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  1. Lady Alice Danvers was born in the year 1476 in Oxfordshire, England, daughter of Sir William Danvers and Lady Anne Pury. She was married in the year 1504 in Oxfordshire, England to Sir John Rainsford, they had 2 children. She died in the year 1551 in Great Tew, Oxfordshire, England. This information is part of Royal House of Layton of Stuart and Rohan by John Layton on Genealogy Online.

  2. All The Good Times by Alice Stuart, released 01 January 1964 1. ... Lady Margaret 17. Kassie Jones 18. Take It Slow And Easy 19. Three Jolly Rogues 20. Woman Blue 21.

  3. was successful in finding a pass, about 30 miles east of Stuart's track, with numerous waterholes and springs, the principal of which is the Alice Spring which I had the honour of naming after Mrs Todd.” Lady Alice Todd, wife of the Superintendent of Telegraphs, inspired not only the name of the town, Alice Springs, but also the Todd River.

  4. Confusingly named “Lady Alice”, since this apple has nothing to do with the much more famous Pink Lady, Alice has a middling candy-like sweetness, a skin that won’t offend, and a juiciness that’ll have to do, I guess. Alice is a perfectly nice lady, but like an office colleague who sits somewhere over there, you will forget this apple ...

  5. Alice Elgar approved of the decades-long friendship. When she wrote to Lady Stuart Wortley, Alice Elgar invariably used the salutation "My dearest Namesake." Another younger woman brought into Edward's world by Lady Elgar was Dora Penny (1874–1964), daughter of Reverend Alfred Penny, rector of Wolverhampton.

  6. This record of Elgar's intimate friendship with Alice Stuart Wortley--daughter of the painter Millais and wife of an MP--and her family chronicles a period of great artistic accomplishment set against a brilliant background of Edwardian theater, Royal Academy dinners, and private concerts.

  7. Sobieski Stuarts. In the 1820s, two English brothers, John Carter Allen (1795–1872) and Charles Manning Allen (1802–1880) adopted the names John Sobieski Stuart and Charles Edward Stuart, moved to Scotland, converted to Catholicism, and about 1839 began to claim that their father, Thomas Allen (1767–1852), a former Lieutenant in the Royal ...