Raeburn
Encyclopedia
Raeburn may refer to:
  • Anna Raeburn
    Anna Raeburn
    Anna Raeburn is a British broadcaster and journalist who is famous for her role as an 'agony aunt' giving advice on life relationship and more general life problems. She is principally known for her work on Capital Radio in London....

     (born 1944), British broadcaster and journalist
  • Boyd Raeburn
    Boyd Raeburn
    Albert Boyd Raeburn was an American jazz bandleader and bass saxophonist.Boyd Raeburn was born in Faith, South Dakota, and became one of the greatest and least-known of jazz bandleaders during the 1940s...

     U.S. jazz bandleader and bass saxophonist
  • Henry Raeburn
    Henry Raeburn
    Sir Henry Raeburn was a Scottish portrait painter, the first significant Scottish portraitist since the Act of Union 1707 to remain based in Scotland.-Biography:...

     (1756–1823), Scottish portrait painter
  • Harold Raeburn
    Harold Raeburn
    Harold Andrew Raeburn was a Scottish mountaineer.-Life:Raeburn was born in 1865 at 12 Grange Loan, Edinburgh. His father William Raeburn, a brewer, married Jessie Ramsay in 1849...

     (1865–1926), British mountaineer
  • Julieon Raeburn
    Julieon Raeburn
    Julieon Raeburn is a sprinter from Trinidad and Tobago who specializes in the 200 metres.He attended the Abilene Christian College in the United States.-Achievements:-External links:*...

     (born 1978), Trinidadian athlete
  • Paul Raeburn
    Paul Raeburn
    Paul Raeburn is the author of Acquainted with the Night, a memoir of raising children with depression and bipolar disorder. He has been the science editor and a senior writer at Business Week, and the science editor and chief science correspondent of The Associated Press...

    , U.S. science writer
  • Raeburn Place
    Raeburn Place
    Raeburn Place is the main street of Stockbridge, Edinburgh, and the name of the playing fields there.-Rugby:The first international rugby football game was played on the playing fields at Raeburn Place on 27 March 1871 between England and Scotland. It was won by Scotland, though England got revenge...

    , playing fields in Edinburgh, Scotland
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