James Charles Batchelor: Difference between revisions
m Ait moved page J. C. Batchelor to James Charles Batchelor |
No edit summary |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
Pall Mall Gazette - Tuesday 24 August 1875</ref> | Pall Mall Gazette - Tuesday 24 August 1875</ref> | ||
1878 July 22nd. Died at Calcutta, age 59, and was succeeded by [[Noblett St. Leger Carter]] | 1878 July 22nd. Died at 7, Hastings Street, Calcutta, age 59, and was succeeded by [[Noblett St. Leger Carter]] | ||
1878 'The death of Mr. J. C. Batchelor, the well-known Traffic Manager of the East Indian Railway, is announced. Mr. Batchelor had been ailing little lately, but (says the Indian Daily News) it was not supposed that he was suffering from any serious illness, and he was having tiffin at Messrs. Burn and Co.’s, when suddenly, in the middle of a sentence, he fell back in his chair, and died of heart disease, it is supposed. He was a man universally liked on the Railway, and a man of most charitable disposition. Of his management of the line, it would be work of supererogation to say anything. Its excellence has been acknowledged over and over again by the Directors of the E.I.R., and he has been specially thanked for his services by successive Governments of India.'<ref>Homeward Mail from India, China and the East - Monday 19 August 1878</ref> | 1878 'The death of Mr. J. C. Batchelor, the well-known Traffic Manager of the East Indian Railway, is announced. Mr. Batchelor had been ailing little lately, but (says the Indian Daily News) it was not supposed that he was suffering from any serious illness, and he was having tiffin at Messrs. Burn and Co.’s, when suddenly, in the middle of a sentence, he fell back in his chair, and died of heart disease, it is supposed. He was a man universally liked on the Railway, and a man of most charitable disposition. Of his management of the line, it would be work of supererogation to say anything. Its excellence has been acknowledged over and over again by the Directors of the E.I.R., and he has been specially thanked for his services by successive Governments of India.'<ref>Homeward Mail from India, China and the East - Monday 19 August 1878</ref> |
Latest revision as of 10:54, 16 July 2024
James Charles Batchelor (c1819-1878)
Worked for the London and North Western Railway
Traffic Manager for the East Indian Railway for twenty years
1875 August 22nd. Death Susan the beloved wife of J. C. Batchelor, East Indian Railway, at 139 Holland Road, Kensington.[1]
1878 July 22nd. Died at 7, Hastings Street, Calcutta, age 59, and was succeeded by Noblett St. Leger Carter
1878 'The death of Mr. J. C. Batchelor, the well-known Traffic Manager of the East Indian Railway, is announced. Mr. Batchelor had been ailing little lately, but (says the Indian Daily News) it was not supposed that he was suffering from any serious illness, and he was having tiffin at Messrs. Burn and Co.’s, when suddenly, in the middle of a sentence, he fell back in his chair, and died of heart disease, it is supposed. He was a man universally liked on the Railway, and a man of most charitable disposition. Of his management of the line, it would be work of supererogation to say anything. Its excellence has been acknowledged over and over again by the Directors of the E.I.R., and he has been specially thanked for his services by successive Governments of India.'[2]