Lloyd family (Birmingham)

The Lloyd family of Birmingham was a prominent Quaker family who migrated in the seventeenth century to Birmingham, England, from Dolobran Hall near Meifod, Powys (previously in Montgomeryshire),[1] Wales. The family were involved in manufacturing and in the establishment of Lloyds Bank.[2] The principal residence of the senior branch of the Birmingham family was Farm, Bordesley.

At the outbreak of the First World War Gertrude and John Henry Lloyd had four sons of military age:[3]

  • Alan Scrivener Lloyd who enlisted in the Royal Field Artillery and was killed on 4 August 1916 at Ypres.
  • Ronald Lloyd joined the Friends' Ambulance Unit in 1914, but following Alan's death enlisted in the Royal Field Artillery.
  • Eric Lloyd joined the Friends Ambulance Unit in 1914 and enlisted in the Navy in 1916.
  • Gerald Lloyd was a Conscientious Objector and undertook alternative civilian service with the YMCA.

Notable family members

Prominent members of the family included:

gollark: ???
gollark: Umnikos == helloboi confirmed?
gollark: Other good liquids include: GTech™ electromagnetically confined lepton slurry; apple juice; hot chocolate; molten uranium salts.
gollark: Well, I like orange juice, but it's probably unhealthy to drink that for *everything*.
gollark: Water tastes too bland and I don't really make recipes.

See also

References

  1. "Deeds relating to the Lloyd family and to the Dolobran estate". National Library of Wales. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  2. Lloyd, Samuel (1907). The Lloyds of Birmingham. Cornish Brothers.
  3. Roberts, Sian (2014). Great war britain birmingham : remembering 1914-18. [S.l.]: The History Press Ltd. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-7509-5969-8.
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