Outram Marshall

[1] Marshall was a contemporary at Oxford of the Mohawk student Oronhyatekha, whom he took under his wing on the Canadian’s arrival in 1862.

[4] Marshall was Patron of the benefices of St Nicholas, Perivale, and of Roos with Tunstall, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, which meant having the right to choose the parish priest.

[citation needed] In 1915, during the First World War, while the Marshalls were living at Pinewood, Oriental Road, Woking, their daughter Emilie married Major Alfred Hopewell Pullman, of the Royal West Kent Regiment,[7][8] a decorated Boer War officer who a few months later gained the DSO for gallantry at the Battle of Loos.

[9] In March 1918, Pullman retired from the army due to ill health caused by the war, and joined the Marshall family at Woking.

[9] Marshall died on 14 February 1932, still living at Pinewood, leaving an estate valued at £3,296.