Frederick Lee (Malaysian Actor)
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Frederick Lee (Malaysian Actor)
Frederick Lee may refer to: *Frederick Lee, Baron Lee of Newton (1906–1984), British politician * Frederick Lee (cricketer, born 1856) (1856–1896), English cricketer * Frederick Lee (cricketer, born 1840) (1840–1922), English barrister and cricketer *Fred Lee (cricketer, born 1871) (1871–1914), English cricketer * Fred Lee (cricketer, born 1905) (1905–1977), English cricketer *Frederick Lee (priest) (1832–1902), Church of England priest and author *Frederick Richard Lee (1798–1879), English painter *Frederic Sterling Lee (1949–2014), American economist *Frederic Schiller Lee (1859–1939), American physiologist See also * Frederick Lee Bridell (1830–1863), English painter *Fred Li Fred Li Wah-ming ( Chinese: 李華明; born 25 April 1955, Hong Kong) is a former member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong representing the constituency of Kowloon East. He was a member of the Kwun Tong District Council for Tsui Ping ... (born 1955), Hong Kong politician * ...
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Frederick Lee, Baron Lee Of Newton
Frederick Lee, Baron Lee of Newton, PC (3 August 1906 – 4 February 1984)LEE OF NEWTON, Baron
Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014
was a British Labour Party politician and peer. Born in to Joseph and Margaret Lee, he was educated at Langworthy Road School of Engineering. He was Chairman of the Works Committee at

Frederick Lee (cricketer, Born 1856)
Frederick Lee (18 November 1856 – 13 September 1896) was an English first-class cricketer. Born in Baildon, Yorkshire, England, Lee was a right-handed batsman and occasional wicket-keeper, who played 105 games for Yorkshire County Cricket Club between 1882 and 1890, and also played in first-class games for an England XI (1885), The Players (1886-1889), North of England (1887-1889), Lord Hawke's XI (1889) and L Hall's XI (1889). He scored three centuries, his best innings being a score of 165 in the Roses match against Lancashire. He made 3,953 runs in all, at an average of 21.36 with 19 fifties. He took fifty nine catches and completed one stumping. He was a free, stylish, enterprising batsman when at his best and learnt the game at Baildon Green C.C., heading that club's batting averages from 1879 to 1881. From 1882 to 1884, he was engaged by Hodgson & Simpson's in Wakefield. He always lived in Baildon, and was only 33 years old when he was replaced by Yorkshire, poss ...
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Frederick Lee (cricketer, Born 1840)
Frederick Lee (11 August 1840 – 13 November 1922) was an English barrister and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University, Surrey and Middlesex, plus other amateur sides, in the 1860s. He was born in Finsbury, London and died at Streatham, also in London. Lee was educated at Rugby School and at St John's College, Cambridge. He was the fifth son of Henry Lee, a builder from Balham, and among his siblings was a half-brother, John, 15 years older than Frederick, who played cricket for Cambridge University, Surrey and a lot of other amateur sides in the 1840s. Frederick Lee was a right-handed middle order batsman and a bowler whose bowling style is not known. He played in a couple of first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1860 and was then selected for the University Match against Oxford University at Lord's where, with scores of 16 and 6, he did as well as any batsman in a very low scoring game which Cambridge won narrowly. He played again ...
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Fred Lee (cricketer, Born 1871)
Frederick Marshall Lee (8 January 1871 – 18 November 1914) played first-class cricket for Kent and Somerset County Cricket Clubs between 1895 and 1907. He was born in Kensington in London and died at Wonford near Exeter in Devon. Educated at Uppingham School and the Royal Agricultural College,Carlaw D (2020) ''Kent County Cricketers A to Z. Part One: 1806–1914'' (revised edition), pp.325–326.Available onlineat the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. Retrieved 21 December 2020.)Jeater D (2020) ''County Cricket: Sundry Extras'' (second edition), p.101.Available onlineat the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. Retrieved 2020-12-21.) Lee was a right-handed batsman and an occasional left-arm spin bowler. He made his first-class cricket debut in two matches for Kent in 1895; in the first of these, he made 12 in his first innings against a Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) side including W. G. Grace, and 0 in his second innings. But in his second ma ...
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Fred Lee (cricketer, Born 1905)
Frederick George Lee (24 May 1905 – 19 November 1977) played first-class cricket in 10 matches for Somerset between 1925 and 1927. He was born at Chard, Somerset and died at Taunton, also in Somerset. Fred Lee was the second cricketer of this name to play for Somerset: he was not related to the earlier Fred Lee, and nor was he related to Frank Lee and Jack Lee, the London-born brothers who were his near-contemporaries in the Somerset side. Lee was a tail-end batsman and a bowler, though neither his batting nor his bowling style is recorded. He recorded his best bowling figures in his first match, with three wickets for 103 runs against Yorkshire Yorkshire ( ; abbreviated Yorks), formally known as the County of York, is a Historic counties of England, historic county in northern England and by far the largest in the United Kingdom. Because of its large area in comparison with other Eng ... in 1925, and his score of eight in Somerset's first innings was also the hig ...
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Frederick Lee (priest)
Frederick George Lee (6 January 1832 in Thame, Oxfordshire – 22 January 1902 at Lambeth, London) was a priest of the Church of England and a religious author. He co-founded the Order of Corporate Reunion. Biography Lee was trained in Cuddesdon Theological College and ordained to priesthood in 1856 by the Bishop of Oxford, Samuel Wilberforce. Lee became, together with Ambrose de Lisle and others, a co-founder of the Association for the Promotion of the Unity of Christendom (APUC) in 1857. In Aberdeen, he had difficulties with the bishop concerning his ritualistic practices; he later became vicar of All Saints' Lambeth, London. In 1874, Lee, John Thomas Seccombe, and Thomas Wimberley Mossman founded a clandestine Anglo-Papalist society, the Order of Corporate Reunion, to continue the work of the APUC and to restore an apostolic succession recognised by the Roman Catholic Church through reordinations, as a means for reunion. Lee is believed to have been secretly consecrated as a ...
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Frederick Richard Lee
Frederick Richard Lee (10 June 1798 in Barnstaple, Devon – 5 June 1879 in Vleesch Bank, South Africa) was an English artist. Life 1862 painting of the Rock of Gibraltar with Windmill Hill Barracks in view Lee was the son of Thomas Lee of Barnstaple in north Devon and brother of Thomas Lee (Jnr), an architect. Frederick enrolled as a student at the Royal Academy on 16 January 1818, aged nineteen. Although no dated paintings are recorded from this time, by the time of his election as an Associate of the Royal Academy (A.R.A.) on 3 November 1834, at least six dated paintings existed. One of F.R. Lee's paintings from this time is ''Bringing in the Stag'', an oil, measuring 38 cm x 51 cm (1830) at the Tate Gallery in London). Lee was elected to full membership of the Royal Academy on 10 February 1838. A further seven paintings have been documented as painted by Lee before this date, again as oils, mainly on canvas. The Tate Gallery has an example from this peri ...
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