Bermingham After The Lucky Moon1
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Bermingham After The Lucky Moon1
Bermingham is a surname, and may refer to: * Alan Bermingham (born 1944), English former professional footballer * Ann Bermingham (born 1948), American art historian * Anne Bermingham (1925–2006), Australian chemist * Brendan Bermingham (born 1956), Irish retired sportsperson * Brendon Bermingham (1914–1975), Australian rules footballer * Brian Bermingham, former Irish Fine Gael politician and former Cork City Council member * David Bermingham (born 1962), English banker, part of the ''Natwest Three'' * Debra Bermingham (born 1953), American artist * Edward Bermingham, 13th Baron Athenry (died 1709), Anglo-Irish lord * Edward J. Bermingham (1887–1958), American investment banker * Ellis Bermingham, Countess of Brandon (1708–1789) * Erin Bermingham (born 1988), New Zealand cricketer * Francis Bermingham (fl. 1652), Irish Franciscan friar and scholar * Gerry Bermingham (born 1940), British politician * Ian Bermingham (born 1989), Irish footballer * James Bermingham, Bishop ...
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Alan Bermingham
Alan Bermingham (born 11 September 1944) is an English former professional footballer who played as a full-back. He made over 100 appearances for Wrexham Wrexham ( ; cy, Wrecsam; ) is a city and the administrative centre of Wrexham County Borough in Wales. It is located between the Welsh mountains and the lower Dee Valley, near the border with Cheshire in England. Historically in the count ... in the English Football League. He also played for Durban City in South Africa. In 1967 he appeared for Skelmersdale Utd in the FA Amateur Cup Final against Enfield at Wembley Stadium. The score was 0–0 at full time and deep into extra-time Skelmersdale were awarded a penalty, which Bermingham struck against the post. In the replay at Maine Road the following week Enfield won 3–0. References 1944 births Living people English men's footballers Men's association football defenders Skelmersdale United F.C. players Wrexham A.F.C. players Durban City F.C. players En ...
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Jennifer Bermingham
Jennifer Bermingham is an American professional golfer from Long Beach, California. In college, Bermingham competed for the UC Riverside Highlanders where she was named Big West Conference freshman of the year and was named all-conference four-times as well as first-team three-times. After college and while training to become a certified LPGA Teaching Professional, she spent 2010 and 2011 on the Symetra Tour with limited success. She is a Class A LPGA Teaching Professional and the 2015 Sandy LaBauve Spirit Award winner, which honors the founder of LPGA USGA Girls Golf. In 2016, she was the lone club professional to make the cut at the 2016 KPMG Women's PGA Championship The 2016 KPMG Women's PGA Championship was the 62nd Women's PGA Championship, played June 9–12 at Sahalee Country Club in Sammamish, Washington, a suburb east of Seattle. Brooke Henderson, 18, won her first major title with a birdie on the f .... She was the first club professional to make the cut since 20 ...
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Thérèse Bermingham
Thérèse Bermingham from Killiney, Ireland was one of 12 elected volunteer members and former Vice-Chairman of the World Scout Committee, one of the most senior roles in the main executive body of the World Organization of the Scout Movement. In 2007, Bermingham attended the 21st World Scout Jamboree and joined 350 young people-a boy and a girl from almost every country-for a sunrise ceremony at Brownsea Island, off the coast of Dorset to mark the centenary of Scouting. In 2015, she was awarded the 344th '' Bronze Wolf'', the only distinction of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, awarded by the World Scout Committee for exceptional services to world Scouting. Bermingham is a tax advisor serving Dublin Dublin (; , or ) is the capital and largest city of Republic of Ireland, Ireland. On a bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the Provinces of Ireland, province of Leinster, bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, a part of th .... See also ...
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Rachael Bermingham
Rachael Bermingham is an Australian entrepreneur, author, public speaker, mentor and former TV personality and hairdresser. Rachael has written 10 bestselling books (9 self-published and 1 published) since 2006. Her books are nearing sales of 8 million copies. Books Rachael's first book ''Read My Lips'' was written with co-authors Cyndi O'Meara, Jodie McIver, Fleur Whelligan, Kim Morrison, and Allison Mooney, and released 14 February 2006. Rachael's second book ''4 Ingredients'' was co-written with Kim McCosker (''Turnbull''), as were the following books within the series, ''4 Ingredients 2'', ''4 Ingredients Gluten Free'', "4 Ingredients Fast, Fresh & Healthy" and "4 Ingredients Kids". Rachael and Kim celebrated their first title being named bestselling title of 2008 (it was 2nd bestselling title to JK Rowling's ''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'' in 2007 the year of its release). In 2010, Rachael launched her own book publishing and education company Berming ...
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Philip Bermingham
Philip Bermingham (c.1420–1490) was an Irish judge who held the office of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. He was regarded as "the most learned Irish lawyer of his time", but he had a somewhat turbulent political career and was twice accused of treason. Background He belonged to a junior branch of the great Anglo-Irish dynasty of Bermingham, which held the titles Earl of Louth and Baron Athenry. He was probably the grandson of John Bermyngham, judge of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland), who died in 1415. Patrick Bermingham, a later Chief Justice, was his cousin. Little seems to be known of his own parents. Career He is first heard of during the Wars of the Roses, when he was acting as legal adviser to James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormonde, who was a staunch supporter of the House of Lancaster. Ormonde was executed by the rival dynasty, the House of York, after their decisive victory at the Battle of Towton in March 1461, and Bermingham himself was condemned to death as a traitor ...
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Paddy Bermingham (footballer)
Patrick Joseph Bermingham (17 March 1904 – 7 November 1970) was an Irish footballer who played as a defender and represented the Irish Free State football team in 1934. Born in March 1904 and from the Rathcoole area of County Dublin, Bermingham was a pupil of the Royal Hibernian Military School in Dublin's Phoenix Park and was school cross-country, swimming and boxing champion. Early in his career Bermingham worked for WD & HO Wills Cigarettes on South Circular Road before working at Urney's Confectionery in Tallaght. He lived in the Dublin suburb of Rialto. Bermingham played professional football for several Irish clubs including Brideville, St. James Gate Athletic Football Club, Shamrock Rovers and Belfast Celtic. Bermingham played for the Irish Free State Football Team and scored a penalty in the 62nd minute against Hungary in Dalymount Park in a friendly match in Dublin on Sunday 16 December 1934. He was one of the youngest players ever to play for the Free State team. ...
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Paddy Bermingham (athlete)
Patrick Joseph Bermingham (15 March 1886 – January 1959) was an Irish police officer and sportsman, specialising in the discus. He was from Moyasta in County Clare and joined the Dublin Metropolitan Police. Bermingham won ten Irish national discus titles: IAAA titles in 1919 and 1920, and NACAI titles in 1923–4–5–6–7, 1930, 1932, and 1933. He held the Irish record at until 1939. He won five English AAA discus titles: 1924–5–6, 1932, and 1934. He also won four Irish titles in each of the 56 lbs weight throw events: for height (1923, 1925–6, 1929) and for distance (1923, 1925–6–7). He represented Ireland at the 1924 Summer Olympics, but was eliminated in the qualifying round of the discus competition; his longest throw would have qualified for the final six but was discounted as a foul. His best mark of ranked him eleventh overall. He is recorded as having competed in the 1934 British Empire Games, though sources vary as to whether he represented the Iri ...
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Mick Bermingham
Michael Bermingham is an Irish people, Irish sportsperson. He played hurling for the Kilmacud Crokes GAA, Kilmacud Crokes club from 1951 until 1983 and was a member of the Dublin GAA, Dublin senior inter-county team. Bermingham was selected on the Rest of Ireland Team in 1965. This was like the fore-runner to the GAA GPA All Stars Awards, All Stars, a team sponsored by the now defunct “Gaelic Weekly”. In 1971 he was selected at right-corner-forward in the first ever All Stars team, Dublin’s first All Star, having finished the season as one of the top scorers. In 1984 he was named on the Centenary Team of players who had not won All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland honours. Early years Bermingham was born in Ireland began playing in his youth. Playing career Club Bermingham won ten club championships, seven of which while playing in New York between 1965 and 1974. He won two Dublin Senior Hurling Championships in 1974 and 1976 and an Dublin Intermediate Hur ...
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Margaret Ball
Margaret Ball (1515–1584) was a prominent member of 16th-century Irish society, who, despite being the widow of a Lord Mayor of Dublin, was arrested for her adherence to the Catholic faith and died of deprivation in the dungeons of Dublin Castle. She was declared a martyr for the faith by the Catholic Church and beatified in 1992, one of a group of 17 Irish Catholic Martyrs. Early life She was born Margaret Bermingham in Corballis, a townland now part of the village of Skryne in County Meath, where her father, Nicholas, had purchased a farm when he emigrated from England. The family later became politically active; her brother, William Bermingham, protested in London against Earl Thomas Radclyffe, when he imposed the Protestant Reformation on behalf of the boy-king Edward VI. When she was 16 years old, Margaret Bermingham married Bartholomew Ball, an alderman of the City of Dublin, whose wealthy family operated the bridge over the River Dodder, which is still known as Ballsbr ...
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Karl Bermingham
Karl Bermingham (born 6 October 1985) is an Irish former professional footballer who played as a forward. He began his career in the Premier League with Manchester City spending the first three years of his professional career, also having brief loan spells with both Lincoln City and Burnley before returning to his native Ireland. He remained in Irish football for the rest of his career playing for Newry City, Derry City, Waterford United, Monaghan United, Shelbourne and Longford Town. He has represented the Republic of Ireland at schoolboy level. Career Early career Bermingham played for the Irish-based club until moving to Manchester City's youth system. He made his league debut, however, for Lincoln City, where he spent three months on loan at the end of the 2004–05 season. At the start of the 2005–06 season he made a number of appearances in first team friendlies for Manchester City but did not play any competitive matches. During Autumn 2005 he was loaned ...
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Joseph Bermingham (priest)
Joseph Aldrich Bermingham (1801–19 May 1874) was an eminent Irish Anglican priest. He was educated at Trinity College Dublin and held incumbencies at St Bride's, Dublin and Kellistown. He was the Dean of Kilmacduagh Kilmacduagh () is a small village in south County Galway, near Gort, in Republic of Ireland, Ireland. It is the site of Kilmacduagh monastery, seat of the Diocese of that name. The diocese is now part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Galway, Ki ... from 1849 until his death aged 73 at Gort on 19 May 1874."Fasti ecclesiae Hibernicae : the succession of the prelates and members of the Cathedral bodies of Ireland" Cotton,H: Dublin : James Charles & Son, 1878 Notes Alumni of Trinity College Dublin Deans of Kilmacduagh 1801 births 1874 deaths {{Ireland-Anglican-clergy-stub ...
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Joseph Bermingham
Joseph Bermingham (9 May 1919 – 11 August 1995) was an Irish Labour Party politician. Bermingham was born in Castlemitchell, County Kildare. He was educated at the Christian Brothers school in Athy and the O'Brien Institute in Dublin. Bermingham worked as a shopkeeper before being elected in 1967 as a member of Kildare County Council. He was an unsuccessful candidate for Dáil Éireann at the 1969 general election and at a by-election in 1970. He was elected to the 20th Dáil as Labour Party Teachta Dála (TD) for the Kildare constituency at the 1973 general election. After the 1981 general election, Labour and Fine Gael formed a coalition government. Bermingham was appointed by the government to the position of Minister of State at the Department of Finance with responsibility for the Office of Public Works. He served in that post until early 1982 when the government of Garret FitzGerald fell in a vote on the budget. When a new Fine Gael– Labour Party coalition came ...
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