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Sir Thomas Arthur Bramsdon (27 February 1857 – 29 September 1935)〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=House of Commons constituencies beginning with "P" (part 2) )〕 was a British solicitor from Portsmouth〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Sir Thomas A. Bramsdon (Portsmouth, Central Division) )〕 and a Liberal Party politician who was elected for four non-consecutive terms as a Member of Parliament (MP) for Portsmouth constituencies.〔 == Early life == Bramsdon was born on the 27 February 1857 in Portsea, Portsmouth, the son of John and Emma Bramsdon.〔1861 Census RG09/634 Folio 86, Page 27, Schedule 161: Portsea Island - Portsmouth Municipal Borough - 40, Hertford Street, Portsea, Portsmouth〕 In the 1861 Census his father was described as a retail brewer living at 40 Hertford Street, Portsea and Thomas is listed as a four-year-old Scholar.〔 In the 1871 Census Bramsdon is living with his widowed mother at 350 Commercial Road, Portsea and is described as a 14-year-old solicitor's clerk.〔1871 Census RG10/1129 Folio 5, Page 4, Schedule 23: Portsea Island - Portsmouth Municipal Borough - Commercial Road, Portsea, Portsmouth〕 Bramsdon was educated at Esplanade House School, in Portsmouth, and admitted as a solicitor in 1878, practising in the local firm of Bramsdon and Childs. He later became a Justice of the Peace and Coroner for Portsmouth, and was at one time President of Coroners' Society for England and Wales. He also served as Chairman of the Governors of the Royal Portsmouth, Portsea, and Gosport Hospital, as a Governor of Portsmouth Grammar School, and for six years was Chairman of the Portsmouth School Board.〔 In 1880 he married Mary Anna Adelaide (''née'' Reid), the only daughter of Captain Charles Auguste Reid of the 20th Bengal Infantry.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Thomas Bramsdon」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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