Beamish

Look up beamish in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Beamish may refer to:

People

  • Alfred Beamish (1879–1944), English tennis player
  • Group Captain Charles Beamish (1908–1984), Irish rugby player and RAF pilot
  • Sir David Beamish, KCB (born 1952) British public servant
  • Emma Beamish (born 1982), Irish cricketer
  • Francis Beamish (1802-1868), Irish Whig and Liberal politician
  • Geordie Beamish (born 1996), New Zealand athlete
  • Sir George Beamish (1905–1967), British air marshal and Irish rugby player
  • Geraldine Beamish (1883–1972), English tennis player
  • Harold Beamish (1896–1986), New Zealand flying ace of World War I
  • Henry Hamilton Beamish (1873–1948), British racist and Rhodesian politician
  • Olive Beamish (1890–1978), Irish-born suffragette
  • Richard J. Beamish (1869–1945), Pennsylvania lawyer, journalist, author, and public official
  • Robert Beamish (1916–2001), Canadian physician and cardiologist
  • Sally Beamish (born 1956), British composer
  • Tufton Beamish (Royal Navy officer) (1874–1951), rear admiral in the Royal Navy and member of Parliament for Lewes
  • Tufton Beamish, Baron Chelwood of Lewes (1917–1989) son of the above; British Army officer and member of Parliament for Lewes
  • Group Captain Francis Victor Beamish, DSO & Bar, DFC, AFC (1903–1942), RAF fighter pilot
  • Beamish Murdoch (1800–1876), Canadian lawyer, historian and political figure in Nova Scotia

Fictional characters

  • Chet Beamish, a character from the television series The Big Valley
  • Dr. Beamish, a character from the film Dracula's Daughter
  • Leonard Beamish, a character from the film Carry On Regardless
  • Bert Beamish, Mrs. Beamish and Major Beamish, characters in The Ickabog by J. K. Rowling
  • Wendy Beamish, a character from the film St. Elmo's Fire

Places

Other uses

See also

Topics referred to by the same term
Disambiguation icon
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Beamish.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.