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  1. Jan 9, 2023 · About George Edward Dodson. George Dodson is believed to be the ancestor of Grace Chamblee McGee, wife of Grady McGee, and this is taken from her history. George Dodson, Sr BIRTH 31 Oct 1702 Farnham, Richmond County, Virginia, USA DEATH 21 Oct 1783 (aged 80) Pittsylvania County, Virginia, USA BURIAL Body lost or destroyed MEMORIAL ID 181963538 ...

  2. Edward Cothey is on Facebook. Join Facebook to connect with Edward Cothey and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to share and makes the world more open and connected.

  3. Jul 10, 2023 · Genealogy for John Fortunatus Wright (1861 - 1954) family tree on Geni, with over 250 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives. ... Edward Francis Wright: B ...

  4. Arthur Seymour Sullivan (b Lambeth, London. England. 1842; d. Westminster, London, 1900) was born of an Italian mother and an Irish father who was an army band­master and a professor of music. Sullivan entered the Chapel Royal as a chorister in 1854. He was elected as the first Mendelssohn scholar in 1856, when he began his studies at the ...

  5. Jan 11, 1993 · Writing in the late eighth century, nearly 200 years after the poet’s death, Paul the Deacon could still celebrate Venantius Fortunatus as the apex vatum, admired for his “renowned intelligence, quick wit, and delightful expression.” 1 Later critics have not always shared this high estimate of Fortunatus’s poetry, objecting not only to his style, but also to his choice of themes and to ...

  6. WRIGHT, FORTUNATUS (d. 1757), merchant and privateer, of a Cheshire family, son of John Wright, master-mariner and shipowner of Liverpool (d. 1717), seems to have served in early life on board merchant ships or privateers, and later on to have been in business in Liverpool. Owing to some lawsuit or political entanglement, the details of which are unknown, he left Liverpool in 1741 with his wife an

  7. Contrastingly, Montagu’s eldest son, Edward Wortley Montagu III, was a King’s Scholar at Westminster School by the age of 11, and almost certainly could read and write in English, Latin and Greek at this stage. That Fortunatus was not sent to Westminster or educated in English from a young age does not suggest disfavour.