Our indexes include entries for the spelling clarke. In the period you have requested, we have the following 4,912 records (displaying 4,651 to 4,660):
Imperial Service Medal
(1936) Awards by kings George V and Edward VIII of the Imperial Service Medal to officers of the Home Civil Service. The names are arranged alphabetically by surname (in capitals) and christian names, with office or rank in the service. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Imperial Service Medal on Retirement
(1936) Awards by kings George V and Edward VIII of the Imperial Service Medal to officers of the Home Civil Service on their retirement. The names are arranged alphabetically by surname and christian name(s), with office or rank in the service. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Boys entering Aldenham School
(1937) Aldenham School in Hertfordshire is a public school originating as an Elizabethan grammar school. The Aldenham School Register was first published in 1898, but this tenth edition, by R. J. Evans, and published in 1969, comprised only living old boys who had entered the school from 1900 onwards, together with those who had entered the school before 1900 and who had responded to a questionnaire. There is thus a general presumption that all the boys mentioned were alive in 1969. The boys are listed alphabetically by surname under the term in which they entered the school. Full name is given, in bold, surname first. Then an abbreviation indicating their house (B, Beevor's; K, Kennedy's; M, McGill's; P, Paull's; SH, School House); the period of stay at the school; address as of 1969; father's name, occupation and residence (where the father had also studied at the school, his name is given in capitals with the year of his entry); brief details of any achievements at the school (particularly at sports); and the briefest of details of subsequent career. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Boys entering Denstone College
(1937) Volume 2 of the Denstone Register, listing boys entering Denstone College, the public school near Uttoxeter, from 1931 to 1952, was edited by E. T. Greenwood and published in 1957. The bulk of the information was obtained by enquiry with the Old Denstonians themselves, though not all could be contacted. Each item sets out, so far as could be ascertained: full name (in capitals, surname first); current address (as of 1957); school house; school record; and summary of career. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Boys entering Trinity College, Glenalmond
(1937) Trinity College, Glenalmond, Perthshire, was originally founded as a college at which young men might be trained for the ministry of the Scottish Episcopal Church, and the sons of the laity might be educated and brought up in the faith and tradition of the Church. In 1876 the Theological College was transferred to Edinburgh, Glenalmond remaining as a boys' school. This second edition of the school register, edited by G. St Quintin, was published in 1955, incorporating the text of the first edition prepared by E. W. Neish. The scholars are listed by term of entering the school, and then alphabetically by surname; the details then given are full christian names, date of birth; name of father; any distinctions within the school; and then a career synopsis, with date and place of death where known. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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British Army appointments and decorations
(1937) Orders from the War Office conferring promotions, decorations and alterations of rank during September 1937. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Civilians working for the Admiralty
(1937) The Civil Service Commission issued a monthly report listing certificates issued to civil servants of various grades on their initial appointment (whether after open competition, or without); assignments to higher grades; and transfers between departments. This is the report for June 1937: the sample scan is from the listing for post office clerks. The admiralty lists cover clerks and a shorthand typist; women tracers; junior assistants; pensioner clerks and established storemen in H. M. naval establishments; established civilian employees; technical officers, artificers, and an assistant II in the technical pool of the Scientific Research and Experiment Department; engine fitters, shipwrights, ship fitters, electrical fitters, skilled labourers, joiners, founders, labourers, a patternmaker, a hosemaker, a boilermaker, a stoker and a coppersmith in H. M. dockyards and naval establishments around the world; a local clerk and a constablev in H. M. dockyard, Malta; an established messenger; a pharmacist in Royal Naval hospitals; and assistants in H. M. Nautical Almanac Office. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Civil servants
(1937) The Civil Service Commission issued a monthly report listing certificates issued to civil servants of various grades on their initial appointment (whether after open competition, or without); assignments to higher grades; and transfers between departments. This is the report for August 1937: the sample scan is from the listing for post office clerks.
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Civil Servants
(1937) The Civil Service Commission issued a monthly report listing certificates issued to civil servants of various grades on their initial appointment (whether after open competition, or without); assignments to higher grades; and transfers between departments. This is the report for July 1937: the sample scan is from the listing for post office clerks.
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Civil servants in the Foreign Office
(1937) The Civil Service Commission issued a monthly report listing certificates issued to civil servants of various grades on their initial appointment (whether after open competition, or without); assignments to higher grades; and transfers between departments. This is the report for June 1937: the sample scan is from the listing for post office clerks. The lists for the Foreign Office include clerks and an office keeper. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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