24 October 1942(1942-10-24) (aged 29) El Alamein, Egypt
Source: Cricinfo, 15 October 2020
Alfred Palmerston Cobden (9 May 1913 – 24 October 1942) was a New Zealand cricketer. He played in two first-class matches for Canterbury in 1935/36.[1][2] He was killed in action during World War II.[3]
^"Alfred Cobden". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
^"Alfred Cobden". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
^"Alfred Palmerston Cobden". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
Thomas AlfredCobden (1794 – 1842) was an English architect, best known for designing many buildings in south-east Ireland, such as Cathedral of the Assumption...
Richard Cobden (3 June 1804 – 2 April 1865) was an English Radical and Liberal politician, manufacturer, and a campaigner for free trade and peace. He...
5 May – John Denvir, soldier 6 May – Douglas Stewart, poet 9 May – AlfredCobden, cricketer 13 May – John Miles, microbiologist, epidemiologist 16 May...
Cricket Association XI [617] 17 January 1942 38 Kyaumedaung, Burma [618] AlfredCobden Canterbury [619] 24 October 1942 29 El Alamein, Egypt [620] Arthur Cocks...
Donald Gordon Cobden (11 August 1914 – 11 August 1940) was a New Zealand All Black rugby player, No 430 in 1937. He was a wing. He played for Canterbury...
with Alfred Marshall, who interested him in economics. He was a foundation member of the Economic Society (1890). In 1893 he was appointed as Cobden Lecturer...
Mary, lived at 100 Bayswater Road. Tony Blair Winston Churchill Richard Cobden, lived on Westbourne Terrace A. J. Cronin Umaru Dikko, former Nigerian minister...
2010, and in the US in 2011. Futility (1922, 2012) Cobden Sanderson The Polyglots (1925, 2013) Cobden Sanderson Doom (1928) Duckworth. Also published as...
He won the Chancellor's Gold Medal for English Verse in 1899, and the Cobden (1901), Burney (1901), and Adam Smith Prizes (1903), and made his mark in...
his convictions were strengthened during a visit to England when he met Cobden and other leading advocates. During his first administration, he reduced...
Dickinson (born 1996), actor Frank Dobson (1886–1963), sculptor, lived in Cobden Road as a teenager in 1901 John Drinkwater (1882–1937), poet and dramatist...
familiar with the names of great contemporary reformers—Gladstone, Richard Cobden and John Bright—and began to read the radical Reynolds's Newspaper. By the...
of a letter addressed to Richard Cobden, a denunciation of the "peace-at-any-price party", under the title of Cobden and his Pamphlet considered. Another...
his father was a merchant from Hampshire, and a close friend of Richard Cobden. Educated at a private school in Alderley Edge, Cheshire, and then at school...
hosted meetings of the pro-Free Trade Cobden Club between the 1880s and 1930s resulting in the NLC and the Cobden Club sharing a very large number of memberships...
France and made the country an agricultural exporter. He negotiated the 1860 Cobden–Chevalier Free Trade Agreement with Britain and similar agreements with...
first accommodation was at Cobden House on Quay Street, Manchester, in a house which had been the residence of Richard Cobden. In 1859, Owens College was...
1913 in protest at the blackballing of a friend, Baron de Forest Richard Cobden Albert Cohen Professor Martin Daunton Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Queen Camilla...
September 1859 the Radical MP Richard Cobden visited Gladstone, who recorded it in his diary: "... further conv. with Mr. Cobden on Tariffs & relations with France...
business as ennobling and enabling, and an American counterpart to Mill, Cobden, and Bright", whose portrait Lincoln hung in his White House office. Sociologist...
treaty with Great Britain in 1860 ratified the free trade policy of Richard Cobden and Michel Chevalier, had brought upon French industry the sudden shock...