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  1. Sir Edward Howard Marsh KCVO CB CMG (18 November 1872 [1] – 13 January 1953) was a British polymath, translator, arts patron and civil servant. [2] He was the sponsor of the Georgian school of poets and a friend to many poets, including Rupert Brooke and Siegfried Sassoon. In his career as a civil servant he worked as private secretary to a ...

  2. mainly through the influence of his brother-in-law, the Reverend Edward Marsh. Williams and his wife finally arrived in New Zealand to take up their missionary work in 1823, 17 years before the Treaty of Waitangi received its first signatures. The European record of Williams' missionary activities and his commitment to the

  3. Names: Williams, Edward Marsh; Biographical details: Birth date 1818 Death date 1909 Birth place Birth country

  4. Henry Edward Williams (1843-1923) Samuel Williams (1846-1846) Thomas Sydney Williams; Mary Anne Davies (1850-1925) Allen Marsh Williams; Joseph Heathcote Williams; Alfred Owen Williams (1856-1921) George Coldham Williams (1858-1944) Arthur Frederick Williams; Ellen Jane Williams (1862-1944) Norman Theodore Williams (1864-1928)

  5. Edward Marsh (1586 – 10 March 1684) Born in Braintree, Essex, England between 1585 & 1588. Married: Anne Streame in 1596 in Braintree, Essea, England. Died in Mar 1683/4.

  6. findnzartists.org.nz › artist › 16382Williams, Edward Marsh

    Names: Williams, Edward Marsh; Biographical details: Birth date 1818 Death date 1909 Birth place Birth country

  7. Edward Marsh Williams, the eldest son of Henry and Marianne Williams, reassured Shortland. Te Haratua was indignant that Kihi had murdered an employee of ‘his (Te Haratua’s) own pakehas’. He was there to ‘deliver a more summary form of justice.’ Williams persuaded Te Haratua and his warriors to leave and allow the case to proceed.