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Ruthie Blackburn
- Ruthie Blackburn changed her name to “Lucie” to mark her newfound freedom. After nearly a year at Amherstburg, she and her husband made their way to Toronto in 1834.
www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/thornton-and-lucie-blackburn
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He was married three times; with his second wife Rosalie he had a daughter, Julia Blackburn, born in 1948. During the marriage he was regularly violent and, on the birth of Julia, became a frequently absent parent returning home drunk after many infidelities which he did not keep secret.
Mar 20, 2024 · 5,788 likes, 459 comments - tonyblackburn on March 20, 2024: "Here I am with my wife Debbie at Windsor Castle just about to be presented with my OBE".
Aug 1, 2020 · Tony Blackburn wife: Tony and wife Debbie tied the knot in 1992. (Image: GETTY) Tony and Debbie share daughter Victoria and Tony's son Simon is from his first marriage. Tony was previously...
Jan 30, 2024 · Tony Blackburn took to Twitter last night to share a snap of himself enjoying his 81st birthday celebrations with his wife. Fans exclaimed that age was nothing more than "a number on a...
- Chloe Govan
Thomas Blackburn was an English poet, novelist, and critic whose verse is notable for haunted self-examination and spiritual imagery. The son of a clergyman, Blackburn was educated at the University of Durham. In his autobiographical novel, A Clip of Steel (1969), he depicts a childhood tormented.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Thomas Blackburn. born Feb. 10, 1916, Hensingham, Cumberland, Eng. died Aug. 13, 1977, Wales. English poet, novelist, and critic whose verse is notable for haunted self-examination and spiritual imagery. The son of a clergyman, Blackburn was educated at the University of Durham.
Overview. Thomas Blackburn. (1916—1979) Quick Reference. (1916 –79), son of an Anglican clergyman (see his autobiography A Clip of Steel, London, 1969, his best book), was born in Cumbria. After leaving Cambridge as a result of ... From: Blackburn, Thomas (Eliel Fenwick) in The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century Poetry in English »