Anthony Blaxland Stransham

General Sir Anthony Blaxland Stransham (d. October 1900, aged 95) led the Royal Marines during the First Opium War, winning the war and Hong Kong for the British Empire, when a young captain. Later in his career, as a General and the Grand Old Man of the Army, Queen Victoria twice knighted the General Grand Commander of the Bath in the Order of the Bath. Stransham was the son of Lt. Col. Anthony Stransham of the Royal Marines and grandson of Major Samuel Stransham of the Royal Marines, who planted the British flag on the Falkland Islands, claiming that island for King George III. See also:
  • The Stransham family; Stransham
  • The 'fighting Wilberforces' are one branch of descendants of the Stransham family.
  • Streynsham Master, the royal Governor in India before Elihu Yale, was a distant kinsman.
  • An Edward Stransham from Kent, who professed the Catholic faith, was blessed and named a martyr in the Catholic pantheon of saints.
Stransham, Anthony Blaxland Stransham, Anthony Blaxland

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
receiver (radio)
receiver (firearms)
thom goolsby
ed meyer
joe johnson
list of submarines of the royal navy
dichotomy
marshall stewart
dragonet
bill fletcher
1996 in gay rights
jeanne smoot
sector lights
leading lights
lewy body
steve troxler
leading line
2000 in gay rights
control
thue morse sequence
the hellbound heart
1988 in gay rights
carpetbagger
jump rope
mary dewson
geodetic datum
raffles
pilbara region of western australia
michigan state highway 37
samuel stransham
battersea shield
2003 in gay rights
stransham family
goldfields esperance region of western australia
law of land warfare
environmental vandalism
pilates
world climate report
latent homosexuality
servlet container
cominform
uss bass (ss 164)
uss cachalot (ss 170)
uss cuttlefish (ss 171)