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  1. 1 de ene. de 2014 · Thomas Gore Browne and the Taranaki War, 1860–61 | The New Zealand Wars of the 1860s have traditionally been associated with the popularity of antagonistic racial discourses and the growing ...

  2. Harold was the son of Thomas Gore Browne, brother to Ethel Locke King and Wilfrid Gore Browne. He was married to Lady Muriel Murray, daughter of Charles Murray, 7th Earl of Dunmore. His brother Francis's son, Stewart Gore Browne of Shiwa Ngandu was Harold's nephew.

  3. Thomas Robert Gore Browne (3 juillet 1807 - 17 avril 1887) est un officier britannique est un homme d'État. Il est successivement gouverneur de Ste Hélène , Gouverneur de Nouvelle-Zélande , Gouverneur de Tasmanie et Gouverneur des Bermudes .

  4. Portrait of Thomas Gore Browne. Portrait of Thomas Browne by Freeman Brothers, c1860-1867. Read more about Thomas Browne. Share this item. Credit. Alexander Turnbull Library. Reference: PA2-0740. Permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Te Puna Matauranga o Aotearoa must be obtained before any reuse of this ...

  5. Thomas Robert Gore Browne was born on 3 July 1807 at Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, England, the second son of Robert Browne and his wife, Sarah Dorothea Steward. The family, of Anglo-Irish origin, had settled near Aylesbury in the late eighteenth century: sons in each generation had entered the armed services and the church.

  6. Sir Thomas Gore Browne (grandfather) The Rt Rev'd Wilfrid Gore Browne, Bishop of Kimberley and Kuruman (nephew) Other work. Farming and politics. Lieutenant Colonel Sir Stewart Gore-Browne, DSO, (May 3, 1883 – August 4, 1967), called Chipembele by Africans, was a soldier, pioneer white settler, builder, politician and supporter of ...

  7. Harriet Gore Browne’s intense scrutiny of her own and her husband’s actions expose an interior questioning of the legitimate use of force against indigenous resistance. The pain running through Harriet Gore Browne’s journals, tormenting her days and nights, speaks to the centrality of race, emotion and the intimate in colonial rule.