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Richard Allison (other)
Richard Allison may refer to: *Richard Allison (composer) (c. 1560/70–before 1610), English composer *Richard Allison (military physician) (1757–1816), Physician General of the U.S. Army *Richard Allison (architect) (1869–1958), Scottish architect *Rick Allison Rick Allison (real name: ''Éric Vleminckx'', born July 17, 1964, in Brussels) is a Belgian-born Canadian singer, author and record producer. Biography In 1990, Allison met singer Lara Fabian in a piano-bar in Brussels. They started writing thei ...
(born 1964), Belgian musician {{hndis, Allison, Richard ...
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Richard Allison (composer)
Richard Al(l)ison (born c. 1560–1570 – died before 1610) was an English composer. He wrote ''de la Tromba'', a fine broken consort piece which has several professional recordings and first became well known due to the Julian Bream Consort. He was known to be in the service of the Countess of Warwick in 1599, and then working for Sir John Scudamore. His publications are: ''The Psalms of David in Meter'' (1599) and ''An Hour's Recreation in musicke, apt for instruments and voyces'' (1606). His work also appears in Michael East's and Thomas Ravenscroft's psalters, and Thomas Morley's broken consort publication. He referred in the dedication of his ''Psalmes'' to the late Ambrose Dudley, 3rd Earl of Warwick as 'my good Lord and Master'. Allison is represented by thirteen compositions in a set of consort books (dated 1588), from the household of Sir Francis Walsingham. Ten four-part settings by him appeared in East's ''Whole Booke of Psalms'' (1592), and he contributed a dedicato ...
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Richard Allison (military Physician)
Richard Allison (1757 – March 22, 1816) was Physician General of the U.S. Army, the position that later became Surgeon General, from 1792 to 1796. He was the first physician to set up a permanent practice in Cincinnati, Ohio. Early life Allison was born near Goshen, New York in 1757. Career During the American Revolutionary War, he served as a surgeon's mate in the Pennsylvania Line of the Continental Army. He was the senior American military physician in the Northwest Indian War, and became the surgeon general of General Anthony Wayne's Legion when those troops were organized and defeated the Indians at the Battle of Fallen Timbers. On the re-organization of the army in 1789, he was appointed surgeon of a regiment of infantry, and became the ranking medical officer of the U.S. Army up to the time of his resignation. After living for a few years on his farm on the east fork of the Little Miami River, he returned to the city in 1805, and continued to practice medicine unti ...
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Richard Allison (architect)
Sir Richard John Allison (1869–1958) was a Scottish architect. From 1889 he was associated with the government Office of Works in London (as example The Science Museum), and from 1914 was its Chief Architect. Selected works * The Science Museum, London (1919–28) * The Duveen wing, National Portrait Gallery, London (1933), with J G West. * The Geological Museum, London * The Royal Courts of Justice, Belfast (1933), with J G West. * The British Ambassador's house in Diplomatstaden Diplomatstaden (Swedish for "Diplomat City") is a neighbourhood in the Östermalm district in central Stockholm, Sweden. As the name suggests, the neighbourhood is the home of many embassies and ambassadorial residencies. Diplomatstaden encompas ..., Stockholm (1915).The architect was a "''british''" "Allison" also according to: References 20th-century Scottish architects 1869 births 1958 deaths {{UK-architect-stub ...
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