George Howe (musician)
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Sir George Grobham Howe, 1st Baronet Sir George Grobham Howe, 1st Baronet (c. 1627 – 26 September 1676) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1660 to 1676. Howe was the son of George Howe (d. 1647) of Berwick St Leonard, Wiltshire and his wife Doroth ...
(–1676), English politician * George Howe (physician) (1654/5–1710), Scottish physician *
George Howe, 3rd Viscount Howe George Augustus Howe, 3rd Viscount Howe (c. 1725 – 6 July 1758) was a career officer and a brigadier general in the British Army. He was described by James Wolfe as "the best officer in the British Army". He was killed in the French and Ind ...
(1725–1758), British Army general *
George Howe (printer) George Howe (1769 – 11 May 1821) was a poet, printer, and editor of the first Australian newspaper, the ''Sydney Gazette''. Early life Howe was the son of Thomas Howe, a government printer on Basseterre, Saint Christopher Island (now bett ...
(1769–1821), Australian printer, editor and poet *
George Howe (merchant) George Howe (1819–1899) of Boston was a 19th-century merchant, industrialist, and investor. He was, with David Nevins Sr., co-owner of Pemberton Mill
(1819–1899), American merchant and industrialist *
George Curzon-Howe, 2nd Earl Howe George Augustus Frederick Louis Curzon-Howe, 2nd Earl Howe (16 January 1821 – 4 February 1876) was a British peer and Conservative party politician. Biography Curzon-Howe was the eldest son of Richard William Penn Curzon-Howe, 1st Earl Howe, ...
(1821–1876), British peer *
George Howe (attorney) George Howe (July 4, 1824 - February 21, 1888) was a Vermont attorney and politician. Howe was most notable for his service as United States Attorney for the District of Vermont from 1861 to 1864 and a member of the Vermont Senate from 1874 to ...
(1824–1888), American lawyer *
George Frederick Howe George Frederick Howe CB (1856 – 7 December 1937) was a British civil servant and barrister. Howe was born in Redhill, Surrey, and educated at Reigate Grammar School. He joined the Civil Service and was appointed to the Inland Revenue as ...
(1856–1937), British civil servant *
George Howe (architect) George Howe (1886–1955) was an American architect and educator, and an early convert to the International style. His personal residence, High Hollow (1914-1917), established the standard for house design in the Philadelphia region through the ...
(1886–1955), American architect *
George L. Howe George Locke Howe (1898–1977) was an intelligence operative in World War II, an author, and a well-known architect in the Washington, D.C. area. His 1949 novel ''Call It Treason,'' drawn from his war experience using captured German soldiers to ...
(1898–1977), author and intelligence operative in World War II *
George Howe (actor) George Winchester Howe (19 April 1900 – 24 June 1986) was an English actor who played numerous stage roles, was a frequent broadcaster on radio and television and appeared in four feature films. Howe acted in a wide range of plays, including n ...
(1900–1986), English actor and comedian * George Howe (footballer) (1924–1971), English footballer * George A. Howe (died 1909), Massachusetts politician *
George Howe (priest) George Alexander Howe (born 1952) is a retired Anglican priest. He was Archdeacon of Westmorland and Furness from 2000 until 2011. Howe was educated at Liverpool Institute, Durham University and Westcott House, Cambridge. Howe was ordained in ...
(born 1952), Anglican priest * George W. Howe, American psychologist *
George Howe (politician) George Howe was an American politician who served in the Michigan House of Representatives immediately after adoption of the state's first constitution. Career George Howe settled in what is now Bridgewater Township in Washtenaw County, Mich ...
, American politician in the Michigan House of Representatives


See also

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Howe (surname) Howe is an English surname. Howe, when derived from the non, haugr, means hill, knoll, or mound and may refer to a tumulus, or barrow. However, when derived from ang, hol, it can refer to a hollow or dell.Eric Partridge (1977), ''Origins: A Short ...
{{hndis, Howe, George