckPage

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:AutoWikiBrowser/CheckPage Northernhenge (talkcontribsnon-automated contribswikicheckercounttotallogspage movesblock logemail)

References

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Citing a paper[1] {{wayback}} can create these links for you; use the 'url' and 'date' parameters to specify the URL and date. For example:

Note that the date parameter defaults to '*'.[2]

Vandalism templates

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  • Vandalism
  • {{subst:uw-vandalism1}} ~~~~
  • {{subst:test|}} ~~~~ (unintentional vandalism/test)
  • {{subst:test1a|}} ~~~~ (unintentional removal of content)
  • {{subst:test2|}} ~~~~ (suitable for nonsense)
  • {{subst:test2a|}} ~~~~ (variant for blankings)
  • {{subst:test3|}} ~~~~ (please stop)
  • {{subst:blatantvandal|}} ~~~~ (obvious vandalism)
  • {{subst:test4|}} ~~~~ (last warning)

Welcome!

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  • This was done by subst-ing the welcome template...

Hello, Northernhenge, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are some pages that you might find helpful:

Please remember to sign your messages on talk pages by typing four tildes (~~~~); this will automatically insert your username and the date. If you need help, check out Wikipedia:Questions, ask me on my talk page, or ask your question on this page and then place {{help me}} before the question. Again, welcome!

Wikitable

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Radioactive releases compared (TBq)
Radiation Windscale Chernobyl Three Mile Island
Iodine-131 740 1,760,000 much less
Caesium-137 22 79,500 much less
Xenon-133 12,000 6,500,000 300,000
Strontium-90 80,000 much less
Plutonium 6100

Tree

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UK road sign colours

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UK road sign colours
Colour code Usage
#0079C1/white Motorways
#00703C/#FFD200 Primary road
#E31837/white Warning signs
#794400/white Tourist destinations
#FFD200/black Roadwork signs

Something else(?)

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This ISBN 978-0-276-44244-5 is ok.

SU616687[3]

Ninekirks
 
 
Ninekirks
Location within the United Kingdom
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townPENRITH
Postcode districtCA
List of places
UK
England
54°39′45″N 2°40′58″W / 54.6625°N 2.6829°W / 54.6625; -2.6829

To get the (talk) after your name

Go to "My preferences" at the top right
Paste [[User:FredBloggs|FredBloggs]] [[User talk:FredBloggs|(Talk)]] into the Nickname field
Check the Raw signiture box and Press save

Ideas...

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Potential additions or creations.

Sylvie Facon

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Linda Spurrier

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A Plan for Plymouth

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A Plan for Plymouth, published in 1943, is a report prepared for the City Council by James Paton Watson and Professor (later, Sir) Patrck Abercrombie. It made proposals for the reconstruction of Plymouth after the destruction of its city centre in the Plymouth Blitz, many of which were implemented. It explains the history and geography of Plymouth and looks at the characteristics of the population and its occupations before explaining the plan itself.

Criticisms

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Poor Plymouth. It was badly blitzed in the Second World War and then subjected to slash and burn by its city fathers. The modern visitor will find it a maze of concrete blocks, ill-sited towers and ruthless road schemes. Most of this damage was done by one man, Patrick Abercrombie, in the 1950s. The old Barbican district would, in France or Germany, have had its façades restored or rebuilt. Here new buildings were inserted with no feeling for the texture of the old lanes and alleys.[4]

Notes

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  • Some Notes on Post-War Development at Plymouth, by J. PATON WATSON, C.B.E., M.I.C.E., M.I.MUN.E., City Engineer and Surveyor, Plymouth. (1949). Journal of the Royal Sanitary Institute, 69(2), 71–78. https://doi.org/10.1177/146642404906900201
  • Craigie, Jill (1946) THE WAY WE LIVE - AN INTIMATE LOOK AT POST WAR PLYMOUTH AND THE PLAN AHEAD, A Two Cities film, F Del Giudice in charge of production

Volume 2

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The New Seekers I'd Like To Teach The World To Sing (In Perfect Harmony)
Donny Osmond Too Young (1951 song)
Gary Glitter Rock and Roll (Gary Glitter song)
T. Rex (band) Hot Love (T.Rex song)
The Sweet Little Willy (song)
Middle of the Road (band) Soley Soley
The Staple Singers I'll Take You There
Blackfoot Sue Standing in the Road (redirects to Blackfoot Sue)
The Bee Gees Run to Me (Bee Gees song)
Vicky Leandros Come What May
Slade Take Me Bak 'Ome
Derek And The Dominos Layla
Bay City Rollers Keep On Dancing (The Gentrys song)
Joe Cocker Delta Lady
Dawn Knock Three Times
Mardi Gras (music group) Too Busy Thinking About My Baby
Frederick Knight (singer) I've Been Lonely For So Long
Melanie (singer) Ruby Tuesday (song)
Sammy Davis Jr. The Candy Man
Mary Hopkin Those Were The Days (song)

Jockey Club of Kenya

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Originally East African Turf Club of which Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere was first president. A.S. Cooper, was the first Honorary Secretary of the newly formed East African Turf Club.[5]

First race under EATC auspices 1904. Renamed 1921. [6]

THIS IS WRONG--> The Jockey Club of Kenya was founded in 1965.[7]

The Jockey Club of Kenya describes itself as "the governing body of thoroughbred racing".[8]

Jockey Club of Kenya operates Ngong Racecourse.[9]

The Nairobi Business Park was first envisaged by the Jockey Club of Kenya. The club owned of 400 acres (1.6 km2) of land by the Ngong Road between Nairobi and Karen. The club decided to diversify their land use by restructuring their land portfolio.

Brian Perry (veterinarian) was until recently Chairman of the Kenya Polo Association and Chief Steward of the Jockey Club of Kenya

Monday 09 March 1903 , Lancashire Evening Post "Civilisation" in Uganda News has just reached London from East Africa of the march of civilisation in what it known, too often mistakenly, as the "Dark Continent." This is the formation at Nairobi, one of the principal stations on the Uganda Railway, and just below the famous Kikuyu escarpment, of an East African Turf Club, under the presidency of Sir Charles Eliot, the British Commissioner. Racing of a promiscuous character has for some time past taken place at Nairobi, but it was felt that the time had arrived when it should be properly organised and placed on a proper footing. The lease the racecourse is granted by Sir Charles Eliot, there is an entrance fee of Rs.15, the annual subscription is Rs.ls, and the rules of the Calcutta Turf Club are to be adapted to the conditions of the country, in view of a further meeting which is to take place on Tuesday next.

Sheffield Daily Telegraph - Monday 09 March 1903 London correspondence Whither the Englishman goes, thither he lugs his customs as well as his baggage. The latest mail to London tells the world at home that at Nairobi, somewhere or other on the Uganda Railway, an East African turf club has been formed by the English residents, and a racecourse leased. When the North Pole is discovered one may expect tho discoverer to send home for straw and sawdust to lay down a racecourse, with the Pole as the finishing post.

After the closure of Lowther Castle

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  • Lancashire Evening Post - Tuesday 17 December 1935 "no statement on rumour of closing"
  • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Monday 23 December 1935 "not come to a final decision regarding the closing"
  • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Thursday 27 March 1947 "sales by auction at Lowther"
  • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Thursday 03 April 1947 "old decorative porcelain"
  • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Wednesday 16 April 1947 "lowther castle sale opens"
  • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Thursday 17 April 1947 "the end of an epoch"
  • Lancashire Evening Post - Friday 18 April 1947 "The first three days' sale"
  • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Thursday 08 May 1947 "collection of carpets and rugs, tapestries"
  • Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Wednesday 21 May 1947 "the sixth series of sales"

Hugh Lowther was the last resident of Lowther Castle. His brother Lancelot the 6th Earl inherited the estate in 1944 but because of Hugh’s large debts was forced to sell many of the family’s treasures. A large auction sale was held in 1947. Lancelot died in 1953 and was succeeded by James his grandson.

James wished to develop the estates and concentrated on farming. He saw Lowther Castle as an extravagance. After he returned from the World War II he said “it was a place that exemplified gross imperial decadence during a period of abject poverty. The army had damaged the grounds and buildings during the war and the castle had been empty for many years. James offered the Castle as a gift to three local authorities but all refused. At that time the only options for large country houses were to open them to the public or demolish them. He could not afford the former so he was forced to demolish the property. He left the shell of the castle intact as a silhouette. The forecourt became pig pens and the concrete on the south lawns that the army had laid he used as a base for a broiler chicken factory. The remainder of the gardens was used as a timber plantation.[10]

Other

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  • Belfast News-Letter - Thursday 29 August 1895 "small wonder Westmorland folk are proud of their Lowther Castle"
  • Carlisle Journal - Friday 29 September 1865 detailed description "bordering the most delicious scenery of England"

Writing

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Karen Archer

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https://www.discogs.com/artist/4036343-Karen-Archer British actress born 26 July 1948 in Lancashire, England. She has worked for the Royal Shakespeare Company in Nicholas Nickleby and as Mrs Erlynne in Lady Windermere’s Fan, as well as across the country in plays such as Ghosts, She Stoops to Conquer and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Her television appearances include The Chief, Ruth Rendell Mysteries, Casualty and Chancer and she has been seen in the films The Secret Garden and Forever Young.

https://naxosaudiobooks.com/archer-karen/ Karen Archer has worked for the Royal Shakespeare Company in Nicholas Nickleby and as Mrs Erlynne in Lady Windermere’s Fan, as well as across the country in plays such as Ghosts, She Stoops to Conquer and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Her television appearances include The Chief, Ruth Rendell Mysteries, Casualty and Chancer, and she has been seen in the films The Secret Garden and Forever Young.

http://www.englishtheatre.at/english/about-us/archive/season-200405/lifeaftergeorge/cast/karen-archer.html Karen Archer’s theatre credits include Mourning Becomes Electra by Eugene O’Neill at R.N.T. (2004), Nicholas Nickleby for the RSC and on tour in the US, More Lies About Jerzy at the New End Theatre, My Matisse at the Edinburgh Festival, Memory of Water at Vienna’s English Theatre, Summerhouse at the Belfast Festival, What the Butler Saw at the Mercury Colchester, Ghosts at Manchester Library, Lady Windermere’s Fan at Ipswich, She Stoops to Conquer at the Lyric Hammersmith, The File at Liverpool Playhouse and Stevie, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Seascape and Ashes at the Overground Theatre, Kingston. Her TV credits include Doctors, Elizabeth I in Elizabeth, Holby City, Brookside, The Chief, Casualty, Chancer, Keats, Father’s Day, The Bill, Jury, Ruth Rendell Mysteries (No Crying He Makes), The Cleopatras, On The Line, Rockcliffe’s Babies, EastEnders and The Secret Garden. Films include The Mouse and the Woman, Giro City and Forever Young. Her radio credits include numerous broadcasts for the BBC as well as being a member of the BBC Radio Drama Company twice.

https://www.parktheatre.co.uk/whats-on/the-other-place/cast Theatre includes: The Mousetrap (West End), Harriet Wilson’s War (Coppermill Prod), The Hundred We Are (Yard Theatre), Happy Ending (Arcola), Four Days in Hong Kong (Orange Tree Theatre), As You Like It (RSC), Hamlet (RSC), All’s Well That Ends Well (RSC), An Inspector Calls (PW Productions tour), The Goodnight Bird & Generous (Finborough Theatre), The God’s Weep (RSC), Town (Royal & Derngate Theatre), Hamlet, Twelfth Night (Southwark Playhouse), Mourning Becomes Electra (National Theatre), Noises Off (Centerstage Theater, Seattle), Life After George, The Memory of Water (Vienna’s English Theatre), Phallacy, My Matisse (Andy Jordan Productions), Misery (Harrogate Theatre), More Lies About Jerzy (New End, Hampstead), Ghosts (Library Theatre), Nicholas Nickleby (RSC UK/US tour), An Ideal Husband (New Wolsey Theatre), What The Butler Saw (Mercury Theatre), She Stoops to Conquer (Lyric Hammersmith), Swedish Embassy (Company of Angels), Bare Necessities (UK tour), The File (Liverpool Playhouse), Stevie, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Seascape, You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown (Overground Kingston). Television includes: Law & Order UK, Holby City, New Tricks, Doctors, Panorama: Fifa’s Dirty Secrets, Elizabeth, Casualty, The Bill, The Chief (Lead, 4 series), The Ruth Rendell Mysteries, Chancer, EastEnders, Rockliffe’s Babies, On the Line, The Secret Garden, Hannay, Brookside, Juliet Bravo, Mitch, Father’s Day, Jury, The Cleopatras, BBC2 Playhouse, Play for Today: Billy, The Crezz, Shadows. Film includes: Wasted, Forever Young, Giro City, The Mouse and the Woman

https://www.spotlight.com/0637-9088-8574 Lots of data

https://www.broadwayworld.com/people/Karen-Archer/ Lots of data

https://www.newsandstar.co.uk/news/17201308.thriller-play-hits-bullseye-keswick-theatre/ (5th November 2018) Review: The Other Place, Theatre by the Lake, Keswick. Karen Archer ‘rediscovered’ this play years after first reading it and was so smitten by it that she was determined to stage it. Her determination and desire have paid off. She turns in a true tour-de-force as the central character who realises she is suffering from the onset of dementia. This is not a one-woman production, but Archer, at once vindictive, then vulnerable, dominates proceedings as successful neurologist Juliana Smithton, whose life unravels following a breakdown at a conference.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p06k4rhy Director Claire van Kampen and actress Karen Archer talk about the play "The Other Place" and Helen Muir behind London’s late night "Culture Crawl".

https://finboroughtheatre.co.uk/production/miss-wilsons-waterloo/ Karen Archer HARRIETTE WILSON Productions at the Finborough Theatre include Generous and The Goodnight Bird. Theatre includes Happy Ending (Arcola Theatre) The Hundred We Are (The Yard), Four Days in Hong Kong (Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond), As You Like It, Hamlet, All’s Well That Ends Well (Royal Shakespeare Company), Town (Royal and Derngate Theatres, Northampton), The Gods Weep (Royal Shakespeare Company at the Hampstead Theatre), Mourning Becomes Electra (National Theatre), The Memory of Water (English Theatre, Vienna), Ghosts (Library Theatre, Manchester) and Nicholas Nickleby (Royal Shakespeare Company on National Tour and US Tour). Television includes What To Do When Someone Dies, Law and Order UK, Holby City, New Tricks, Hustle. Elizabeth I in Elizabeth and Assistant Chief Constable Anne Stewart in four series of The Chief. Film includes Wasted, Forever Young, Giro City and The Mouse and the Woman.

Elizabeth Morton

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See Elizabeth Heery at IMDb

List of public art in Southampton

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This is a list of public art in Southampton, England. This list applies only to works of public art accessible in an outdoor public space. For example, this does not include artwork visible inside a museum.

Image Title / individual commemorated Location Date Artist Material Coordinates
  Isaac Watts Watts Park,Southampton

Rooms

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Regular cast members
Actor Character Episodes Years
Jenny Twigge Carol West 53 episodes 1977
Ian Redford Ian West 52 episodes 1975-1977
Anne Dyson Mrs. Beale 51 episodes 1977
William Marlowe Brian Kettle 51 episodes 1977
Julie Shipley Lesley Losey 49 episodes 1977
Jill Gascoine Ruth Harris 45 episodes 1977
Ann Curthoys Kathy Singer 39 episodes 1977
Michael Boughen Geoff Austin 37 episodes 1977
Cheryl Branker Meryl 32 episodes 1977
Diana Berriman Linda Todd 30 episodes 1977
Sylvia Kay Dorothy Lawson 28 episodes 1974-1976
Bryan Marshall Clive Lawson 28 episodes 1974-1976

and many others appearing less frequently. Produced by Jacqueline Davis who also produced Man at the Top and Armchair Thriller.

Force (waterfall)

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(See also List of waterfalls of Iceland for names ending in foss.)

Footballers

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Southampton under Ted Bates (footballer)

Monuments in t'fells

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NY 75093 21456 : Prehistoric stone hut circle settlement, two associated enclosures and three cairns, 170m west of confluence of Swindale Beck and Hilton Beck

NY 75864 22515 : Scordale lead mines

NY 74649 21300 : Prehistoric stone hut circle settlement, an associated field system and two round cairns 700m south west of Great Carrath

NY 75846 19002 : Howgill Fold Romano-British farmstead

NY 76543 22385 : Prehistoric stone hut circle settlement 320m south east of Dow Scar

NY 76561 22483 : Prehistoric stone hut circle settlement 240m south east of Dow Scar

NY 75527 21381 : Swindale Brow prehistoric hut circle settlement, two enclosures & three round cairns, 280m SE of confluence of Swindale Beck & Hilton Beck

NY 76769 20615 : Swindale Beck prehistoric stone hut circle settlement, associated field system, four ring cairns, a round cairn and three hut platforms

NY 73885 23753 : Trundale Gill prehistoric stone hut circle settlement, regular aggregate field system, enclosures, hut circle, round cairn, and three shielings

References

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  1. ^ Tubs, Shane (2008). "Franz Kaspar Hesselbach (1759–1816): Anatomist and Surgeon". World J Surg (32): 2527–2529..
  2. ^ USTA (n.d.). "Improving your game: Scoring". United States Tennis Association. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
  3. ^ Backus, J.W. (1959). "The Syntax and Semantics of the Proposed International Algebraic Language of Zürich ACM-GAMM Conference". Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Processing. UNESCO. pp. 125–132.
  4. ^ Jenkins, Simon (2009). England's thousand best houses. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-103929-9.
  5. ^ http://www.britishempire.co.uk/article/sanders/sanderschapter18.htm
  6. ^ "Jockey Club of Kenya - History".
  7. ^ Struwer, Ardina. "Ngong Racecourse Kenya" (PDF). Gallop Magazine. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  8. ^ http://www.jockeyclubofkenya.com/about_jck.php
  9. ^ The Standard, April 3, 2009: Kenya Derby is main Jockey Club of Kenya event
  10. ^ Lowther Website. Online reference http://www.lowther.co.uk/index.php/the-lowther-family/7th-earl