Bath King of Arms - Kings of Arms

Kings of Arms

  • 1725–1745: Grey Longueville
  • 1745–?: Edward Younge
  • ?–1757: William Woodley
  • 1757–1771: Samuel Horsey
  • 1771–1800: Sir Thomas Cullum, 7th Baronet
  • 1800–1829: John Palmer Cullum, Esq. (son of Sir Thomas Cullum)
  • 1829–1864: Algernon Frederick Greville
  • 1865–1891: Admiral Hon. George Grey
  • 1891–1896: Admiral Lord Frederic Kerr
  • 1896-1897: Sir Lynedoch Gardiner
  • 1898–1904: Major-General Sir John McNeill
  • 1904–1915: Sir Spencer Ponsonby-Fane
  • 1919–1920: Admiral of the Fleet Sir George Callaghan
  • 1920–1929: General Sir Charles Monro
  • 1930–1933: Vice-Admiral Sir William Pakenham
  • 1933–1946: Major-General Sir Walter Braithwaite
  • 1946–1951: Admiral Sir Max Horton
  • 1952–1965: Air Chief Marshal Sir James Robb
  • 1965–1976: Sir Richard Goodbody
  • 1976–1985: Admiral of the Fleet Sir Michael Pollock
  • 1985–1999: Air Chief Marshal Sir David Evans
  • 1999–2009: General Sir Brian Kenny
  • 2009-Present: Admiral Lord Boyce

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Famous quotes containing the words kings and/or arms:

    Sometimes it takes years to really grasp what has happened to your life. What do you do after you are world-famous and nineteen or twenty and you have sat with prime ministers, kings and queens, the Pope? What do you do after that? Do you go back home and take a job? What do you do to keep your sanity? You come back to the real world.
    Wilma Rudolph (1940–1994)

    His eloquence was of every kind, and he excelled in the argumentative as well as in the declamatory way. But his invectives were terrible, and uttered with such energy of diction, and stern dignity of action and countenance, that he intimidated those who were the most willing and the best able to encounter him. Their arms fell out of their hands, and they shrunk under the ascendant which his genius gained over theirs.
    Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (1694–1773)