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  1. Albert Henry George Grey, 4. hrabia Grey (ur. 28 listopada 1851 w St. James’s Palace w Londynie, zm. 29 sierpnia 1917) – brytyjski polityk. Życiorys. Ukończył Trinity College na Uniwersytecie Cambridge. W latach (1904-1911) generalny gubernator Kanady.

  2. Albert Grey. Vera Harding. Philip Kent Grey, 7th Earl Grey (born 11 May 1940) is a British naval pilot and hereditary peer. [2] His father, Albert Harry George Campbell Grey, was born in Ottawa, Ontario and served as Trooper with the Canadian Armoured Corps when he was killed in 1942. [2]

  3. Henry Grey, 4th Earl of Kent (c. 1495 – 24 September 1562) was Earl of Kent from 1524 to his death. He was a son of George Grey, 2nd Earl of Kent and his second wife Catherine Herbert. His maternal grandparents were William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke and Anne Devereux. His father was previously married to Anne Woodville, a daughter of ...

  4. Albert Henry George Grey, the 4th Earl Grey, was appointed Governor General of Canada on December 10, 1904. He was largely responsible for the outstanding success of the Quebec tercentenary celebration in 1908. It was his suggestion that the battlefield of the Plains of Abraham be preserved as a national park. Earl Grey was immensely […]

  5. Al Grey (1925–2000), American jazz trombonist with Count Basie. Alan Grey, a former New Zealand rower. Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey (1851–1917), British politician, Governor General of Canada, eponym of the Grey Cup. Alex Grey (born 1953), American artist. Allan Grey, a character from A Streetcar Named Desire.

  6. www.canadahistory.ca › sections › politicsEarl Grey - Canada History

    Canada History. Albert Henry George Grey, the 4th Earl Grey and Canada's ninth Governor General, was no stranger to public service. Born in St James Palace, London, on November 28th, 1851, he was the son of the Honourable Sir Charles Grey, a private secretary to Queen Victoria for many years, and a grandson of a former British Prime Minister.

  7. Hon. John Grey (1743 – 12 July 1802), married and had issue. In 1738, he represented Leicestershire in the British House of Commons, but entered the House of Lords in 1739 upon inheriting the earldom. On 3 March 1744, he was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Lincolnshire, and on 8 March, of Staffordshire too. He had inherited the Grey estates ...