Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir James KEY CAIRD (n. la 7-an de januaro 1837 - m. la 6-an de marto 1916) estis brita barono kaj mecenato. Li naskiĝis en Dundee, kaj fariĝis unu el la plej sukcesaj entreprenistoj de la urbo, per la uzado de la plej avangardoj teknologioj por sia firmao Ashton and Craigie Mills. Li multe riĉiĝis, kaj financis la konstruaĵon Caird Hall ...

  2. The eldest son of James Caird, a lawyer, and his wife, Mary Ann née Hutcheson, James Caird was born in Glasgow, Scotland, educated at Glasgow Academy, and then in 1878 joined a leading firm of East India merchants, William Graham & Co., headquartered in Glasgow. Caird married Henrietta Anna Stephens in 1898, with whom he had one daughter.

  3. James Key (Chelmsford, Reino Unido; 14 de enero de 1972) es un ingeniero británico que trabaja en la Fórmula 1.Actualmente es el directo técnico de Sauber y es el principal diseñador del C44. [1] Trayectoria. Key se unió a Jordan Grand Prix en 1998 tras pasar varios años como ingeniero de varios datos, convirtiéndose entonces en ingeniero de pista de Takuma Satō.

  4. A viagem do James Caird foi uma viagem num pequeno barco sem coberta desde a ilha Elefante, nas ilhas Shetland do Sul, até à Geórgia do Sul, no sul do oceano Atlântico, numa distância total de 1 500 km. Tendo ao comando sir Ernest Shackleton, e cinco companheiros, o objectivo da viagem era obter ajuda para resgatar o grupo principal da ...

  5. Hace 5 días · Edward Caird died in 1889, although his son, James Key Caird, had already taken over the running of Ashton Works in 1870. He was to direct the fortunes of the firm of Cairds for the next forty years. Under James Caird's management the Ashton Works was re-built and equipped with the most modern plant. In 1905, he took over the Craigie Works ...

  6. Edward Caird, founder of the Caird business was born in Montrose in 1806 and began the manufacture of cloth in a 12-loom shed at Ashton Works, Dundee, in 1832. He was one of the first to weave cloth composed of jute warp and weft and, as the use of the new textile became popular, his business expanded. In 1870, his son, James Key Caird, took ...

  7. The voyage of the James Caird was an open boat journey from Elephant Island in the South Shetland Islands to South Georgia in the southern Atlantic Ocean, a distance of 800 nautical miles ... been named by Shackleton after Sir James Key Caird, a Dundee jute manufacturer and philanthropist, whose sponsorship had helped finance Shackleton’s ...