Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Michael Sadleir was born in Oxford, England, the son of Sir Michael Ernest Sadler and Mary Sadler. [3] He adopted the older variant of his surname to differentiate himself from his father, a historian, educationist, and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leeds .

  2. The son of Sir Michael Ernest Sadler, a noted educationalist, social reformer, and modern art collector, Sadleir changed his last name to the early spelling of his family name in order to differentiate himself from his father.

  3. Sadleir married in 1914 Edith, daughter of Albert Darell Tupper-Carey, canon of the Church of England. They had one daughter and two sons, of whom the elder was killed in action while serving with the Royal Navy during the war of 1939Ð45. Sadleir died in London 13 December 1957. (p.

  4. Michael Sadleir was born in Oxford, the son of Sir Michael Ernest Sadler and Mary Ann Harvey. He adopted the older variant of his surname to differentiate himself from his father, a historian, educationist, and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leeds.

  5. SINCE THE APPEARANCE in 1927 of Michael Sadleir's pioneering biography, Anthony Trollope: A Commentary, it has been taken for granted thatJames Sprent Virtue, the projector and first proprietor of Saint Pauls Magazine, was, as Sadleir put it, "in a publishing sense a parvenu." Sadleir described Virtue as "an important printer

  6. Sep 1, 2001 · Sadleir was a man of letters, a publisher (with the London firm Constable), a best-selling novelist (most memorably the author of Fanny by Gaslight (1940), a biographer (of Edward Bulwer-Lytton,...

  7. People also ask

  8. The educationalist Sir Michael Sadler (1861-1943) was successively Secretary of the Oxford University Extension Delegacy, 1885-95; Director of the Office of Special Enquiries and Reports (Board of Education), 1895-1903; part-time professor of the history and administration of education at Manchester University, 1903-11; Vice-Chancellor of the ...

  1. People also search for