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  1. Lord George Gordon (26 December 1751 – 1 November 1793) was a British nobleman and politician best known for lending his name to the Gordon Riots of 1780. An eccentric and flighty personality, he was born into the Scottish nobility and sat in the House of Commons from 1774 to 1780. His life ended after a number of controversies, notably one ...

  2. Here at my school we teach no one to break the laws. Rather, we encourage and teach obedience to the Law. How much success do you think a thief will have using stolen material to assert God's Law in court?

  3. George Gordon's School of Common Law. If you liked George's teachings on the Law of God, you might like The Institutes of Biblical Law, by John Rushdoony. Rushdoony was saying the same things as George, 20 years before George was saying them. Rushdoony founded the homeschooling movement in the 1960s.

  4. From 1801 to 1805, he attended the Harrow School, where he excelled in oratory, wrote verse, and played sports. He also formed the first of those passionate attachments with other, chiefly younger, boys that he would enjoy throughout his life; before reaching his teen years he had been sexually initiated by his maid.

  5. Gordon’s School is the National Memorial to British war hero, philanthropist and martyr, Major-General Charles George Gordon (1833-1885), and was founded in 1885 when it began existence as ‘Gordon Boys’ Home’ for necessitous boys.

  6. Aug 10, 2021 · When Byron’s great-uncle, posthumously labelled the “wicked” Lord Byron, died on 21 May 1798, the 10-year-old George Gordon became the sixth Baron Byron of Rochdale.

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  8. Gordon’s School is the National Memorial to British war hero, philanthropist and martyr, Major-General Charles George Gordon (1833-1885), and was founded in 1885 where it began existence as ‘Gordon Boys’ Home’ for necessitous boys.

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