Caddy (surname)
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Caddy (surname)
Caddy is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Alan Caddy (1940–2000), guitarist in the 1960s British instrumental band The Tornados * Benjamin Jennings Caddy (1881–1955), South African trade unionist * Caroline Caddy (born 1944), Australian poet * Dorian Caddy (born 1995), French footballer * Douglas Caddy, American lawyer * Eileen Caddy (1917–2006), one of the founders of the Findhorn Foundation community * Florence Caddy (1837–1923), English writer * George Caddy (1914–1983), Australian dancer and photographer * Jo Caddy (1916–2006), Australian-American painter and ceramicist * John Caddy, American poet and naturalist * Joseph Caddy (1885–1946), English footballer * Josh Caddy (born 1992), Australian rules footballer * Peter Caddy (1917–1994), British caterer and hotelier, and founder of the Findhorn Foundation community * Warren Caddy (born 1997), French footballer * William R. Caddy (1925–1945), United States Marine and Medal of Hon ...
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Alan Caddy
The Tornados (The Tornadoes in North America) were an English instrumental rock group of the 1960s that acted as backing group for many of record producer Joe Meek's productions and also for singer Billy Fury. They enjoyed several chart hits in their own right, including the UK and US No. 1 "Telstar" (named after the satellite and composed and produced by Meek), the first US No. 1 single by a British group. Today Dave Watts has his own version of the band. History The Tornados were formed in 1961 as a session band for Joe Meek, although the name did not come until early 1962. In 1961 they provided the instrumentals for the film short ''The Johnny Leyton Touch'', including a jazzed up version of "Taboo", originally by Margarita Lecuona. From January 1962 to August 1963, The Tornados were the backing band for Billy Fury (as well as recording and performing as an act in their own right); they toured and recorded with Fury as ''The Tornados''. Their recordings with Fury were pr ...
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Benjamin Jennings Caddy
Benjamin Jennings Caddy (November 1881 – 13 March 1955) was an Australian-born South African trade unionist. Born in Ballarat, Caddy emigrated to South Africa in 1898. The Second Boer War broke out soon after, and Caddy fought on the British side. After the war, he worked as a boilermaker, and 1904 joined the UK-based United Society of Boilermakers. He became prominent during strikes held in 1913 and 1914, and in 1916 he was a leading founder of the new South African Boilermakers' Society (SABS). In 1920, he was elected as general secretary of the union, serving until 1950. In 1919, Caddy was part of a group of workers who seized control of the Johannesburg municipal services, and attempted to run them. He was also prominent in the 1922 Rand Rebellion, and was imprisoned for a time. In 1929, he attended the International Labour Organization conference in Geneva, as an advisor to Bill Andrews. He helped found the Mining Unions Joint Committee, chairing it from 1939 unt ...
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Caroline Caddy
Caroline Mavis Caddy (born 20 January 1944) is an Australian poet. Biography Born in Western Australia to an Australian mother and an American father, Caroline Mavis Caddy spent part of her childhood in the United States and Japan. She returned to Western Australia where she finished high school, and later worked as a dental nurse with the Road Dental Unit. According to Queensland poet Jaya Savige "Caddy writes with equal verve about the rural southwest of WA and her time abroad, particularly in China (though also Canada and Antarctica). ...Her relaxed, often conversational tone belies her sharp eye for detail which, combined with a knack for simile and metaphor, has remained acute throughout her career." Awards * 1990 – Western Australian Week Literary Award for poetry * 1991 – National Book Council Banjo Award for Poetry * 1992 – National Book Council Award for Poetry * 2008 – Wesley Michel Wright Prize Bibliography * ''Singing at Night'' (1980) * ''Letters From the ...
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Dorian Caddy
Dorian Caddy (20 March 1995) is a French professional footballer who plays striker. Club career Caddy is a youth exponent from Nice. He made his Ligue 1 debut on 23 January 2016 against Lorient. He started in the first eleven before he was substituted for Rémi Walter after 62 minutes in a 2–1 home win. In January 2016, Caddy was promoted to the Nice first team due to good performances with the CFA team. In November 2016, Caddy joined Ligue 2 club Clermont on loan for the remainder of the 2016–17 season. The following season he joined newly-promoted Quevilly-Rouen. In the summer of 2018 Caddy signed for Rodez in Championnat National, and helped the club gain promotion to Ligue 2. At the end of that contract he signed for Laval. International career Born in metropolitan France, Caddy is of Martiniquais descent. He is a youth international for France. Honours Martigues * Championnat National 2 The Championnat National 2, commonly known as National 2 and formerly kn ...
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Douglas Caddy
Douglas Caddy (born March 23, 1938), is an American attorney who was briefly counsel for the five men arrested for the Watergate burglaries, as well as two other men involved in the Watergate scandal, E. Howard Hunt and Gordon Liddy. Background Caddy was born in 1938. He was educated at Georgetown University School of Foreign Service (B.S. degree) and New York University School of Law (J.D. degree). Watergate According to Caddy, he met Hunt at a public relations firm then became friends due to shared political views. He served as national director for Young Americans for Freedom and had volunteered for the Committee to Re-elect the President. Caddy said that he also provided routine legal work for Hunt. Around 3 a.m. on the morning of June 17, 1972, Caddy stated that Hunt called him from an office in the Old Executive Office Building and said that they needed to talk. The two men met at Caddy's house where Hunt's predicament became evident. Caddy never spoke in court for Hunt, Li ...
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Eileen Caddy
Eileen Caddy MBE (26 August 1917 – 13 December 2006) was a spiritual teacher and new age author, best known as one of the founders of the Findhorn Foundation community at the Findhorn Ecovillage, near the village of Findhorn, Moray Firth, in northeast Scotland. The commune she started in 1962 with husband Peter Caddy and friend Dorothy Maclean was an early New Age intentional community where thousands of people from dozens of countries have resided in years since. One of the UK's largest alternative spiritual communities, The Sunday Times referred to it, on Caddy's death, as "the Vatican of the New Age". Early life She was born Eileen Marion Jessop in Alexandria, Egypt, the second of four children of Albert Jessop, an Irishman, and the director of Barclays Bank DCO; her mother Muriel was English. At six she was sent to school in Ireland, where she lodged with an aunt, and returned to Egypt in the holidays.
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Florence Caddy
Florence Caddy (1837 – 9 July 1923) was an English non-fiction writer from Middlesex. She wrote the first book on household management to become well known. Family She was born in Middlesex (now part of London) in 1837, as Florence Tompson. She married John Turner Caddy in 1857 at Church of Christ the King, Bloomsbury in London and had five children: John Francis in 1857, Florence in 1863, Arnold in 1866, Hermione Helena in 1869 and Adrian in 1879. Her husband died in 1902 and she died in 1923 in Plymouth. Works Caddy's 1877 ''Household Organization'' covers most aspects of housekeeping in its 84 pages. Her 1886 book on Joan of Arc was described in a review in ''The Spectator ''The Spectator'' is a weekly British magazine on politics, culture, and current affairs. It was first published in July 1828, making it the oldest surviving weekly magazine in the world. It is owned by Frederick Barclay, who also owns ''The ...'' as "eminently readable". However, the reviewer no ...
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George Caddy
George Caddy (1914–1983) was an Australian dancer and photographer. Caddy emerged as a significant photographer of social activities on Bondi Beach in his day, only when hundreds of his photographs were re-discovered in 2007, among them the only existing documentation of an historic beach acrobatic club. Early life Born in Melbourne, Victoria, Caddy moved with his family to Sydney in 1929 when he was 15. His father left the family when Caddy was 17 and the family was living in Bondi. The young Caddy found a job as a paper pattern cutter for the ''Australian Home Journal'' in 1936, taking up photography and competitive dancing in his spare time. By the time he was 20 he had become a champion jitterbug dancer. Photographs in magazines from that period show him with Mavis Lang, the reigning Australian jitterbug champion at the time. From 1936 until 1941 he spent most weekends down at the beach, photographing his friends who were members of a local gym and becoming known as a da ...
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Jo Caddy
Josephine Caddy (c. 1916 – 2006) was an American-Australian painter and ceramicist, who worked in the media of acrylic, oil, printmaking, drawing, and ceramics. She focused on portraiture in both her paintings and ceramics, including "people pots", vases featuring human faces. Biography Caddy was born in Washington, USA and spent part of her childhood in Juneau, Alaska. She completed a degree in Fine Arts at the Vancouver School of Art. She arrived in Tasmania in 1951 and moved to Adelaide in 1957, where she frequently held exhibitions of her work and taught at the South Australian School of Art (now the University of South Australia), University of Adelaide and Girton Girls' School. Caddy was divorced and had three children. Notable works Jo Caddy's paintings are held by the Art Gallery of South Australia and in several private collections. Seven of her portraits were finalists in the Archibald Prize and she won the Portia Geach Memorial Award in 1967. Caddy produc ...
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John Caddy
John Caddy is an American poet and naturalist. Early life John Caddy (15 November 1937 - 7 August 2021) was born in Hibbing, Minnesota and grew up in Virginia, Minnesota. His great-grandfather, Hibbing Pioneer Tom Caddy, was a Mine Captain from Upper Michigan via Cornwall who sank the first underground mine shafts in Hibbing. John taught at the University High School and the College of Education of the University of Minnesota for eight years. In 1967, John was one of the founding poets of the Minnesota Poets in the Schools Program (now COMPAS). He was a partner in Sundog Center, a 1970s residential center for environmental education near Bemidji in northern Minnesota. He lived near Forest Lake, Minnesota on woodlands with ponds and beavers for the last 30 years of his life. Career John Caddy’s upbringing in northern Minnesota was nature-saturated, and as a teacher and poet his work has ever reflected these beginnings. During the 1960s and 70s he began a long career as a te ...
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Joseph Caddy
Joseph Moyle Caddy (1885 – 8 April 1946) was an English professional footballer who played for Plymouth Argyle in the Southern Football League as an outside-left. Personal life Caddy served as a corporal in the Devonshire Regiment and the Worcestershire Regiment during the First World War. He suffered a gunshot wound A gunshot wound (GSW) is a penetrating injury caused by a projectile (e.g. a bullet) from a gun (typically firearm or air gun). Damages may include bleeding, bone fractures, organ damage, wound infection, loss of the ability to move part of th ... to the head in May 1918. Career statistics References 1885 births 1946 deaths People from Wendron Men's association football forwards English men's footballers Southern Football League players Plymouth Argyle F.C. players British Army personnel of World War I Devonshire Regiment soldiers Military personnel from Cornwall Worcestershire Regiment soldiers British shooting survivors Footballers fro ...
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Josh Caddy
Joshua Nicholas Caddy (born 28 September 1992) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who last played for the Richmond Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). He previously played for the Gold Coast Football Club from 2011 to 2012, and the Geelong Football Club from 2013 to 2016. Caddy was drafted by Gold Coast with the seventh selection in the 2010 AFL draft after captaining underage football with the Northern Knights in the TAC Cup. He was a premiership player with Richmond in both 2017 and 2019. Junior football Caddy played junior football with Eltham in the Diamond Valley Football League before joining the Northern Knights in the TAC Cup. He played a handful of matches for the Knights in 2009 and went to be captain the club in 13 matches in the 2010 season. He placed second in the club's best and fairest that year. During this time he formed a friendship with Knights teammate and eventual and teammate, Dion Prestia. In 2010 Caddy represented ...
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