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MIDLETON, WILLIAM
(c. 1550 - c. 1600), poet, soldier, and sailor
battle in which Sir Philip Sidney was killed. In all probability he was a member of the force sent to Portugal in 1589 with the object of placing
Don
Antonio on the throne. After his return he seems to have served the queen on sea and to have won renown as a brave sailor. He is said to have been the ' Captaine Middleton ' who was sent in 1591 by the earl of Cumberland (who was with the fleet near the
PARRY, Sir DAVID HUGHES
(1893 - 1973), lawyer, jurist, university administrator
(1963). Hughes Parry became the embodiment of the
don
as a public servant. In the 1950s, he would serve as vice-chairman of the Universities Grants Committee, a member of the Law Reform Committee, and, in 1959, he chaired a committee of enquiry on the university system in New Zealand. The ensuing Report, known as the Parry Report, would lead to the wholesale reform of the University system and the
teulu
PHYLIP
, poets Ardudwy
hand-writing of William. Of the carolau one of the most interesting types is that called 'Karol Wyl Fair wrth Wirota.' One of these, beginning 'Dyma wirod Mair yn dyfod,' is attributed in Blodeu-Gerdd, 1759, to William Phylip, where it is called 'Carol i'r Gwirod, ar
Don
Deuair.' The manuscripts, however, do not agree in attributing this particular example to him, but there is probably no doubt that
PRICE, MARGARET BERENICE
(1941 - 2011), singer
and would not sing anything which did not suit her voice. Her Desdemona was widely acclaimed, as was her Donna Anna in Mozart's
Don
Giovanni. She accepted the invitation of the conductor Carlos Kleiber to record the part of Isolde in Richard Wagner's opera Tristan und Isolde, to great acclaim, though she would not perform the role on stage. Her voice is preserved on a number of excellent recordings
SALMON, HARRY MORREY
(1891 - 1985), conservationist, naturalist, soldier
much of his childhood the family lived at Heol
Don
, Whitchurch where, aged nine his interest in birds was awakened by the discovery on the way to school of a blackbird's nest. Salmon's bird diary commenced in 1903 when he listed the birds' nests he had found. With his friends Bert Evans and Alex Lawrence he bird watched along the nearby Glamorgan Canal and soon further a field. In 1908 aged seventeen
SCOTT-ELLIS, THOMAS EVELYN
(8th BARON HOWARD DE WALDEN, 4th BARON SEAFORD), (1880 - 1946), landowner and sportsman, writer, and patron of the arts
the home of his ancestors. He also spent some time at Llanina, Cardiganshire. Besides being a patron of dramatists (in Wales and London) and musicians, e.g. his association with Josef Holbrooke in the production of The Children of
Don
and Dylan, he was himself a writer, the Arthurian cycle giving him the subject of his first play, and, later, the folklore of Wales providing him with material for
SHEPHERD, DONALD JOHN
(1927 - 2018), cricketer
Don
Shepherd was born at Port-Eynon on the Gower Peninsula, on 12 August 1927, the eldest of the three children of Jack Shepherd and his wife Lillian (née Howell). The family later moved to Parkmill, 7 miles nearer to Swansea, where his parents were responsible for running the family shop and where
Don
helped with the daily delivery of newspapers. He married Joan Maureen Evans in 1953, and they
VAUGHAN, ARTHUR OWEN
(Owen Rhos-comyl; 1863? - 1919), adventurer and author
and D.S.O. He was the author of four novels: The Jewe of Ynys Galon (1895), Battlement and Tower (1896), The White Rose of Arno (1897), and Old Fireproof (1906). He collaborated with lord Howard de Walden in a drama, The Children of
Don
, 1912. His historical books, Flame bearers of Welsh History, 1905, and The Matter of Wales, 1913 (a more ambitious work), have not met with the approval of
WATKINS, ALBERT JOHN
(1922 - 2011), cricketer
football for Plymouth Argyle and Cardiff City and rugby for Pontypool. He scored his maiden first-class century in 1946 and in 1948 became the first Welshman to play in an Ashes Test. This match, at the Oval, was the final Test match of
Don
Bradman, the legendary Australian batsman. Bradman was bowled for a duck on the second ball of his innings, and Watkins ensured for himself a place in cricket
WILLIAMS, THOMAS
(fl. end of the 18th century), attorney, outstanding figure in the copper industry
Uxbridge in 1788, Thomas Williams gave a hint that he himself had ambitions to become a Member of Parliament; he was elected for Great Marlow in 1790, and held the seat till his death on 30 November 1802. His descendants gradually released their hold on the copper industry; they are now remembered as owners of the Craig-y-
don
estate and the founders of banks. Several were Members of Parliament; three of
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