4) the formation of Hispanic irrigation communities during the 18 th century in the northern Rio Grand Valley”.
Chill Wills | Wills Hill, 1st Marquess of Downshire | W.D. & H.O. Wills | Tom Wills | Mark Wills | Garry Wills | Wirt | William John Wills | Wirt Township, Itasca County, Minnesota | Wills Hill | Jack Wills | Bob Wills | Wirt Township | Wills Hall | Wills | Donald Wills Douglas, Jr. | Davida Wills Hurwin | Wirt Williams | Wills Point, Texas | Wills Eye Institute | William Wirt Vaughan | William Wirt Hastings | William Wirt Adams | William Wirt | William Wills, 1st Baron Winterstoke | W. G. Wills | Thomas "Tom" Wills | Stancomb-Wills Glacier | Sir Frederick Wills, 1st Baronet | Michael Wills |
In 1936, aged 36, he was granted a permit to play for the Havelock Football Club, representing the Havelock tobacco factory of W.D. & H.O. Wills, in the "Saturday Morning League" competition, conducted by the Industrial Football League.
In 1919 the estate was sold to cover death duties to Gilbert Wills, 1st Baron Dulverton, an heir to the W.D. & H.O. Wills tobacco fortune.
David Brudenell-Bruce is the son of Michael Brudenell-Bruce, 8th Marquess of Ailesbury and Edwina Sylvia de Winton Wills of W.D. & H.O. Wills.
Ernest C. Wills, American football, basketball and baseball coach
With W. G. Wills he produced Cora, a drama in three acts, Globe Theatre, 28 February 1877.
Allan and Ginter in the U.S. in 1886, and British company W.D. & H.O. Wills in 1888, were the first tobacco companies to print advertisements and, a couple years later, lithograph pictures on the cards with an encyclopedic variety of topics from nature to war to sports — subjects that appealed to men who smoked.
The CD includes a 24-page booklet with information about each track, as well as biographical information about Wills, written by Trav S.D., author of No Applause, Just Throw Money: The Book That Made Vaudeville Famous.
The Wills family were part owners of W. D. & H. O. Wills, tobacco importers and cigarette manufacturers, which had been founded by Wills's great grandfather, Henry Overton Wills, in 1786, and later became part of Imperial Tobacco.
The brand is cited in Salman Rushdie's post-colonial novel Midnight's Children, where it is, however, mis-attributed to the former British importer and manufacturer W.D. & H.O. Wills: Rushdie later explains this as symptomatic of an 'unreliable narrative' device in his essay on the book's 'errata'.
Thomas "Tom" Wills (1835–1880), one of the inventors of Australian rules football