Henry Bathurst, 3rd Earl Bathurst

The Earl Bathurst
Portrait of Henry Bathurst, 3rd Earl Bathurst by William Salter
President of the Board of Trade
In office
31 March 1807 – 29 September 1812
MonarchGeorge III
Prime Minister
Preceded byThe Lord Auckland
Succeeded byThe Earl of Clancarty
Foreign Secretary
In office
11 October 1809 – 6 December 1809
MonarchGeorge III
Prime MinisterSpencer Perceval
Preceded byGeorge Canning
Succeeded byThe Marquess Wellesley
Secretary of State for War and the Colonies
In office
11 June 1812 – 30 April 1827
Monarchs
Prime MinisterThe Earl of Liverpool
Preceded byThe Earl of Liverpool
Succeeded byThe Viscount Goderich
Lord President of the Council
In office
26 January 1828 – 22 November 1830
Monarchs
Prime MinisterThe Duke of Wellington
Preceded byThe Duke of Portland
Succeeded byThe Marquess of Lansdowne
Personal details
Born(1762-05-22)22 May 1762
London
Died27 July 1834(1834-07-27) (aged 72)
London
NationalityBritish
Political partyTory
Spouse
Lady Georgina Lennox
(m. 1789)
Children7
Parent(s)Henry Bathurst, 2nd Earl Bathurst
Tryphena Scawen
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford
Quartered arms of Henry Bathurst, 3rd Earl Bathurst, KG, PC

Henry Bathurst, 3rd Earl Bathurst, KG, PC (22 May 1762 – 27 July 1834) was a High Tory, High Church Pittite. He was an MP for thirty years before ennoblement. A personal friend of William Pitt the Younger, he became a broker of deals across cabinet factions during the Napoleonic era. After the Napoleonic Wars, Bathurst was on the conservative wing of the Tory party.

Background and education

Lord Bathurst was the elder son of Henry Bathurst, 2nd Earl Bathurst, by his wife Tryphena Scawen, daughter of Thomas Scawen. He was educated at Eton College from 1773 to 1778 and then up to Christ Church, Oxford. This college was considered the most academic at Oxford, and he went up with his closest companions at Eton William Wyndham Greville, Richard, Lord Wellesley and Canon Bathurst, his cousin. He matriculated at Christ Church on 22 April 1779, at the age of sixteen. In 1781, he decided to embark on a Grand Tour of Europe. Without taking a degree, Bathurst left Oxford for Germany, where he travelled with Greville. From Switzerland, he went to Italy, before moving north to Paris. On hearing that William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne's government was challenged by a Fox–North coalition, Bathurst headed back to London in February 1783.

Immediately upon entering politics, he admired the patriotism and oratory of William Pitt.

It was through the ultra Tories Pitt and Wellington that he helped to gain recognition for the independence of Spain and Portugal; a policy decision that was influential on the Peninsular War. Later on, he would support Canada and Australia to establish 'white' dominion status, a legacy of what one historian has noted was the significant tenure of Secretary of War and Colonies before Palmerston in the 19th century. This fact is often overlooked since Bathurst was far from being a radical. The social diarist Maria Edgeworth, often alluded to by Jane Austen, wrote that he was an "old school dog". A "formalist", she thought who was "very much from that class".

Political career

Lord Apsley was member of the British Parliament for Cirencester from July 1783, when he was elected the moment he turned 21 but refused to serve with the Whigs owing to a friendship with Tory William Pitt. A maiden speech bravely opposing the East India Bill was sufficiently impressive to bring down the government. On New Year's Eve 1783 the "mince pie" administration was without the young lord who was called away to Cirencester.

He was a junior civil lord of the Admiralty from 1783 to 1789 adhering firmly to the Pittites. At Carshalton a by-election missing voter agents Bathurst sent a former employee to aid Pitt's party cheering on his friends to help. The department included five lords, of whom all the others were MPs with 20 clerks and a secretary, Paul Stephens. He was assisted at the Navy Board by a "hard-working" Captain Charles Middleton.

Apsley contested the General Election in 1790 in his father's interest at Cirencester. Granted the reversion in 1786 from Lord Hardwicke to the tellership sinecure worth £2,700 per annum in the Commons as a lord of the treasury to 1791.[1] A cousin Richard Hopkins vacated a junior post at the Treasury on 10 August 1789. He was therefore responsible for counting the government's votes on divisions in the chamber as well as recording expenditure. On 19 April 1791, he voted for repealing the slave trade in the first such vote on abolition. He was however not in favour of repealing the Test Act in Scotland. On 3 June 1791 he sat on the committee of Inquiry into the Prince of Wales' civil list and use of funds which were granted for the heir apparent's household at Carlton House. Yet by the 21st he had resigned to attend to his dying father at home.[2]

As an unpaid Commissioner of the Board of Control from 1793, he was sworn to the Privy Council on 21 June. When awarded a salary by Pitt he rejected it for the sinecures that already obtained. He was again at the centre of cabinet government, but had failed to make his mark attending only a quarter of the meetings held every ten days. In the Commons, he was a diffident speaker, and not a great orator, which hampered advancement to the great offices of state. He relinquished office on his father's death in 1794. Lord Mornington offered the Governorship of Madras, but even on appointment, he withdrew from travelling to India, to which his wife objected strongly.

In 1801 he was a Joint clerk of the crown in Chancery worth £1,100 pa; a position that monitored claims and civil suits, giving him an eye for better administrative competence. At the height of Bonaparte's invasion scares he returned home to command the Cirencester Volunteer Cavalry. When Pitt was asked to resume as Prime Minister he chose his old friend again in May 1804, to be Master of the Mint in new offices built by Robert Smirke in July, while he worked on the entrance hall at Cirencester. He professed to Pitt he was "well provided for" after he had tried to bring the Pitt and Grenville factions to unite. He advised Grenville that the king would not tolerate Catholic officers in the Army during a national crisis, on the Whig's summons to the palace. His friend's death on 23 Jan 1806 prompted Bathurst to quit politics, but the Ministry of all the Talents was very brief.[3]

Appointed as President of the Board of Trade in March 1807, Bathurst's first concern was Napoleon's Continental System against free trade. Yet he was defeated by cabinet 'hawks', who closed all British ports, invoking the Navigation Acts at home and abroad. Bathurst's response was the Orders-in-council of 11 and 25 November 1807. He was behind Admiral Berkeley's posting to Lisbon, and subsequent championing of John VI of Portugal as Emperor of Brazil. Obliged to concede Napoleon's Convention of Cintra, Canning criticised the policy as "the most disastrous."

In defending royalty when the Duke of York resigned as Commander-in-chief he refuted the allegation of corruption, being bribery for the sale of commissions. "There is no calculation to advantages...to the capture of the Island of Flushing" he told the vice-president at the Board. Bathurst also advised the King on Portland's resignation from ill health. For the two months from 11 October 1809 he was briefly in charge of the Foreign Office he imposed a travel ban to Portugal, withdrawing diplomat Henry Williams-Wynne.[4] Thinking of the lines at Torres Vedras he sent the King a board of backgammon, a strategic victory.

He remained Master of the Mint during the ministries of the Duke of Portland and Spencer Perceval, only vacating these posts in June 1812 to become Secretary of State for War and the Colonies under Lord Liverpool; a position he retained until Liverpool resigned in April 1827.[5]

Bathurst deserves some credit for improving the conduct of the Peninsular War, while it was his duty to defend the government concerning its treatment of Napoleon Bonaparte.[5] Bathurst endorsed Sir George Prévost's policy in British North America when war broke out in 1812. He ordered the Provincial Marines to be replaced with Royal Navy personnel authorising the occupation of the Great Lakes; yet organized with the defence of Canada in mind. The strategy remained essentially defensive and underfunded until Napoleon I was sent to Elba in 1814; by which time it was too late. Bathurst refused to send large-scale reinforcements. However, when operations switched to the north-western forests and inlets of Vancouver Sound in British Columbia 20,000 troops arrived to prevent incursion over the border. The failure of the Plattsburgh Expedition destroyed Prevost's reputation among Royal Navy officers. He was recalled to face a court-martial on Bathurst's orders, but died in 1815.

When King George IV turned to George Canning to form a government following Liverpool's resignation, Bathurst, along with Wellington and Lord Eldon on the far right of the Tory party, who called themselves the 'Ultra Tories', refused to serve under him due to the new prime minister's humble origins, liberal policies and support for Catholic emancipation. When Wellington in turn was called to form a government a few months later in the aftermath of Canning's death, he opted for a middle-of-the-road cabinet and Bathurst had to contend with the relatively minor position of Lord President of the council.[6]

A High Tory

A close friend of Castlereagh's and Wellington's, Bathurst shared their view that the first responsibility of government was to try to preserve the established order both at home and overseas. He enjoyed sinecure incomes as Teller of the Exchequer and Clerk of the Crown and, as such, was a beneficiary of the 'old corruption' system loathed by radicals. He was a High Churchman and a High Tory, a significant Gloucestershire landowner, a lifelong supporter of agricultural interests and a supporter of the Corn Laws. As Colonial Secretary, he would be hostile both to the introduction of representative institutions, and to the development of a free press in Britain's possessions. While himself an efficient and conscientious bureaucrat, he ran the Colonial Office on traditional, paternalistic lines and overseas posting owed much to status, nepotism and family contacts. He appointed his brother-in-law the Duke of Richmond, who was in financial straits, Governor-General of Canada and sent out his son-in-law, Major General Sir Frederic Ponsonby, to be Governor of Malta. He appointed as Governor of Cape Colony Lord Charles Somerset, a son of his friend the Duke of Beaufort. On the other hand, while not an abolitionist, he was a friend of William Wilberforce and he pressed his colonial governors hard to improve the living conditions of Caribbean slaves.[7]

Position regarding penal transportation

Bathurst reorganized the department with his capable Under-secretary Henry Goulburn. Blue books were introduced for the first time with new office routines. Goulburn's successor, Wilmot Horton was an admirer of practical good sense and discretion. Bathurst appears to have been personable, amused and capable of delegating tasks. To prevent a Tory split he supported Pitt's decision to return the Cape of Good Hope colony in Feb 1801, voted to keep the Aliens Act 1793 and wanted foreigners to carry passports. He accepted the Peace Treaty of Amiens in 1802 following Pitt's lead, whom Malmesbury said: "he looked up to".

In 1817 he dispatched a commission of inquiry to Australia to investigate the colony's use of transportation and treatment of convicts. John T Bigge sent back three Reports recommending that more settlers should be sent to the colony, and therefore transportation should continue. Bathurst ordered changes to the administration of justice and land distribution in the colony. He was made Knight of the Garter in 1817, and he held several lucrative sinecures.[5] The collapse of wages and economic depression since 1800 exercised the mind of the Board President

"When I paused over this scene of misery, unequalled in the history of civilised times, I felt naturally to demand, how it was possible to sustain existence in such circumstances, and whether it were not practicable to administer charitable aid?"

Rising unemployment brought a real sense of crisis to Bathurst's statement to the Lords. Much of the blame for importuned labourers begging in the streets was protectionism, Lord Brougham demanding on 13 March 1817, "a full and unsparing review of the whole commercial policy of this country".[8] Also in 1817 he made a signal speech to the Lords governing the conditions under which Napoleon had been sent to St Helena in which he made it clear the hardship the former emperor was facing.

Position regarding the abolition of slavery

Bathurst's official position caused his name to be mentioned frequently during the agitation for the abolition of slavery, and with regard to this traffic, he seems to have been animated by a humane spirit.[5] This is recognised in the naming of the town of Bathurst, Eastern Cape, which was renamed in memorial for a humanitarian gesture towards the settlers of Albany, and parliamentary censure of Lord Charles Somerset, its excessively punitive governor-general. The current capital of The Gambia, Banjul, was originally named Bathurst after the earl.

Bathurst was Lord President of the Council in the government of the Duke of Wellington from 1828 to 1830, and favoured the removal of the disabilities of Roman Catholics, although did not believe that it would improve the constitution and so voted against.[5] He was however a sturdy opponent of the Reform Bill of 1832.[5] The Earl, who had four sons and two daughters, died on 27 July 1834 at his London home, 16 Arlington Street, Piccadilly. He was buried in Cirencester Abbey's parish church. Charles Greville's much-quoted encomium is hardly flattering but remains largely because it was published in his Memoirs.[9]

Family

His wife Georgina Lennox, by Thomas Gainsborough

Lord Bathurst married Lady Georgiana, daughter of Lord George Henry Lennox, in April 1789. He died in July 1834, aged 72, and was succeeded in the earldom by his eldest son, Henry.

Lady Bathurst died in January 1841, aged 75.

Likenesses

Sir Thomas Lawrence was the court painter when Bathurst sat for his studio. Subsequent etchings were done in London, in 1810, by Thomas Phillips and Henry Meyer. One example was purchased by the National Portrait Gallery of Australia in Canberra.

There is a sculpture of Bathurst on the exterior of the Colonial Office in London.[10]

Legacy

Bathurst was portrayed by Christopher Lee in the South African television series Shaka Zulu.

Some places named after Bathurst

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Extra Black Book – 1820
  2. ^ Thompson, p.16
  3. ^ Letters from Bathurst to William Pratt, Earl of Camden
  4. ^ Thompson, p.27
  5. ^ a b c d e f Chisholm 1911.
  6. ^ David Cannadine (2017), Victorious Century. The United Kingdom, 1800–1906, Penguin Books, 2019, p. 147.
  7. ^ David Cannadine (2017), p. 116–118.
  8. ^ The speech of Henry Brougham, Esq., M.P. In the House of Commons, March 13, 1817, on the state of the nation. Printed for Ridgways. 1817.
  9. ^ Greville, Memoirs, vol.3, p.65
  10. ^ "Colonial Office - S08 - Bathurst". London Remembers. Retrieved 21 June 2020.

Sources

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bathurst, Earls". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Thompson, Neville. "Bathurst, Henry, third Earl Bathurst (1762–1834)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1696. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Arthur Aspinall, The Letters of King George IV 1812-1830, 3 volumes, (London 1938)
  • Francis Bickley (ed.), Report on the manuscripts of Earl Bathurst, preserved at Cirencester Park, HMC, 76 (1923)
  • Supplementary despatches (correspondence) and memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur, duke of Wellington, ed. A. R. Wellesley, second duke of Wellington, 15 vols. (1858–72)
  • Despatches, correspondence, and memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur, duke of Wellington, ed. A. R. Wellesley, second duke of Wellington, 8 vols. (1867–80)
  • N. D. McLachlan, 'Bathurst at the colonial office, 1812–27: a reconnaissance', Historical Studies [University of Melbourne], 13 (1967–9), 477–502
  • N. Thompson, Earl Bathurst and the British empire (Barnsley 1999)
  • GE Cokayne, The Complete Peerage of Great Britain and Ireland, vol.XIV (London 1912–1958)
  • History of Parliament, Commons
  • The Greville memoirs, 1814–1860, ed. L. Strachey and R. Fulford, 8 vols. (1938)
  • The Times (29 July 1834)

Archives

  • BL, 108 volumes of corresp. and papers, Loan 57
  • Lord Bathurst, Cirencester Papers, 70 Letters
  • Glos. RO, Cirencester MSS
  • NL Scot., dispatches and papers received
  • Surrey HC, secret service accounts
  • Surrey HC, Goulburn Papers
  • BL, corresp. with Lord Aberdeen, Add MS 43074–43260
  • BL, corresp. with Sir William A'Court, Add MS 41511–41523
  • BL, corresp. with Lord Grenville, Add MS 58944
  • BL, corresp. with Lord Liverpool, Add MS 38247–38575
  • BL, corresp. with Sir Hudson Lowe, Add MS 20111–20233, passim
  • BL, corresp. with Sir H. Lowe, Add MS 49508, passim
  • BL, corresp. with Sir Robert Peel, Add MS 40226–40398
  • BL, corresp. with comte de Puisaye, Add MS 7981
  • BL, corresp. with George Rose, Add MS 42773
  • BL, corresp. with Lord Wellesley, Add MS 37288–37314, passim
  • BL OIOC, corresp. with Mary Skelton, MS Eur. E 334
  • CKS, corresp. with Lord Camden
  • Royal Archives
  • Cumbria AS, Carlisle, letters to Lord Lonsdale
  • Derbys. RO, corresp. with Sir R. J. Wilmot-Horton (Cotton) Papers
  • LPL, corresp. with Bishop Howley · Mitchell L.,
  • NSW, letters to Sir Robert Wilmot Horton · Mount Stuart Trust Archive, Mount Stuart, Rothesay, letters to Lord Hastings
  • NA Scot., corresp. with Lord Dalhousie
  • NA Scot., letters to Sir Alexander Hope
  • NL Scot., corresp. with Sir Alexander Cochrane and Thomas Cochrane
  • NL Scot., corresp. with Sir Francis Graham
  • NL Scot., corresp. with Lord Melville
  • NL Scot., dispatches and letters to Lord Stuart De Rothesay
  • PRONI, corresp. with Lord Castlereagh · Sandon Hall, Staffordshire, Harrowby Manuscript Trust, corresp. with Lord Harrowby
  • TNA: PRO, letters to William Pitt, PRO 30/8
  • U. Nott. L., letters to Lord William Bentinck
  • U. Nott. L., letters to fourth duke of Newcastle
  • U. Southampton L., letters to duke of Wellington [copies].
  • U. Keele, Sneyd Papers
  • U. NSW Aus, The Mitchell Lib., Bathurst Papers
  • U. W Ontario, D.B.Weldon Lib., Bathurst Papers

Glossary

  • BL - British Library
  • OIOC - Oriental and India Office catalogue, in British Library
  • CKS -
  • Derbys RO - Derbyshire Record Office
  • Surrey HC - Surrey History Centre
  • NL Scot - National Library Scotland
  • NA Scot - National Archives Scotland
  • PRONI - Public Record Office of Northern Ireland
  • U. Nott. L. - University of Nottingham Library
  • TNA - The National Archives of UK at Kew, Richmond, Surrey.
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Cirencester
1783–1794
With: Samuel Blackwell to 1785
Richard Master 1785–1792
Robert Preston from 1792
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Master of the Mint
1804–1806
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Board of Trade
1807–1812
Succeeded by
Preceded by Master of the Mint
1807–1812
Preceded by Foreign Secretary
1809
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of State for War and the Colonies
1812–1827
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord President of the Council
1828–1830
Succeeded by
Peerage of Great Britain
Preceded by Earl Bathurst
1794–1834
Succeeded by

Read other articles:

Mazmur 143Naskah Gulungan Mazmur 11Q5 di antara Naskah Laut Mati memuat salinan sejumlah besar mazmur Alkitab yang diperkirakan dibuat pada abad ke-2 SM.KitabKitab MazmurKategoriKetuvimBagian Alkitab KristenPerjanjian LamaUrutan dalamKitab Kristen19← Mazmur 142 Mazmur 144 → Mazmur 143 (disingkat Maz 143, Mzm 143 atau Mz 143; penomoran Septuaginta: Mazmur 142) adalah sebuah mazmur dalam bagian ke-5 Kitab Mazmur di Alkitab Ibrani dan Perjanjian Lama dalam Alkitab Kristen. Mazmur ini...

 

Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Desember 2022. Yuliya BohachovaInformasi pribadiLahir7 September 1970 (umur 53) OlahragaOlahragaRenang Yuliya Bohachova (lahir 7 September 1970) adalah seorang perenang asal Ukraina. Ia berkompetisi dalam dua lomba pada Olimpiade Musim Panas 1988 mewakili Uni S...

 

Dinullah RayesBerkas:Dinullah Rayes.jpgLahir7 Februari 1990 (umur 33) Kalabeso, Kecamatan Buer, Sumbawa, Hindia BelandaKebangsaan IndonesiaPekerjaanSastrawanOrang tuaLalu Muhidin Rayes (ayah) dan Ringgi (ibu) H. Dinullah Rayes (lahir 7 Februari 1939) adalah seorang sastrawan dan budayawan Indonesia asal Nusa Tenggara Barat.[1][2] Dinullah pernah berkarier sebagai guru SD dari tahun 1956 hingga 1965. Kariernya kemudian berlanjut menjadi Kepala Bidang (Kabid) Kebudayaan Kab...

Запрос «Роулинг» перенаправляется сюда; о новозеландском премьер-министре см. Роулинг, Билл. Джоан Роулингангл. Joanne Rowling Джоан Роулинг на катании яиц на лужайке перед Белым домом в 2010 году Имя при рождении англ. Joanne Rowling[4] Псевдонимы Дж. К. Роулинг,Кеннилуорти У...

 

Santa María de los Llanos entidad de ámbito territorial inferior al municipio y localidad Santa María de los LlanosUbicación de Santa María de los Llanos en España. Santa María de los LlanosUbicación de Santa María de los Llanos en la provincia de Salamanca.País  España• Com. autónoma  Castilla y León• Provincia  Salamanca• Comarca Sierra de Francia• Partido judicial Béjar• Municipio Santibáñez de ...

 

Daniel Sánchez Arévalo Daniel Sánchez Arévalo (* 24. Juni 1970 in Madrid) ist ein spanischer Drehbuchautor und Filmregisseur. Der Preisträger des Goya 2007 für die beste Nachwuchsregie wurde als „der verheißungsvollste Regisseur aus Spanien seit Almodóvar“ bezeichnet. Der 1970 in Madrid geborene Sánchez Arévalo wurde als Autor von Drehbüchern für die erfolgreichen spanischen Fernsehproduktionen Hermanas und Ellas son así bekannt, für die er seit 1993 schreibt. Seine Regiearb...

أبرشية سانت كاترين   الإحداثيات 18°N 77°W / 18°N 77°W / 18; -77  [1] تقسيم إداري  البلد جامايكا[2][3]  التقسيم الأعلى مقاطعة ميدلسكس  العاصمة سبانيش تاون  خصائص جغرافية  المساحة 1192 كيلومتر مربع  عدد السكان  عدد السكان 518427 (2014)[4]520804 (2019)[...

 

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Kappa (homonymie). Kappa, d'après un dessin du XVIIIe siècle. Un kappa, dessin de 1836. Le kappa (河童?) est un monstre du folklore japonais, décrit comme un génie ou un diablotin d'eau. Il est réputé pour chercher à attirer les humains ou les animaux dans l'eau. Représentation Cette section ne cite pas suffisamment ses sources (septembre 2022). Pour l'améliorer, ajoutez des références de qualité et vérifiables (comment faire...

 

Medical conditionMalignant hyperthermiaOther namesMalignant hyperpyrexia, anesthesia related hyperthermia[1]Abnormalities in the ryanodine receptor 1 gene are commonly detected in people who have experienced an episode of malignant hyperthermiaSpecialtyAnesthesiology, critical care medicineSymptomsMuscle rigidity, high body temperature, fast heart rate[1]ComplicationsRhabdomyolysis, high blood potassium[1][2]CausesVolatile anesthetic agents or succinylcholine i...

American author (b. 1956) For other people named Michael Connelly, see Michael Connelly (disambiguation). Michael ConnellyConnelly at the detective fiction convention Bouchercon XLI in San Francisco, October 2010Born (1956-07-21) July 21, 1956 (age 67)Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.OccupationNovelistEducationSt. Thomas Aquinas High SchoolAlma materUniversity of FloridaGenreCrime fiction, thrillerSpouse Linda McCaleb ​(m. 1984)​Children1Websitemichaelcon...

 

Francisco I. Madero llegando a Pachuca en 1912. Los Tratados de Ciudad Juárez fueron unos acuerdos de paz firmado el 21 de mayo de 1911 entre el entonces Presidente de México, Porfirio Díaz, y el revolucionario Francisco I. Madero, tras la Toma de Ciudad Juárez. Este acuerdo puso fin a los combates entre las fuerzas que apoyaban a Madero y las que apoyaban a Díaz, y concluyó la fase inicial de la Revolución mexicana.[1]​ Los tratados estipulaban que Díaz y su vicepresidente Ram...

 

Association football club in England Football clubHalesowen TownFull nameHalesowen Town Football ClubNickname(s)The YeltzFounded1870sGroundThe Grove, HalesowenCapacity3,150 (525 seated)[1]OwnerKeith McKennaChairmanKeith McKennaManagerPaul SmithLeagueSouthern League Premier Division Central2022–23Northern Premier League Division One Midlands, 2nd of 20 (promoted via play-offs)WebsiteClub website Home colours Away colours Third colours Halesowen Town Football Club is a football club b...

1992 – MCMXCII31 år sedan År1989 | 1990 | 199119921993 | 1994 | 1995 Årtionde1970-talet  | 1980-talet 1990-talet2000-talet | 2010-talet Århundrade1800-talet 1900-talet2000-talet Årtusende1000-talet Året Födda | AvlidnaBildanden | Upplösningar Humaniora och kultur Datorspel | Film | Konst | Litteratur | Musik | Radio | Serier | Teater | TV Samhällsvetenskapoch samhälleKrig | Politik | Sport Teknik och vetenskapMeteorol...

 

Burj Al Masa is a planned 93 story, 432m supertall skyscraper In Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Burj Almasaبرج الماسةFormer namesThe DiamondDiamond TowerGeneral informationStatusUnder construction[1]LocationJeddah, Saudi ArabiaCoordinates21°38′49″N 39°06′13″E / 21.64694°N 39.10361°E / 21.64694; 39.10361Groundbreaking9 January 2010Construction started9 January 2011Estimated completion2027Cost$1BillionHeightArchitectural432 m (1,417 ft)[1...

 

Largest city in Quebec, Canada Montrealer redirects here. For other uses, see Montreal (disambiguation) and Montrealer (disambiguation). City of Mary redirects here. For the city in Ukraine, see Mariupol. City in Quebec, CanadaMontreal Montréal (French)CityVille de MontréalFrom top, left to right: Downtown Montreal skyline, Old Montreal, Notre-Dame Basilica, Old Port of Montreal, Saint Joseph's Oratory, Olympic Stadium FlagCoat of armsLogoNickname(s): MTL, The 514, The City of Fes...

Town in Texas, United StatesChristine, TexasTownLocation of Christine, TexasCoordinates: 28°47′23″N 98°29′49″W / 28.78972°N 98.49694°W / 28.78972; -98.49694CountryUnited StatesStateTexasCountyAtascosaArea[1] • Total1.72 sq mi (4.45 km2) • Land1.72 sq mi (4.45 km2) • Water0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2)Elevation[2]331 ft (101 m)Population (2010) •...

 

Indian film lyricist This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: Ramajogayya Sastry – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this template ...

 

American animated children's television series Ask the StoryBotsGenreChildren's televisionAnimatedEducationalCreated byEvan SpiridellisGregg SpiridellisBased onStoryBotsVoices ofJudy GreerErin FitzgeraldFred TatascioreJeff Gill Gregg SpiridellisEvan SpiridellisNate TheisTheme music composerGabe SokoloffOpening themeJust Ask the StoryBotsOriginal languageEnglishNo. of seasons3No. of episodes22ProductionProduction companiesJibJab Bros. Studios (2016–18)StoryBots Inc. (2019)Original releaseNet...

This article is about the Veronica Mars episode. For the Kanye West song, see I Am a God. For the Italian novel, see I Am God (novel). 18th episode of the 2nd season of Veronica Mars I Am GodVeronica Mars episodeIn a dream sequence, Veronica's talks to one of the dead bus crash victims. Reviewers were polarized on the visuals of the dream sequences: Some criticized and others praised the visuals of the dream sequence, with one saying that it looked like Bonnie Tyler videos and bad erotic movi...

 

United States historic placeJefferson Market Library(Third Judicial District Courthouse)U.S. National Register of Historic PlacesU.S. National Historic LandmarkNew York State Register of Historic Places (2006)Location425 Avenue of the AmericasManhattan, New York CityCoordinates40°44′5″N 73°59′57″W / 40.73472°N 73.99917°W / 40.73472; -73.99917Built1874–1877ArchitectFrederick Clarke WithersArchitectural styleHigh Victorian Gothic[1]NRHP re...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!