Albert Ward (other)
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Albert Ward (other)
Albert Ward may refer to: * Albert Ward (cricketer, born 1865) (1865–1939), English first-class cricketer * Albert Ward (cricketer, born 1896) (1896–1979), English cricketer * Albert Ward (film director) ''Albert Ward'' (1870-1956) was a British screenwriter and film director. He also play the role of William Shakespeare in the 1914 biopic of the playwright's career ''The Life of Shakespeare''. Selected filmography Director * ''The Pleydell Myster ... (1870–1956), British screenwriter and film director * Sir Albert Lambert Ward, 1st Baronet (1865–1939), British Conservative Member of Parliament * Reg Ward (Albert Joseph Ward, 1927–2011), first Chief Executive of the London Docklands Development Corporation {{hndis, name=Ward, Albert ...
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Albert Ward (cricketer, Born 1865)
Albert Ward (21 November 1865 – 6 January 1939) was an English first-class cricketer, who played first-class cricket for Yorkshire County Cricket Club in 1886, and for Lancashire between 1889 and 1904. Ward also played seven Test matches for England, and was named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1890. Ward, the son of a coal miner, was born in the colliers village of Waterloo near Rothwell, Leeds, Yorkshire, England. He played four matches for Yorkshire, and his debut was against Middlesex at Bradford Park Avenue in 1886, where he made his highest score of 22. He was not able to sustain a place in the Yorkshire side but, after moving to live in Lancashire, he began a successful career for that county. In total he played 330 matches between 1889 and 1904, with his benefit match in 1902 being worth £1,739. He was the first professional to score 1,000 runs in a single season for Lancashire and repeated this eight times. The best being in 1900, when he scored 1 ...
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Albert Ward (cricketer, Born 1896)
Albert Paine Ward (9 November 1896 — 5 March 1979) was an English first-class cricketer and airman. Ward was born in Highgate in November 1896. He served in the Royal Flying Corps and its successor, the Royal Air Force, as an enlisted rank during the First World War. Following the war, Ward played first-class cricket for Hampshire, making a single appearance at Southampton against Lancashire in the 1921 County Championship. Playing in the Hampshire side as a right-arm fast bowler, he took a single wicket during the match, that of Charles Hallows Charles Hallows (4 April 1895 – 10 November 1972) was an English first-class cricketer who played for Lancashire and England. A tall left-handed opening batsman, Hallows provided the attacking flair in the successful Lancashire side in the ..., to take match figures of 1 for 57. Batting at number eleven, he was dismissed for 6 runs in Hampshire's first innings by Harry Dean, while in their second innings he was u ...
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Albert Ward (film Director)
''Albert Ward'' (1870-1956) was a British screenwriter and film director. He also play the role of William Shakespeare in the 1914 biopic of the playwright's career ''The Life of Shakespeare''. Selected filmography Director * ''The Pleydell Mystery'' (1916) * ''A Member of Tattersall's'' (1919) * ''The Pride of the Fancy'' (1920) * ''Aunt Rachel'' (1920) * ''The Last Rose of Summer (film), The Last Rose of Summer'' (1920) * ''Stable Companions'' (1922) References External links

* 1870 births 1956 deaths British film directors {{UK-film-director-stub ...
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Sir Albert Lambert Ward, 1st Baronet
Sir Albert Lambert Ward, 1st Baronet (7 November 1875 – 21 October 1956) was a volunteer soldier in the Territorial Army and a Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom. Ward was an officer of the Honourable Artillery Company, he was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1902. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1904. He was still a lieutenant at the formation of the Territorial Army in 1908, and was promoted to captain in 1913. He fought in World War I, soon being promoted to temporary Major and ultimately rising to the (substantive) rank of lieutenant-colonel. In 1916, he commanded the Howe Battalion of the Royal Naval Division. After the war he continued as an officer, initially reverting to the rank of major. He was awarded the Territorial Decoration TD in 1919. He was re-promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1924 (re-gaining his former seniority), commanding the unit for a period up to 1928. He was given a brevet (military) promotion to colonel in 1927. In 19 ...
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