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  1. 14. Dez. 2019 · Find the obituary of Jeffrey Raymond Konecnik (1957 - 2019) from Asquith, SK. Leave your condolences to the family on this memorial page or send flowers to show you care.

  2. 17. Jan. 2011 · The 2nd Earl of Oxford and Asquith, who died on January 16 aged 94, began life in the First World War as the grandson of the Prime Minister and the son of the dazzling Raymond Asquith; within ...

  3. Raymond Asquith ist ältester Sohn von Julian Asquith, 2. Earl of Oxford and Asquith (1916–2011). Er ist seit 1978 mit Mary Clare Pollen (* 1951) verheiratet, mit der er vier Töchter und einen Sohn hat. [1] Raymond Asquith, der zu Lebzeiten seines Vaters dessen Titel Viscount Asquith als Höflichkeitstitel trug, wurde in der Privatschule ...

  4. 27. Nov. 2017 · December 21, 1915 — Raymond Asquith, the son of England's last Liberal Prime Minister, Herbert Asquith, served in the First World War in the Grenadier Guards and wrote to his wife on this day describing life in the trenches*. In a conflict noted for its mud, blood, horror and tragedy, it seems remarkable that Asquith was able to write of ...

  5. 31. Aug. 2016 · Raymond did get to see his newborn son while on leave from the war. Julian succeeded his grandfather in 1928 as the 2nd Earl of Oxford and Asquith. He lived a long life, dying in 2011 at the age of 94. Julian’s son, Raymond, succeeded him as the 3rd Earl of Oxford and Asquith. Telegraph: Obituary – The Earl of Oxford and Asquith

  6. In his 1928 obituary tribute to H.H. Asquith, Winston Churchill summarised Asquith's last moments: "It seemed quite easy for Raymond Asquith, when the time came, to face death and to die. When I saw him at the Front he seemed to move through the cold, squalor and peril of the winter trenches as if he were above and immune from the common ills ...

  7. Called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1904, Raymond chaffed against the boredom of much legal work and in 1913 was adopted as the Liberal candidate for Derby. When war was declared, however, everything was to change for him. Writing to Diana Manners in August 1914: “I went to a most amusing place call the National Service League Offices ...