Ed west telegraph biography definition

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  • Wrong Side of History

    Good morning, people. Firstly, episode 3 of the Canon Club is now up, on Anton Bruckner.

    I wasn’t too aware of Bruckner’s work, nor of his life: he was a good case of someone who plugged away for years without huge success until his talent was recognised. He was also fascinatingly weird in some ways, and kept a photo of his mother’s corpse in his teaching room (but none of her when alive). The first two episodes, if you missed them, were on Caravaggio and Macbeth.

    Since my last round-up I’ve been in Armenia, a beautiful but tragic country whose striking religious architecture and scenery I have badly captured in photographs below. I wrote a two-part piece about the small nation’s current troubles and troubled history: part one is here and part two here.

    Britain is brutally self-interested when it wants to be but in other ways hopelessly naive and gullible, and earlier I wrote about the Government’s mad idea to hand over islands to Mauritius.

    I also m

    Small, Edward Francis

    1891-1958
    Methodist
    Gambia

    Edward Francis Small, O.B.E. [1] was an evangelist, a trade unionist, a journalist, and a politician. Small was one of the earliest 20th century practicing liberation theologians of colonial West Africa.

    Birth of a Fighter

    Edward was the son of Annie Eliza Thomas, an immigrant mistress from Sierra Leone, and a Bathurst tailor, John William Small. The boy grew up stocky and sturdy; his eyes were bright and the old people interpreted the boy’s stubborn looks and his pronounced forehead as showing a spirit of promise and determination [2].

    Growing up, Edward was surrounded bygd learning. He was tutored at home at very early age by his older half-sister, Hannah Small. Her brilliance in arithmetic and language later helped her to become the first woman to rise to the rank of a sekreterare at the Colonial Secretary’s Office. Furthermore, she had the added honor of becoming Lady Hannah Mahoney, wife of the first Speaker of the Gam

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  • The Daily Telegraph

    British daily broadsheet newspaper

    This article is about the British newspaper. For the Australian newspaper, see The Daily Telegraph (Sydney). For other uses, see The Telegraph.

    The Daily Telegraph, known online and elsewhere as The Telegraph, is a British daily broadsheet newspaper published in London by Telegraph Media Group and distributed in the United Kingdom and internationally. It was founded by Arthur B. Sleigh in 1855 as The Daily Telegraph and Courier.[7]The Telegraph is considered a newspaper of record in the UK.[8][9] The paper's motto, "Was, is, and will be", was included in its emblem which was used for over a century starting in 1858.[1]

    In 2013, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, which started in 1961, were merged, although the latter retains its own editor.[10] It is politically conservative and supports the Conservative Party.[8] It was politically mode