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God's Day of Salvation

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Painter, muralist and teacher, Eadie showed an early talent for drawing. He left Harris Academy as Dux Medallist in Art and from 1931 he studied under J. Milne Purvis at Dundee College of Art, gaining his diploma after three years.

Early recusants included Protestant dissenters, whose confessions derived from the Calvinistic Reformers or Radical Reformers. With the growth of these latter groups after the Restoration of Charles II, they were distinguished from Catholic recusants by the use of the terms "nonconformist" or "dissenter". The "Recusancy Acts", having begun during the reign of Elizabeth I, were repealed in 1650, and during this period a number of punishments were imposed on recusants, including fines, property confiscation, and imprisonment. Despite their repeal, restrictions against Roman Catholics were still in place until full Catholic Emancipation in 1829. In some cases those adhering to Catholicism faced capital punishment, and a number of English and Welsh Catholics executed in the 16th and 17th centuries have been canonised by the Catholic Church as Christian martyrs.

if a decision to terminate before the expiry of the probationary period was to be made the employee would be invited to a probationary hearing and will be offered a right to appeal if such decision was made. Mr Curr was employed by the defendant company, London &Country Mortgages (“L&C”) as a Protection Advisor in 2017. Mr Curr’s employment was governed by a probationary period of eight months which could be extended by a further two months at the discretion of L&C. The contract recognised that his employment had commenced on 18 September 2017 and would continue until terminated. During the probationary period this could be affected by the giving of one month’s notice on either side. During this period it became common for many of the larger Catholic castles and country houses to develop secret chambers or "priest holes" where priests could hide if in the event of a surprise raid by pursuivants (priest-hunters). Sometimes small chapels were concealed in roof-spaces or in secluded parts of the house where Mass could be celebrated in the utmost provacy and safety. Nearby priest holes allowed priests to hide in an emergency, and also allowed for the concealment of the vestments, sacred vessels and altar furniture to be stored. The Curr Family:

Knighton-Hammond was an English painter best known for landscapes, society portraits and industrial paintings. Knighton-Hammond used a variety of styles but is most famous as a water-colourist. Robert Sivell (1888-1958) The Curr family and its branches were established in the town and parish of Hungerford in times preceding the parish register (1558), William Curr for example holding land at Sandon in the c. l470 Hungerford rental. They held land in Kintbury and Shalborne, also in Charnham Street, and their standing became that of yeoman/minor gentry. Three main branches appeared - the country Currs, one branch in Sanham Green, another in Stubwood and Helmes, and the town Currs. All went well with the Currs until the Reformation, when the country Currs remained Catholic and the town Currs became Anglican.the claim was an abuse of process under the ET’s own rules of procedure (see rule 37(1)(a) of the 2013 Rules) as it was based upon identical grounds brought before Master Cook that were now res judicata;

Robert Sivell attended Glasgow School of Art in 1908 and during the First World War worked for a time as an engineer and served in the Merchant Navy. Sivell was a founder member of the Glasgow Society of Painters and Sculptors, a society formed to rival the Royal Glasgow Institute. He was head of drawing and painting at Gray's School of Art, Aberdeen. During the second World War, Sivell was was a member of the War Artists Advisory Committee. On 3 March this year, Mr Curr sought judicial review of the decision of the EAT above and the refusal to grant an extension of time to file his appeal. The application fell before Eady J who dismissed the application and marked it as “TWM” adding that, “ although it is not common to state that a claim is made totally without merit, I am satisfied that this is the case in this instance.”During this period it becomes difficult to distinguish references to individual Currs, not only because of the number of their off-spring but also because they tended (in all three main branches) to use the same Christian names so regularly - John, Thomas, Richard and occasionally Edward, in particular. The Hungerford parish register, as well as local rent rolls and other documents tend to distinguish the three branches respectively by some such phrase as 'of Helmes', 'of Sandon', or 'of the town'.

Following the Reformation and the establishment of the Church of England, the term was first used in a 1593 statute describing those who remained within the Roman Catholic Church and did not attend services of the Church of England as "Popish recusants". In the "Act for restraining Popish recusants", they were defined as those "convicted for not repairing to some Church, Chapel, or usual place of Common Prayer to hear Divine Service there, but forbearing the same contrary to the tenor of the laws and statutes heretofore made and provided in that behalf." Mr Curr sought to appeal the decision of Employment Judge O’Rourke. No appealable point of law presented itself after a consideration of the papers by Lord Summer, but he did not mark the papers as “TWM” which, under the EAT rules, he could have done. In response Mr Curr exercised his right under Rule 3(1) of the EAT Rules (a request for the appeal to be heard before a judge). This was refused by the judge who recorded that the appeal was ‘bound to fail’. Giving her reasons ex tempore she recorded that there were no arguable grounds for the appeal and that it was reasonably practicable for Mr Curr to have brought his claim in time. Permission to appeal this decision was refused by Judge Stacey. Mr Curr sought an extension to the time allowed to appeal to the Court of Appeal (on the basis that he had not received the written reasons) but this was also refused by Judge Stacey. Aggrieved, and perhaps not surprisingly, Mr Curr appealed this decision to the Court of Appeal where, as I understand the situation to be, it resides. One such local recusant family was the Curr family, who held land in Sanden Fee (Sanham), Charnham Street, Kintbury and Shalbourne. The following is an extract from Norman Hidden's book "Aspects of the Early History of Hungerford":Eric Kennington was an English sculptor, artist and illustrator, and an official war artist in both the First and Second World Wars. He studied at Lambeth School of Art and his best known graphic works are the many figure studies and portraits he made as an official war artist from 1917-1919, when he worked mainly in pastels. Dame Laura Knight (1877-1970) The courts clearly have the ability to consider all claims and applications, despite not being marked as being TWM, in determining whether there a litigant is persisting in their futile endeavor. However, by not marking the claim or application in accordance with CPR 3.3(7), 3.4(6) and 23.12 uncertainty can be introduced. This was noted in the case of Odutola v Hart [2018] EWHC 2260 (Ch) where the absence of the acronym ‘TWM’ introduced uncertainty as to whether or not, collectively, the claims and applications could constitute ‘persistence’. During the Second World War, Eadie joined the Gordon Highlanders and served as the unofficial war artist with the 51st (Highland) Division. His work was eventually taken by the Imperial War Museum and public galleries in Aberdeen, Dundee and Glasgow, and can also be seen in the collections of regiments which formed the Division. The National War Museum has several examples of his wartime work, including pictures he produced while on active service in Normandy in 1944.

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