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Tatham
Tatham is an English surname, and a place name. It may refer to: People * Tatham family, the first residents of Hipping Hall * Agnes Clara Tatham (1893–1972), English artist *Alisha Tatham (born 1986), Canadian basketball player *Arthur Tatham (1808–1874), English rector, member of the Shoreham Ancients (son of Charles Heathcote Tatham, brother of Frederick Tatham) * Charles Tatham (other), several people *David Tatham (born 1939), British ambassador, governor of the Falkland Islands, and biographer * Edward Tatham (1749–1834), English academician, clergyman and controversialist *Emma Tatham (1829–1855), British poet * Frederick Tatham (1805–1878), British artist, member of the Shoreham Ancients (son of Charles Heathcote Tatham, brother of Arthur Tatham) * John Tatham (fl. 1632–1664), English dramatist * Julie Campbell Tatham (1908–1999), US writer, mostly of children's novels *Nick Tatham (born 1983), British singer-songwriter *Ralph Tatham (bap. 1778–1857), ...
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Frederick Tatham
Frederick Tatham (31 July 1805 – 29 July 1878) was an English artist who was a member of the Shoreham Ancients, a group of followers of William Blake. The son of Charles Heathcote Tatham, an architect, Tatham and his brother and sister were all associated with the Ancients. His sister Julia married another member, George Richmond, the father of William Blake Richmond. Tatham is most notable because after Blake's death, he looked after the poet's widow Catherine, who nominally worked as his housekeeper. After her death in 1831, he claimed that she had left him all her husband’s works. This claim brought him into conflict with another Ancient, John Linnell, who insisted that Blake's sister should have inherited them. Tatham also tried to extract paintings that Linnell himself owned, though Linnell had bought them from the artist. Shortly afterwards, Tatham joined a millenarian sect, becoming an Irvingite (follower of Edward Irving). At this time his religious dogmatism le ...
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Agnes Clara Tatham
Agnes Clara Tatham (18 January 1893 – 13 September 1972) was an English painter. Several of her works are well known in art circles and have changed hands at the most prestigious auction houses. Life Tatham was born on the 18 January 1893 as the fourth out of five children, her parents were Meaburn Talbot Tatham and Susan Clara Miers. She spent her childhood at Northcourt House, Abingdon, England. Her family nickname ´Widdy´. For a period in March 1901she lived in the house of her mother's family. Eden Cottage, Beckenham, London. Agnes studied art at the Byam Shaw School of Art. Where she developed a friendship with Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale (1872–1945), who was a watercolour teacher at the school, with annual commercial exhibitions and in works in the illustrated press, identifying as a third-wave pre-Raphaelite. Agnes also studied at the Vicat Cole School of Art and, from 1915 to 1921, was a student at the Royal Academy Schools The Royal Academy of Arts (RA ...
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Edward Tatham
Edward Tatham (1749–1834) was an English college head, clergyman and controversialist, Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford, from 1792 to his death. Life Born at Milbeck, township of Dent, in the parish of Sedbergh, then in Yorkshire, and baptised at Dent on 1 October 1749, was the son of James Tatham of that parish. He was educated at Sedbergh school under Dr. Wynne Bateman, and was the Tatham who was admitted at Magdalene College, Cambridge, as sizar on 11 May 1767; but the entry does not give the Christian name of either father or son, and he presumably never went into residence. He entered as batler at Queen's College, Oxford, 15 June 1769, and graduated B.A. 1772, M.A. 1776. Tatham took deacon's orders in 1776 and priest's orders in 1778, and the curacy of Banbury was his first charge. The fire at Queen's College in 1779 destroyed his books and some of his manuscripts, and he seems to have moved to Banbury. On 27 December 1781 he was elected to a Yorkshire fellowship at Linco ...
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Tamara Tatham
Tamara Tatham (born August 19, 1985) is a Canadian professional basketball player. She plays for the Canada women's national basketball team. She has competed in the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics. She is tall. Playing career Tatham played college basketball at the University of Massachusetts from 2003 to 2007, appearing in a total of 115 games for the Minutewomen, averaging 10.3 points, 6.6 boards, 2.0 assists and 1.7 steals a contest. She kicked off her professional career in 2007, signing with Catz Lappeenranta in Finland, where she spent the 2007-08 campaign. Tatham enjoyed great success in her five years in Germany, representing the SV Halle Lions (2008-09, 2010 - 2013) and TSV Wasserburg (2009-10), hauling in 2012 Eurobasket.com All-German DBBL Player of the Year honours as well as Eurobasket.com All-German DBBL Defensive Player of the Year distinction in 2009 and 2012. She also made the Eurobasket.com All-German DBBL 1st Team in 2009, 2012 and 2013. After leaving German ...
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Julie Campbell Tatham
Julie Campbell Tatham (June 1, 1908 – July 7, 1999) was an American writer of children's novels, who also wrote for adults, especially on Christian Science. As Julie Campbell she was the creator of the Trixie Belden series (she wrote the first six) and the Ginny Gordon series. As Julie Tatham she also took over the Cherry Ames series and Vicki Barr series from Helen Wells. Biography Julie Campbell was born on June 1, 1908 in Flushing, New York, United States. She was the seventh of ten children of Julia deFres (Sample) and Archibald Campbell, an Army general, she also was a granddaughter of Army general. On March 30, 1933, she married Charles Tatham Jr, and had two sons. In the 1940s, she created under her maiden name two series for Whitman Publishing Co, the Ginny Gordon series and the popular Trixie Belden series, continued by other writers under the pseudonym Kathryn Kenny. Under her married name, she also wrote some books of Helen Wells's series: Cherry Ames and Vicki Ba ...
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Nick Tatham
Nick Tatham (born 11 June 1983, Hong Kong) is a British singer-songwriter who has dealt with Tourette syndrome for most of his life whilst writing and recording ballads, pop songs and other assorted modern music.Eamonn McCuskerNick Tatham – Love Is All Around, The Digital Fix, 28 April 2004. Tatham has appeared in several BBC television documentaries and received the "Meridian Tonight Young Hero Award", live on TV in 2002, for his contributions to local music and his constant optimism and strength in dealing with his condition. In 2004 Tatham took the lead role in school student Richard Booth's ''Live for the Moment'', a film drama which chronicled the life of a person with Tourette's syndrome. On 20 April 2012 Tatham appeared in the blind auditions of the BBC talent series, ''The Voice The Voice may refer to: Fictional entities * The Voice or Presence, a fictional representation of God in DC Comics * The Voice (''Dune''), a fictional ability in the ''Dune'' universe * ...
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Hipping Hall
Hipping Hall is a country house hotel on the border of Lancashire, Cumbria and North Yorkshire, near Kirkby Lonsdale. Opened in 2005 by chemist-turned-hotelier Andrew Wildsmith, the five-star retreat dates back to the 15th century and has nine bedrooms and a Four-AA Rosette restaurant serving a menu of locally sourced food. In Autumn 2010, Hipping Hall featured in an episode of BBC2’s '' The Trip'' – a series starring Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon, in which the pair embark on a restaurant tour of northern England. History The house was originally the family home of the Tathams – a family of blacksmiths who catered for all those travelling on the old packhorse route from Yorkshire to Cumbria via Cowan Bridge. One of Hipping's main features is The Great Hall, now the dining room, which dates from the 15th century and is a balconied, beamed space. From there is a view of a 13th-century wash house complete with Gothic arch. Hipping Hall is surrounded on four sides by the mag ...
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Tatham, Lancashire
Tatham is a village and civil parish in the City of Lancaster district in Lancashire, England. In 2001, it had a population of 393, increasing slightly to 396 at the 2011 Census. A large part of the parish of Tatham is an upland area, known as Tatham Fells, which includes the largest settlement in Tatham, Lowgill; its highest point, at Ward's Stone; and the Great Stone of Fourstones The Great Stone of Fourstones, or the Big Stone as it is known locally, is a glacial deposit on the moorlands of Tatham Fells, England, straddling the county border between North Yorkshire and Lancashire, near Bentham in the District of Cr ..., known locally as "the Big Stone". See also * Listed buildings in Tatham, Lancashire References External links Tatham Parish Council Villages in Lancashire Civil parishes in Lancashire Geography of the City of Lancaster {{Lancashire-geo-stub ...
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John Tatham
John Tatham (fl. 1632–1664) was an English dramatist of the mid-17th century. He was a strong Cavalier. Hatreds Little is known of Tatham personally. He was a Cavalier, with a hatred of the Puritans and of the Scots – he went so far as to invent a dialect that he claimed was the Scots vernacular. Poems and stage works ''Fancy's Theatre'', a collection of his poems, was published in 1640. It included an elegy on the dramatist John Day. In the years 1657–64, Tatham produced eight pageants for the annual London Lord Mayor's Show, seven of which were entitled ''London's Triumph''). He also wrote ''London's Glory'', an entertainment to celebrate the return of King Charles II to London at the Restoration. This was performed on 5 July 1660. Among the known plays by John Tatham are: *''Love Crowns the End'' (1632; printed 1646) *''The Distracted State'' (1641; printed 1651) *''The Scots Figgaries, or a Knot of Knaves'' (printed 1652) *''The Rump'' (printed 1660). Legacy In 168 ...
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Charles Tatham (other)
Charles Tatham may refer to: *Charles Heathcote Tatham (1772–1842), British architect *Charles Tatham (fencer) (1854–1939), American Olympic fencer * Charlie Tatham (Charles Murray Tatham, 1925–2016), Canadian politician *Chuck Tatham (Charles "Chuck" Tatham, born 1963), Canadian screenwriter and television producer *Charles Tatham (tennis) Charles Tatham (5 August 1864 – 27 February 1925) was a British real tennis player who competed in the jeu de paume tournament at the 1908 Summer Olympics The 1908 Summer Olympics (officially the Games of the IV Olympiad and also know ...
(born 1925), British tennis player {{hndis, Tatham, Charles ...
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Emma Tatham
Emma Tatham (31 October 1829 – 4 September 1855) was a 19th-century English poet. Her work is seldom read today, but she was regarded in the Victorian era as a prodigy and a poetic genius. Life Tatham was born near Gray's Inn, London, to George and Ann Tatham, and educated at Miss Jolly's school in Great Ormond Street up to the age of 16. Her older sister had died before she was born. Her biographer, a Methodist minister and family friend, states (pp. 3 and 7) that her father's family came from West Witton, North Yorkshire, and kept an upholstery shop in Holborn. Her mother came from Kent.Benjamin Gregory: ''Memoir of Emma Tatham... with "the Angel's Spell" and other pieces not published during her lifetime'' (London, Hamilton, 1859). A transcript of the legend on her gravestone appears on p. 124. The family moved to 7 Addington Square, Margate in 1847, largely for the sake of Emma's health (p. 35). She began to write poetry early, and from the age of 16 to 18, she ra ...
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Arthur Tatham
Arthur Tatham (1808–1874) was a member of the Shoreham Ancients, a group of followers of William Blake. He served as a Church of England priest for more than 40 years. The second son of Charles Heathcote Tatham, an architect. Tatham and his brother Frederick Tatham and his sister Julia were all associated with the Ancients (art group). His sister Julia married another member, George Richmond, the father of William Blake Richmond. He was for over forty years rector of Broadoak and Boconnoc, Cornwall, (1832-74) and prebendary of Exeter Cathedral Exeter Cathedral, properly known as the Cathedral Church of Saint Peter in Exeter, is an Anglican cathedral, and the seat of the Bishop of Exeter, in the city of Exeter, Devon, in South West England. The present building was complete by about 14 ... from 1860. He wrote two pamphlets, one them being "A Cornish Bishopric: a statement of facts" (1859), part of the campaign for a modern Bishop of Cornwall (he was in favour of Bodmin ...
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