John reeves tea
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Year 2019International Furniture Fair Singapore (IFFS).
This year we launched new designs including the Talon Slot collection, Bento modular lounge series, Victoria occasional tables in solid wood, Pinlock Steel Presentation Shelving and New configuration of the Pinlock Shelving in solid wood.
Vietnam International Furniture & Home Accessories Fair (VIFA).
In collaboration with SUNBRELLA outdoor fabrics we exhibited at our CAST outdoor collection complete with cushions and covers by SUNBRELLA and Quick Dry Foam.
New product launched here - CAST Sun Lounger.
Year 2018 REEVESdesign launches at KOFURN exhibition in Korea with I+STYLERS and Inart.
International Furniture Fair Singapore (IFFS).
In celebration of over 10years of the Louis Collection, we launched Louis Solid Wood - in solid FSC Walnut and FSC Oak, including a Louis Four Poster bed with Ombre lacquered posts.
Successful launch of the Talon Petite Lounge chairs - a more compact lounge chair that is complemented with companion Talon Ottoman, ideal for smaller rooms an
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John Reeves (activist)
British judge and public official
John Reeves (20 November 1752 – 7 August 1829) was a legal historian, civil servant, British magistrate, conservative activist, and the first Chief Justice of Newfoundland. In 1792 he founded the Association for Preserving Liberty and Property against Republicans and Levellers, for the purpose suppressing the "seditious publications" authored by British supporters of the French Revolution—most famously, Thomas Paine's Rights of Man. Because of his counter-revolutionary actions he was regarded by many of his contemporaries as "the saviour of the British state";[1] in the years after his death, he was warmly remembered as the saviour of ultra-Toryism.
Life
Reeves was educated at Eton College and Merton College, Oxford, being elected in 1778 as a Fellow of The Queen's College, Oxford. In 1779 he was called to the bar and held the public offices counsel to the Royal Mint; law clerk to the Board of Trade; and superintendent of Aliens. Following the Gordon Riots of 1780, he drafted London and Westmin
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REEVES, JOHN, judge and author; b. 20 Nov. 1752 in London, son of John Reeves; d. there unmarried 7 Aug. 1829.
Schooled at Eton College, John Reeves was denied a fellowship at King’s College, Cambridge, but matriculated at Merton College, Oxford, on 31 Oct. 1771. He obtained his ba in 1775 and on 11 November was elected Michel scholar of Queen’s College, Oxford. He became a fellow of Queen’s on 8 Oct. 1777, qualifying for an ma the next year. In 1780 Reeves was made a commissioner of bankrupts, having been called to the bar via the Middle Temple the previous year. In 1779 too he had begun his career as a prolific author of works on legal, political, and constitutional questions. Legal adviser to the Privy Council committee for trade from 1787, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society three years later.
In 1791 Reeves stepped out of the conventional life of his profession when he became a judge in Newfoundland. The circumstances of his nomination were complex. In 1787 a decision of the Court of Quarter Sessions in Devon, England, ha
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