Charles Ernest De Loriere
Charles Ernest De Loriere of Charles Ernest De Loriere and Co
Various records available of when he lived in Paris
1869-77 Several patents issued.
1870 "Mr. C. E. de Loriere, of Regent-street, has received from Mousson a letter written by his father, which says that his two sons, he fears, were slain in the battle of Cariguan, and his wife and daughters fled at the sight of the armies, whither he does not know. His home was in ruins and everything had been swept away. The Prussians had brutally treated those whom they had robbed and ruined, but they had paid dearly for it as the number their slain was double the French killed. The French did not waver until they shot away all their ammunition, and the Prussians were still being reinforced. The plains and woods and fields are strewn with wounded and slain, but no shelter could given to the living as the village was a heap of ruin.".[1]
1870 Patent. 615. To Charles Ernest de Loriere, of Great Suffolk-street, in the county of Surrey, Engineer, for the invention of "an improved apparatus for producing rotary motion."[2]
1872 Married (2) 'Charles Ernest de Loriere to Georgina Gwynne, second daughter of the late Mr. Edward Lewis, Iron Foundry, Abergavenny, Monmouthshire'[3]
1876 Birth at Paddington of daughter Gabrielle Courtney De Loriere
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ Devizes and Wiltshire Gazette - Thursday 08 September 1870
- ↑ The London Gazette Publication date:11 March 1870 Issue:23597 Page:1702
- ↑ South Wales Daily News - Saturday 12 October 1872