User:Chemical Engineer/sandbox

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Manual of Style[edit]

Wikipedia:Manual of Style

Citation References[edit]

Cite Web[edit]

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Cite book[edit]

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{{cite book}}: Empty citation (help) Braun, Detlef (2012). Leverkusen. Erfurt: Sutton. ISBN 978-3866809703.

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Harvard Burt & Grady 1994, p. 92

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Cite journal[edit]

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Kam, Jaqueline (June 2004). "Success in Failure: The National Centre for Popular Music". Prometheus. 22 (2): 169–187. doi:10.1080/0810902042000218355. S2CID 155046317.

Anonymous (2002). "Robust design - form follows funk: National Centre for Popular Music, Sheffield". The Architectural Review. 211 (1259 Suppl): 8–9.

Cite magazine[edit]

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Cite news[edit]

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"Is this really the world's ugliest building?". The Star. Sheffield. 21 July 2011. Retrieved 23 November 2018.

Stokes, Paul (21 February 2003). "Student group takes over pop museum". The Telegraph. Retrieved 23 November 2018.

Cite Patent[edit]

To cite a patent

  • [1] 
  • GB 464587A, Reavell, James Arthur, "Improvements in or relating to liquid circulation heating systems", published April 21, 1937 

Cite Historic England[edit]

Historic England. "125, Main Street (1375129)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 May 2019. Commons: 1375129

Cite ODNB[edit]

Pierce, Hazel. "Pole, Margaret, suo jure countess of Salisbury (1473–1541)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22451. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Cite OED[edit]

"fuck, v.". Oxford English Dictionary Online. March 2008. Retrieved 1 June 2014.

Cite First Names[edit]

[1]

Cite Wainwright[edit]

Wainwright, Martin (2009). Leeds: Shaping the City. London: RIBA. ISBN 9781-85946-2447.

Cite Wrathmell[edit]

Wrathmell, Susan (2005). Pevsner Architectural Guides: Leeds. Yale University Press. p. 108. ISBN 0-300-10736-6.

Cite Leodis[edit]

"Headingley Castle". www.leodis.net. Leeds City Council. Retrieved 15 July 2018.


"Briggate at the junction with Boar Lane showing McDonald's at number 33-35". www.leodis.net. Leeds City Council. 6 October 1999. Retrieved 23 March 2019.

"Briggate, looking south". www.leodis.net. Leeds City Council. February 2007. Retrieved 23 March 2019.

"Headingley Castle". www.leodis.net. Leeds City Council. Retrieved 15 July 2018.

Cite WI Villages[edit]

South and West[edit]

South & West Yorkshire Federations of Women's Institutes (1991). The South and West Yorkshire Village Book. Newbury: Countryside Books. ISBN 1-85306-1360.

North[edit]

North Yorkshire Federation of Women's Institutes (1991). North Yorkshire Village Book. Countryside Books. ISBN 1-85306-1379.

East[edit]

East Yorkshire Federation of Women's Institutes (1991). North Yorkshire Village Book. Countryside Books. ISBN 1-85306-1387.

Blue Plaques[edit]

Reference[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hanks, Patrick; Hardcastle, Kate; Hodges, Flavia (2006). A Dictionary of First Names 2nd edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198610601.
  2. ^ Dyson, Peter; Grady, Kevin (2001). Blue Plaques of Leeds. Leeds Civic Trust. ISBN 0905671228.

Ireland Wood[edit]

http://mapservices.historicengland.org.uk/printwebservicehle/StatutoryPrint.svc/23550/HLE_A4L_NoGrade%7CHLE_A3L_NoGrade.pdf

Stone circle in Clayton Wood

https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1018814

Woodland Trust: Ireland Wood Management Plan 2017 7.6 hectares 50% oak, 20% birch two portions north and south of Hospital Lane. http://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/woodfile/463/management-plan.pdf?cb=216ad8b4fc8f438baea86ab024044eeb

Cole Part 2, page 47 Postwar estates. 1948 Iveson and Ireland Wood; 1952 Tinshill, Silkmill and Woodnook; 1957 Moseley Wood; 1973 Holt Park; 1980 Spring Wood

Peter Jaconelli[edit]

Peter Jaconelli (25 November 1925 - 15 May 1999), was a business magnate, and mayor of Scarborough, North Yorkshire from 1971 - 2. He was implicated in the Jimmy Savile sexual abuse scandal.

Life[edit]

Jaconelli was born in Glasgow[1] on 25 November 1925[2] His father, Richard, was head of a company manufacturing and selling ice cream which relocated with the family in 1933 to Scarbororough and the seven-year-old began selling, something he continued to do even when he became chief executive and even after retiring in 1991,[2] being known as the King of the Cornets.[3] When in charge of the company he expanded it from a local company to a national catering one, supplying both ice-creams and desserts to restaurants.[2]

Outside business, he was a Conservative local councillor[4] becoming mayor of Scarborough for 1971-2 and made Honorary Alderman of the Borough of Scarborough in 1996.[3] He was also chairman of the North Yorkshire county council planning committee, and on a number of other local government committees.[2]

On 27 April 1972 he ate 500 oysters in 48.07 minutes to establish a Guinness World Record.[5]

He died 15 May 1999[2] and was buried in Woodlands Cemetery, Scarborough.[1] In 2012 his close friend Jimmy Savile was buried nearby.[1]

Sexual abuse scandal[edit]

In 2014 it was revealed that Jaconelli had been charged with Indecent assault in 1972 and with Savile was suspected of being part of a paedophile ring which had operated in Scarborough.[6] Savile's headstone had already been removed, and Jaconelli's was removed shortly after.[1] The title of Honorary Alderman was posthumously removed in 2013.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Mystery as shamed Scarborough mayor's headstone disappears". Yorkshire Post. 2 January 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Wainwright, Martin (20 May 1999). "Obituary Peter Jaconelli, The ice cream king of Scarborough". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Ex-Scarborough mayor Jaconelli 'charged with indecent assault in 1970s'". Yorkshire Post. 23 September 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
  4. ^ Harvey Proctor, K. Credible and true: the political and personal memoir of K. Harvey Proctor. London: Biteback. p. 23. ISBN 9781785900013.
  5. ^ McWhirter, Norris; McWhirter, Ross (1974). Guinness Book of World Records. Enfield: Guinness Superlatives. p. 236. ISBN 0900424222.
  6. ^ The Newsroom (31 December 2014). "'Shocked' Jaconelli family speaks up". The Scarborough News. Scarborough. Retrieved 17 October 2023.

Desmond McNamara[edit]

Desmond McNamara (1938-2022) was an English actor on the stage, radio, TV and film.

McNamara was born in Hackney, London, to Arthur and Winifred McNamara, and did his National Service in the RAF before becoming a printer. In 1961 he married Pam Bentley, and they had two sons.[1]

From 1966 he trained at RADA before joining Birmingham Repertory Company, then the Young Vic in 1970, then the Royal National Theatre,[1] followed by an extensive theatre career ranging from the lead in Oliver Goldsmith's The Good Natured Man at the Old Vic in 1971 [2] to the part of Merlin in Camelot (musical) in 1996.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

Films included The Great Paper Chase, (1986), Staggered (1994), Shakespeare in Love (1998) and Lucky Break (2001).[1][3]

TV appearances included Hazell, The Bill, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Fortunes of War, Roll Over Beethoven, and All at No 20.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Price, Emlyn (11 July 2022). "Desmond McNamara obituary". The Guardian. London..
  2. ^ Wardle, Irving (10 December 1971). "Unconquering Goldsmith". The Times. London.
  3. ^ "Desmond McNamara(1938-2022)". www.imdb.com. Retrieved 10 February 2023.

Wheatfield[edit]

Wheatfield House, formerly Wheatfield Lodge, is a Grade II listed building, about 1855, with a rear extension in 1900, and 20th century additions to form Wheatfield Hospice, operated by the Sue Ryder charity[1]

References[edit]

George Walker[edit]

Wikimedia has images including the Collier

Brian Flowers, Baron Flowers[edit]

Lord Flowers Obituary, Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/science/2010/jun/29/lord-flowers-brian-flowers-obituary

https://biography.wales/article/s11-FLOW-HIL-1924

LGC[edit]

1907 Report[edit]

REPORT OF THE PRINCIPAL CHEMIST UPON THE WORK OF THE GOVERNMENT LABORATORY FOR THE YEAR ENDING MARCH 31, 1907. WITH APPENDICES. (Issued as a Payliamentary Pupey, pp. 1-33.) THE business of the Government Laboratory may be divided into three classes, via. : (I.) Work in connection with the Revenue Departments-(A) Customs, (B) Excise; (11.) work in connection with other Government Departments ; and (111.) work in connection with the administration of the Food and Drugs Act, and Fertilisers and Feeding Stuffs Act.In all, 173,606 analyses and examinations were made. One thousand eight hundred and seventy-five samples of imported butter were examined, in accordance with the provisions of Section 1 of the Sale of Food and Drugs Act, 1899, and of these 44.4 per cent. contained boron preservative (beinga decrease of 54 per cent. as compared with last year), and 25.1 per cent. added colouring matter. Of 67 samples of cream, 56 contained boron preservative, and 43 of these also contained salicylic acid. Of 127 reference samples under the Sale of Food and Drugs Act, and the Fertilisers and Feeding Stuffs Act, 100 agreed, or partially agreed, with the analyses of the Public Analyst, whilst 24 disagreed. The bulk of the samples referred by magistrates consisted of milk. The charges alleged against the 83 samples examined were as follows : 41 for containing added water, 30 for deficiency in fat, 6 for both added water and deficiency in fat, 4 for containing boron preservative, and 2 for the presence of formaldehyde. In 10 cases the charges could not be substantiated-namely, 6 as regards added water, 3 as to deficiency in fat, and 1 as to the presence of boron preservative. One thousand two hundred and sixty-eight samples of beer, wort, and materials used by brewers were tested for the presence of arsenic. Of these, 49 were found to contain it in excess of the limits laid down by the Royal Commission on Arsenical Poisoning-namely, the equivalent of 1/100 grain of arsenious oxide per pound in the case of solids, or per gallon in the case of liquids. Of the 132 samples of malt examined, two only exceeded the limit, the highest amount found being 1/80 grain per pound. Of 711 samples of glucose, invert sugar, caramel, etc., only two exceeded the limit-namely, a sample of invert sugar which contained 1/50, and one of caramel which contained 1/70, grain per pound. The greatest amount found in any sample of wort or beer was 1/36 grain per gallon. The greatest amount found in any sample examined was 3 grain per pound, this quantity being present in an article intended for flavouring stout.

In 1907 more than 173,000 analyses and examinations were made, principally for Customs and Excise and in connection with the Sale Food and Drugs Act and the Fertilsers and Feeding Stuffs Act. This included, for example, 1875 samples of imported butter and 1278 samples of beer, wort, and materials used by brewers for limits of prohibited substances.



Privatization[edit]

The Next Steps arrangements represent an administrative agreement between ministers, supported by their departments, and chief executives to deliver agreed objectives. The roles, responsibilities and resources of each party are set out before launch in a Framework Document (Efficiency Unit 1988). Before an agency is established a 'prior options' review examines: whether the function should be abolished, privatized, market tested or contracted out, amalgamated or is suitable for agency status. One of the main concerns at the start of the agency project was that the arrangements would be a precursor to privatization (Treasury and Civil Service Committee 1988). In giving evidence to this committee, Michael Heseltine (then a backbencher) argued that agencies should be privatized (Flynn et al. 1988, p. 41) and for Nigel Lawson (the then Chancellor), the process of agencification provided a clarity which made privatization more feasible (Lawson 1992, p. 393). Concerns about privatization prompted governmental reassurances that functions provided through agencies would not normally be considered privatization candidates, and that where this was the case, it would be made clear when the agency was set up (Cm 524 1988, p. 7; Goldsworthy 1991). There was, therefore, a strong belief in departments and agencies that agencies were located in the public sector (Cambell and Wilson 1995, p. 243). Built into the agency process was a review of each agency's prior options (initially after three years, now after five). The first round of reviews coincided with the re-election of a fourth term Conservative government and a noted change in emphasis of the prior options process (Theakston 1995, p. 149). Before moving on to examine how the 1992 election provided a window of opportunity for strategic actors to seek to privatize agencies,

In the DTI, the LGC, provided a range of analytical chemistry analyses (LGC 1989). The role of the Government Chemist - who is also the Chief Executive of the LGC - was to act as an independent and impartial arbiter of last resort in the case of disputes over analysis in the Courts. It became an agency in 1989 with the keen support of the then Government Chemist and his line manager in the DTI, a former Government Chemist. At the time of agencification, it did almost no work in support of DTI legislation and the majority of its work came from other departments. Well before the LGC became an agency, it had clearly identified customers and charges. Although less involved than the FSS in the administration of justice, the LGC did (and does) perform some forensic work and when the future of the Metropolitan Police Forensic Laboratory was being debated consideration was given to its merger with either the FSS or the LGC (Efficiency Unit 1994, p. 10).

Gains, Francesca (1999). "Implementing Privatization Policies in 'Next Steps' Agencies". Public Administration. 77 (4): 713–730. doi:10.1111/1467-9299.00176.

Management Buyout[edit]

The Laboratory of the Government Chemist (LGC) is a commercial company offering a wide range of activities based on chemistry and biology to the private and public sectors. The Laboratory dates from 1842 but takes its name from the long-established post of Government Chemist which it assumed in 1911, and which it still holds on behalf of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). The main roles of the Government Chemist are (i) to act as arbiter, or referee analyst, in disputes arising from chemical analyses undertaken to enforce regulations and (ii) to provide advice and expertise where chemical analysis impinges on regulation or government policy. The Laboratory became an Executive Agency in October 1989 and has returned an operating surplus in each of the years since, except for 1995. In 1993, following a review of privatization options, the President of the Board of Trade announced that LGC would become a company limited by guarantee but would also be willing to consider the possibility of a trade sale if a suitable buyer came forward. The DTI was clear that in privatizing LGC it wanted to see its statutory role maintained even though it would be trading in the private sector. This would mean that the title and role of Government Chemist would remain with the Laboratory and that it would principally be engaged in providing authoritative, independent and impartial advice to underpin the work of government, commerce and industry. Moreover, the Laboratory would continue to receive government support for its involvement in major public sector programmes for at least ten years in commercial terms. This would guarantee part of the Laboratory's income once privatization was complete. This was a demanding requirement for any potential purchaser, especially as the DTI required the eventual purchaser to enter into an agreement to do all things necessary to maintain the capabilities of the office of the Government Chemist. It is therefore not surprising that of the 40 initial enquiries into the sale only three were suitable to proceed further in March 1995. In the event, none of the organizations submitted a final bid. With discussions continuing with one party to establish commercial terms on which they would be willing to proceed, a last minute bid was submitted in June 1995 through a buyout consortium led by the chief executive, Richard Worswick, involving LGC management and employees, The Royal Society of Chemistry, and 3i. Remarkably in just three months the directors of LGC had managed to put together a proposal to purchase the Laboratory and identied appropriate financial backing. The consortium was eventually selected as the preferred bidder in November 1995 and was the first central government laboratory to be privatized through a buyout.

Frier, Peter; Birley, Sue (October 1999). "Management Buyouts in the Public Sector". Long Range Planning. 32 (5): 531–540. doi:10.1016/S0024-6301(99)00041-2.

References[edit]

Further Reading:[edit]

Hammond, P. W.; Egan, Harold (1991). Weighed in the Balance: A History of the Laboratory of the Government Chemist. HMSO. ISBN 0-11-515302-0.

Cinderella[edit]

Theatre[edit]

In 1804 Cinderella was presented at Drury Lane Theatre, London, described as "A new Grand Allegorical Pantomimic Spectacle" though it was very far in style and content from the modern pantomime. However, it included notable clown Joseph Grimaldi playing the part of a servant called Pedro, the antecedant of today's character Buttons.[1] In 1820 Harlequin and Cinderella at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden had much of the modern story (taken from the opera La Cenerentola) by Rossini but was a Harlequinade again featuring Grimaldi.[1] In 1830 Rophino Lacy used Rossini's music but with spoken dialogue in a comic opera with many of the main characters: the Baron, the two stepsisters and Pedro the servant all as comic characters, plus a Fairy Queen instead of a magician.[1] However it was the conversion of this via burlesque and rhyming couplets by Henry Byron which led to what was effectively the modern pantomime in both story and style at the Royal Strand Theatre in 1860: Cinderella! Or the Lover, the Lackey, and the Little Glass Slipper.[1]

  • Cinderella debuted as a pantomime on stage at the Drury Lane Theatre, London in 1904 and at the Adelphi Theatre in London in 1905. Phyllis Dare, aged 14 or 15, starred in the latter.[2] In the traditional pantomime version the opening scene takes place in a forest with a hunt in progress; here Cinderella first meets Prince Charming and his "right-hand man" Dandini, whose name and character come from Gioachino Rossini's opera (La Cenerentola). Cinderella mistakes Dandini for the Prince and the Prince for Dandini. Her father, Baron Hardup, is under the thumb of his two stepdaughters, the Ugly sisters, and has a servant, Cinderella's friend Buttons. (Throughout the pantomime, the Baron is continually harassed by the Broker's Men (often named after current politicians) for outstanding rent.) The Fairy Godmother must magically create a coach (from a pumpkin), footmen (from mice), a coach driver (from a frog), and a beautiful dress (from rags) for Cinderella to go to the ball. However, she must return by midnight, as it is then that the spell ceases.
  1. ^ a b c d Clinton-Baddeley, V. C. (1963). Some Pantomime Pedigrees. The Society for Theatrical Research. p. 9-11.
  2. ^ "Dare, Phyllis and Zena". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia.com. 2002. Retrieved 2018-12-04.

Joyce Dennys[edit]

Joyce Dennys was an English author, painter and illustrator. She produced a notable poster for the Voluntary Aid Detachment to recruit women as auxiliary nurses during World War I.

Married Dr Tom Evans, died 23 February 1991 in London (after him) had daughter, was grandmother and great grandmother. Obit in Daily Telegraph Tuesday, February 26, 1991, Issue 42199, p.18 (Announcements: Deaths: Evans)


Henrietta's War was column in the Sketch, cut out and sent to publisher much much later. Holloway, David The Daily Telegraph (London, England), Friday, September 27, 1985, Issue 40519, p.12 (807 words)

https://www.bloomsbury.com/author/joyce-dennys JOYCE DENNYS was born 14th August 1883 in India. The Dennys family relocated to England in 1886. Dennys enjoyed drawing lessons throughout her schooling and later enrolled at Exeter Art School. In 1919 Dennys married Tom Evans, a young doctor, and they moved to Australia. While living in New South Wales, Dennys's work was constantly in print and exhibited in many galleries. In 1922 Joyce became a mother and moved back to England. Her drawing took second place to the domestic and social duties of a doctor's wife and mother and she became increasingly frustrated. She voiced her frustrations through the character of Henrietta, a heroine she created for an article for Sketch. Henrietta was to become so important to Dennys that she once remarked, 'When I stopped doing the piece after the war, I felt quite lost. Henrietta was part of me. I never quite knew where I ended and she began.' These letters were later compiled to form Henrietta's War, first published by Andre Deutsch in 1985.

https://budleighbrewsterunited.blogspot.com/2013/03/more-joyce-dennys-paintings-on-display.html major biography, including Joyce Dennys was born in Simla, India.

After Exeter Art School and further art studies in London, interrupted by the outbreak of war in 1914, Joyce Dennys served in the Voluntary Aid Detachment nursing scheme. Her experience in various hospitals at this time was the source of amusing caricatures collected in her albums. In 1915 she was commissioned to draw the pictures for Our Hospital ABC with verses by Hampden Gordon and M.C. Tindall, published in the following year. She also produced recruitment posters for the War Office.

Following her marriage to Tom Evans the couple moved for a time to New South Wales where her illustrations, which she exhibited in numerous galleries, were much in demand. In 1922, now a mother, she returned to Britain where her husband became a GP in Budleigh Salterton. She took part in the town’s amateur dramatics at this time as an actress, producer and playwright, but her drawing took second place to the social and domestic duties of a doctor’s wife. However she continued to produce illustrations for magazines such as Punch and Sketch. Among the authors she worked with was Rodney Bennett, father of the composer Sir Richard Rodney Bennett. It was Joyce Dennys who invited him and his family to move to Budleigh when World War Two broke out.

Much of Joyce Dennys’ work is a wry comment on the inferior position of women in society. This 1930 print with the ironic title of ‘Perfect Wives’ features a long-suffering spouse enduring the cold as she watches her husband ice-skating…

Following her death in London in 1991 Joyce Dennys was cremated and her ashes scattered off the coast of Budleigh Salterton.

https://budleighbrewsterunited.blogspot.com/2013/03/more-joyce-dennys-paintings-on-display.html biography https://www.curtisbrown.co.uk/client/joyce-dennys#! biography http://www.devonremembers.co.uk/content/ww1-stories/nurse-artist-and-author

Books[edit]

Henrietta's War: News from the home front - 1939 to 1942 by Joyce Dennys

Henrietta sees it through: More news from the home front - 1942 to 1945 by Joyce Dennys

Mrs Dose - The Doctor's Wife by Joyce Dennys Bodley Head 1930 (she was the wife of a doctor)

In 1926, painter Joyce Dennys (1893–1991) and writer Edmund George Valpy Knox, aka Evoe (1870 – 2 January) collaborated on A Winter Sports Alphabet.

References[edit]

British Society of Rheology[edit]

British Society of Rheology
Formation1950 (1950) (1940)[1]
TypeProfessional association
Location
  • United Kingdom
Membership
600[2]
Official language
English
President
Prof Timothy N. Philips
Key people
Dr Karl Hawkins (Secretary)
Websitewww.bsr.org.uk

A British society for those interested in all aspects of rheology.

Formed in 1940 by G. W. Scott Blair (Secretary), V. G. W. Harrison, and H. R. Lang as the British Rheologist's Club and changed to its present name in 1950. The inaugural meeting was on 16 November 1940 at the University of Reading, at which Sir Geoffrey Taylor was elected President, and its first major conference was at St Hilda's College, Oxford in 1944. A news journal, The Bulletin of the British Rheologist's Club began in 1941. This included some abstracts of papers, which in 1958 became a separate publication Rheology Abstracts which ceased as a printed publication in 2013.[1][2][3]

Scott Blair went on to become the first President of the renamed society in 1950.[2]

It awards a Gold Medal for outstanding contributions to the field as well as other awards and scholarships. It was a founder member of the International Society of Rheology and the European Society of Rheology.[2]

Publishes:

  • Rheology Reviews: peer-refereed academic journal
  • Rheology Bulletin: news of interest to members

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Tanner, R I; Walters, K (1998). Rheology: An Historical Perspective. Elsevier Science B.V. p. 44-6. ISBN 0-444-82945-8.
  2. ^ a b c d Rhian Phillips. "The British Society of Rheology Archive". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Jisc. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  3. ^ "Publications". www.bsr.org.uk. British Society of Rheology. Retrieved 29 March 2019.

Oakwood History[edit]

Oakwood's principal industry in the 1800s was the quarrying of stone, and most of the older stone buildings are from this. An outcrop can be seen on Gledhow rise behind the shop currently (2019) Home Bargains but formerly a Co-op, and there are the remains of a quarry in Gipton Wood.[1][2] Ravenscar Avenue contains quarrymen's cottages, built around 1840.[2] Oakwood Boundary Road is still surfaced with quarried stone sets.[2] In the 19th and early 20th century, Oakwood was a suburb of Roundhay, itself part of a local government district called Leeds Rural District, separate from the city.[3] Horse-drawn omnibuses ran from the city to Roundhay from 1843 but in 1889 a steam tram ran from Sheepscar to Oakwood, circling around the present Oakwoood clock area.[2] In 1891 an electric tram (the first in Europe with overhead wires) ran, continuing past the clock alongside Soldier's Fields to what is now a car park.[3] In 1912 Roundhay Rural District (including Oakwood) became part of Leeds. At this time the large clock which had been removed from Kirkgate Market was presented to the district, being erected in 1913.[4] From 1913 to 1953 the Oakwood clock building served as a shelter for tram passengers.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Mitchell, Murray (2001). "Quarrying in the Oakwood Area". Oak Leaves (2). Oakwood and District Historical Society: 5–10.
  2. ^ a b c d e Walk Around the Clock. Oakwood Traders and Residents Association. 2015.
  3. ^ a b Hall, Geoff (2001). "Oakwood: The Nineteenth Century of Roundhay". Oak Leaves (2). Oakwood and District Historical Society: 3–4.
  4. ^ Harrison, John; Harrison, Cynthia (2007). "Quarrying in the Oakwood Area" (PDF). Oak Leaves (7). Oakwood and District Historical Society. Retrieved 28 March 2019.

Moor Allerton Golf Club[edit]

After the First World War there was a substantial Jewish population in North Leeds including some very successful businessmen. However, there was also a lot of prejudice which meant that many institutions would not admit Jews to membership. This was the case for Moortown Golf Club along with others nearby.[1]

A consortium purchased farm land North of Nursery Lane and West of Primley Park Road. Despite the objections of Moortown Golf Club and the Residents' Association, planning permission was granted and the club opened on 27 March 1923, though initially with only 12 holes playable.[1][2][3]

It was sometimes referred to as a Jewish Golf Course[4] but from the outset it was open to all as members and visitors.[1] Its presence made it attractive as a social venue, and many houses were constructed nearby on what had been a sparsely populated area.[1]

In the late 1960s land was purchased on Blackmoor Farm and the Nursery Lane site was sold for housing. The club opened on its present site off Coal Road, Wike, LS17, on 2 May 1971 with Eldon Griffiths, the Minister for Sport officiating. The former clubhouse on Nursery Lane was converted into a pub, The Allerton.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Hyman, Ted (2001). A History of Moor Allerton Golf Club (2nd edn).
  2. ^ "A New Golf Club. Opening Ceremony To-Day at Moor Allerton". Yorkshire Evening Post. 27 March 1923.
  3. ^ "A New Club for Leeds. Moor Allerton Course Opened". Yorkshire Post. 28 March 1923.
  4. ^ Landa, M J (19 April 1923). "A Jewish Golf Course". Jewish Chronicle.

External Links[edit]

Rolf Prince[edit]

Professor Rudolf George Herman Prince,(1928–2017) known as Rolf was a noted chemical engineering academic, specializing in distillation and mass transfer.[1][2]

Life[edit]

Prince was born in Chemnitz,[3] Germany on 2 August 1928[4] from a Jewish family.[1] He and his mother moved to Italy in 1936, to Ireland in 1939 and to New Zealand in 1940.[1][2] He was educated at Christchurch Boys' High School in Christchurch, then studied chemical engineering at Canterbury University College of the University of New Zealand graduating in 1949.[3] He then took a PhD at the University of Sydney, Australia, becoming a lecturer there.[2] In 1953 he moved to the UK as a process engineer with The Distillers Company.[3] He then from 1958 pursued an academic career, as a lecturer at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, then in 1960 a Senior Lecturer at the University of Sydney and in 1965 a professor at the University of Queensland,[2] where he established a new department of chemical engineering.[4] From 1969 to 1994 he was professor and head of the department of chemical engineering at the University of Sydney, remaining there until his retirement in 1998.[1][2][3]

He died in Sidney on 3 July 2017.[4][5]

Family[edit]

He married Laurel (19 November 1926 - 7 April 2018)[6], whom he met while a student.[1] They had three children.[1][6]

Honours[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Rolf Prince". www.apcche.org. Engineers Australia. 11 December 2017. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Langrish, Timothy. "Rudolf 'Rolf' Prince, 1928–2017". The Chemical Engineer. Institution of Chemical Engineers. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Rudolf (Rolf) George Herman Prince: 1986—1987". www.icheme.org. Institution of Chemical Engineers. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "The Rolf Prince Scholarship". crowdfunding.sydney.edu.au. The University of Sydney. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  5. ^ a b "Deceased Fellows". www.applied.org.au. Art Gallery of New South Wales. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Laurel Prince". tributes.smh.com.au. Sydney Morning Herald. 14 April 2018. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  7. ^ "Winners for 1998". www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au. Australian Academy of Technology & Engineering. Retrieved 30 March 2019.

William H. Thorp[edit]

[2] William Henry Thorp (1852-1944) William Henry Thorp was born in Leeds in 1852 and was articled to A.M. Fowler, Leeds Borough Surveyor. He commenced practice on his own account in 1876 and in the 1890 merged it with that of George Francis Danby. Thorp was responsible for the design of secular buildings and Danby for ecclesiastical buildings. The partnership was dissolved in 1902; Thorp’s son Ralph joined the practice about this time, being taken into partnership in 1909. This lasted until 1911 when Ralph left for London. G.H. Foggitt was taken in partnership from 1919 until 1923. Thorp was a friend of Fred Rowntree. He was a founder member and first secretary of the Leeds & Yorkshire Architectural Society and was President from 1890-1892. Thorp died on 16 January 1944.

Buildings[edit]

  • Nurses Home LGI
  • School of Medicine LGI
  • City Art Gallery
  • YMCA Albion Street
  • Oxford Place Methodist Church
  • 58-62 Vicar Lane, Temperance Hotel
  • Police Station, Library Chapel Allerton
  • Cliff Road, Headingley Home for Girls 1873 (Grimshaw house)
  • Spring Bank, Headingley
  • Porch at Weetwood 1886
  • Friends Meeting House, York

Publications[edit]

An Architect's Sketch Book, At Home and Abroad John N. Rhodes, A Yorkshire Painter

References[edit]

Shadwell[edit]

History[edit]

The first written proof of Shadwell's existence is in 1086 in William the Conqueror's Domesday Book, where it is called Scadewelle, and is part of the Feudal Barony of Pontefract.[1] The origin of the name is not certain, and some 25 variations are found in the historical record, the present one being largely fixed in the 18th century. In the original Anglo-Saxon form, 'welle' could mean a well, spring or boundary, often a boundary stream, such as Shadwell Beck. The 'scade' portion could refer to shady, or a name such as Chad or Shad, and different characters with these names have been postulated.[2] The village pub "The Red Lion" is located between two wells which were originally used to gather water for the brewing process.

In the Middle Ages it was part of the Wapentake of Skyrack. Over the centuries Shadwell was sometimes a separate manor, sometimes part of the Manor of Roundhay until these rights were extinguished in 1935.[1]

Shadwell was historically a township in the ancient church parish of Thorner in the West Riding of Yorkshire, until the construction of St Paul's Church.[1] Roundhay Grange, originally a grange of Kirkstall Abbey, was a detached part of the township.[3]

In the early part of the 19th century it was still a village with fewer than 200 inhabitants, containing 11 farms, 2 inns and a Methodist chapel but no school or church. However, from the middle of the century buildings began to appear as wealthier people moved out of industrial Leeds, made with stone from the local quarries.[4]

In 1866 the township became a separate civil parish as part of Wetherby Rural district, but in 1912 the parish was abolished and absorbed into Leeds.[1][5]

In 1974 Shadwell became part of the enlarged City of Leeds in the new county of West Yorkshire. In 2002 the civil parish was reconstituted, with an elected parish council.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Howard 1978, p. 1-2
  2. ^ Howard 1978, p. 3-4
  3. ^ "Roundhay Park Conservation Area" (PDF). West Yorkshire Archaeological Advisory Service. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
  4. ^ Howard 1978, p. 64-7
  5. ^ Vision of Britain website
  6. ^ Leeds City Council: Shadwell Parish Council

Bibliography

  • Howard (1978). Shadwell and its People. Shadwell Women's Institute.

Richard Fitter[edit]

Telegraph[edit]

Richard Fitter Daily Telegraph

12:04AM BST 06 Sep 2005

Richard Fitter, the author and naturalist who died on Saturday aged 92, was one of Britain's best-known wildlife experts; over half a century, his field guides and other popular writings made an important contribution to the education of amateur natural historians. There can be few nature-watchers who have not, at some time or other, had the pleasure of carrying a Richard Fitter book on their outings. His series of identification guides, beginning with the Collins Pocket Guide to British Birds in 1952, was among the first and best of its kind. Written in a lucid and unpretentious style, these books were ingeniously organised to make things easy for the inexperienced animal or plant spotter. His Pocket Guide to Wild Flowers (written with David McClintock and published in 1956) had illustrations grouped by colour for easier identification. Fitter was also remarkable for his versatility. In an age of increasing specialisation (particularly in any aspect of science), he stood out as an authority on many diverse topics. His classic study of London's natural history was part of the Collins New Naturalist series. The Ark In Our Midst (1961) is a survey of the animals that were introduced to Britain - animals such as the muntjac, the rabbit and the grey squirrel. He produced, with his wife, Maisie, The Penguin Dictionary of Natural History (1967). Among his more unusual projects was the provision of the nature notes for the 1973 edition of The Butterfly Ball and the Grasshopper Feast, illustrated by Alan Aldridge. Fitter also did great service in the management of British wildlife, through his work with bodies such as the Council for Nature, the World Wildlife Fund and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. For all his success, however, he remained a modest and private man and shunned the media circus. A bespectacled and serious man, he was happiest at his home high up in the beech woods of the Chilterns, surrounded by deer, woodland birds and a rich array of wild flowers. Over the years, he identified nine different species of orchid growing near his garden. Since the 1930s he had been an inveterate recorder of the natural world; and his observations over time of events such as the dates on which wild flowers first bloomed have contributed to the growing suspicion that we are entering a period of climate change. Looking at the first flowering dates of 385 species, Fitter discovered that, on average, they flowered four and a half days earlier in the 1990s than they had in the period 1954-1990. Richard Sidney Richmond Fitter, the son of a businessman, was born in London on March 1 1913. He was educated at Eastbourne College, where he developed an early interest in birdwatching, and at the LSE, where he read Economics. He began his professional life as a social scientist, working on the research staff of the Institute for Political and Economic Planning (PEP) and, during the early war years, for Mass-Observation. In 1942 he joined the Operational Research Section of Coastal Command. Immediately after the war, he made the switch from human to animal matters when he became secretary to the special Wildlife Conservation Committee of the Ministry of Town and Country Planning. This was principally concerned with the creation of nature reserves. At the same time, he completed London's Natural History (1945), his first major book, and became assistant editor of The Countryman magazine. In 1958 he was appointed "open air" correspondent of the Observer. The following year Fitter took over as director of the intelligence unit of the Council for Nature. His public voice was now more frequently heard, urging people to help protect their national heritage of plants and animals. A network of wardens was organised to patrol areas containing rare flowers. After 10 years' preparation, he helped to found the British Deer Society in 1968. The first society of its kind, it aimed to study deer and their habitat, to give advice on management and control, and to set proper standards for pursuit and culling. In 1975 Fitter was a member of an inquiry panel into a more emotive issue: the gassing of badgers suspected of carrying TB. After exhaustive tests and surveys, the panel concluded that the gassing was justified, a judgment that caused widespread protests. Richard Fitter served on many conservation bodies, including the Fauna Preservation Society; the World Wildlife Fund; the government's Scientific Authority for Animals; and the British Trust for Ornithology. In 1978 he was admitted to the Order of the Golden Ark in the Netherlands. He received the Peter Scott Medal from the British Naturalists' Association in 1998, and, in the same year, the Christopher Cadbury Medal from the Royal Society for Nature Conservation. His many guides included the Pocket Guide to Nests and Eggs (1964) and Finding Wild Flowers (1972), a useful handbook detailing which plants could be located in which British counties. Despite his heavy workload, he still found time to write books until he was well into later life. Among these were a Guide to the Countryside (with his son, Alistair, and J Wilkinson, 1984), and the Field Guide to the Freshwater Life of Britain and NW Europe (with Richard Manuel, 1986). In 2003 he collaborated with Alistair Fitter and the artist Marjorie Blamey to produce the illustrated flora Wild Flowers of Britain and Ireland. Richard Fitter married, in 1938, Alice Mary (Maisie) Stewart, who died in 1996. They had two sons and a daughter. Alistair Fitter is Professor of Biology at York University.

"Richard Fitter". Daily Telegraph. London. 6 September 2005.

The Guardian[edit]

Obituary: RichardFitter: Conservation expert who wrote fauna and flora bestsellers

The Guardian (London) - Final Edition September 28, 2005

Copyright 2005 Guardian Newspapers Limited

Section: Guardian Obituaries Pages, Pg. 33

Length: 953 words

Byline: Rob Hume and Stephen Moss


Body The name of RSR Fitter, who has died aged 92, shouts from the bookshelves of hundreds of thousands of wildlife enthusiasts, on the spines of identification guides that helped and inspired generations of naturalists. Throughout his life, Richard was active in working for wildlife conservation. As early as 1934, while on a birdwatching trip to Lundy Island, Richard considered writing a book to help people identify wild birds. But it was not until after the second world war, when, by chance, he bumped into the talented young birdwatcher and artist Richard Richardson, that he could take the idea forward. The result was the Collins Pocket Guide to British Birds (1952), illustrated by Richardson, a quirky but invaluable publication with a user-friendly system grouping birds according to habitat, size and colour - rather than the scientific order that most books use. Richard felt that many guides were written for people who already knew which bird was which; his book was intended to help beginners, and it succeeded admirably. A second Collins pocket guide, in 1956, in collaboration with David McClintock, dealt with wild flowers, and is still used by many amateur enthusiasts. Up to a few weeks before his death, Richard was still revising Finding Wild Flowers (1972), again to help the enthusiast get more from the hobby. He was also embarking on his autobiography. Richard was born in London: his first memory was of sitting in a pram, watching ducks on the pond at Tooting Bec. Shortly afterwards, a glimpse of a song thrush's nest with eggs set him on an inevitable course. He developed his knowledge of birds while at Eastbourne College, and became involved in London's natural history while studying at the London School of Economics, making contact with other wildlife enthusiasts, such as Max Nicholson. After taking an economics degree in 1933, he became interested in social sciences and worked at the Institute for Political and Economic Planning till the outbreak of the second world war, when he joined RAF Coastal Command. After the war, he became secretary of the wildlife conservation committee of the Ministry of Town and Country Planning, dealing mostly with new nature reserves. His first book, London's Natural History (1945), was the third in the Collins New Naturalist series. Further books followed, and he became assistant editor of the monthly magazine, the Countryman. He became a director of the Council for Nature, served on the councils of the RSPB and the British Trust for Ornithology, founded the Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Naturalists' Trust (now the wildlife trust, BBOWT), helped found the British Deer Society, and, in 1975, was involved in an early inquiry into badgers and TB. Richard was, at various times, on the steering committee, chairman and member of honour of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (now the World Conservation Union), and was closely involved with the Fauna and Flora Preservation Society (now Fauna and Flora International) and the ICBP (now BirdLife International). On a visit to America on the mid-1960s, he found a new bird book, The Golden Guide, that placed short texts directly opposite pictures, and urged Collins to do something similar. With illustrator Herman Heinzel and bird distribution expert John Parslow, a new guide, The Birds of Britain and Europe, with Africa and the Middle East - pop-ularly known as "Heinzel, Fitter and Parslow" - was published in 1972. A recent revision keeps it near the top of the list. Richard's wife, Maisie, whom he married in 1938, was a hard-working collaborator on his researches. As recently as May 2002, Richard co-wrote a paper in the journal Science with his son Alistair, a biology professor at York University, on the effects of climate change as shown by the changing flowering periods of wild flowers. As an observer and recorder of facts, he was able to show such changes from personal records, kept over 50 years, mostly in the Chilterns, where he lived. Books with Alistair and the artist Marjorie Blamey included Wild Flowers of Britain and Ireland (1974) and several Collins flower guides. Richard was a popular, funny and inspiring speaker, still visiting schools and working on three books just months before he died. Maisie died in 1996. He is survived by his two sons and a daughter. Stephen Moss writes: Having learned my birding with the help of RichardFitter's books, I was privileged that our paths crossed twice in his later years, when he was as active as ever. The first time was sitting in his garden in the Chilterns, when I interviewed him for my book on the social history of birdwatching, A Bird in the Bush. He and Max Nicholson were the last surviving links with the years before the second world war, when birdwatching was done at a more leisurely pace and participants had time to stop and admire other forms of wildlife. With typical modesty, Richard underplayed his part in the postwar birdwatching boom, and lamented the fact that today's dawn chorus pales into insignificance compared to that of his childhood. Earlier this year, he took part in the BBC2 series Springwatch, talking about his decades of keeping records of signs of spring. We filmed Richard sitting in a woodland glade, with his tattered notebooks spreads out before him; he seemed amused that the data within them had proved to be so important. The UK Phenology network, with its thousands of participants, is a fitting tribute to him, and to a lifetime devoted to the observation, study and enjoyment of nature. Richard Sidney Richmond Fitter, naturalist and writer, born March 1 1913; died September 3 2005

Hume, Rob; Moss, Steven (28 September 2005). "Obituary: Richard Fitter: Conservation expert who wrote fauna and flora bestsellers". The Guardian. London.

The Independent[edit]

OBITUARY: RICHARDFITTER; INNOVATIVE WRITER OF WILDLIFE FIELD GUIDES

The Independent (London) September 5, 2005, Monday

Copyright 2005 Independent Print Ltd

Section: First Edition; OBITUARIES; Pg. 51

Length: 1688 words

Byline: PETER MARREN


Body RichardFitter was a prolific writer of wildlife field guides and one of the best-known British naturalists of the 20th century. His mould-breaking book published by Collins in 1952, Pocket Guide to British Birds, was arguably the first modern British field guide. Comprehensively illustrated with paintings by his friend R.A. Richardson, it made life easier for the birdwatcher by dispensing with the traditional order and grouping together birds by size and by their habitat. If you saw a big bird on the sea-shore, you had only to turn to the relevant page. Although Fitter and Richardson were criticised by traditionalists, post-war birders liked the book, and over 100,000 copies were sold. At the time of his death, the ever active Fitter was working on a flora of France. In 1955, Fitter teamed up with David McClintock to write The Pocket Guide to Wild Flowers. Once again, Fitter dispensed with tradition. Rather than begin with buttercups and end with grasses in the approved order, he grouped the illustrations by colour, so that, for example, all similar-looking yellow flowers, whether they were buttercups, celandines, cinquefoils or rock-roses, appeared side-by-side. Together with its well chosen field notes and asterisks to denote rarity, the guide became a firm favourite for a generation of wild flower lovers. Over more than half a century, RichardFitter wrote a dozen field guides on birds, plants and the countryside. In his 91st year he joined the artist Marjorie Blamey and his son Alastair (now Professor of Ecology at York University) to produce what is widely regarded as the best illustrated British flora of our time, Wild Flowers of Britain and Ireland. It includes several characteristic Fitterian innovations, including an illustrated glossary and keys, close- ups of fruits and flowers and thumb-nail distribution maps for every species. Exceptionally among recent field guides, there are no European flowers added purely to extend sales. From an early age, Fitter was obsessed with making records. He made lists of birds and plants from his rambles and car journeys, and maintained a small library of notebooks, reports and card indexes. His habit of recording the first dates of wild flowers was put to unexpected use in the 1990s when observers began to note that frogs were spawning and migrant birds arriving earlier than usual. Fitter's 50-year run of records of over 500 plants formed a unique source of data, which, when analysed, revealed that spring flowers were opening up to a month earlier, and that a few species, such as white dead-nettle, had extended their flowering over winter. The records also showed that climate change is very recent, with no evidence of change before 1990. RichardFitter was born in 1913 in south London, the only son of Sidney and Dorothy Fitter. He was a keen birdwatcher from boyhood; his earliest memory was of sitting in his pram watching ducks on the pond at Tooting Bec Common. Like many boys of his generation, he collected common bird's eggs, but once he acquired a pair of binoculars, his passion turned to living birds. He was encouraged by E.C. Arnold, headmaster of Eastbourne College, where Fitter boarded, and a keen ornithologist. An inveterate list-maker and notebook-filler, Fitter began to record birds for the London Natural History Society, and took particular interest in two birds that had only recently begun to breed in Britain, the little ringed plover and the black redstart. Following the fortunes of the black redstart took Fitter and his binoculars to such unlikely birding spots as Westminster Hospital, the British Museum and even Trafalgar Square. His running censuses of urban birds also brought him into contact with other leading birdwatchers, such as Max Nicholson and James Fisher. He and Fisher became perhaps the first motorised urban birdwatchers, one of them driving while the other craned from the window, counting birds as they came in to roost. Surprisingly, given his passion for wildlife, RichardFitter studied Economics at the LSE. His father ran a meat-importing company and hoped that the young Richard would develop a business sense. However, after graduating, RichardFitter instead joined the research staff at the Institute for Political and Economic Planning (PEP), founded in 1931 to investigate the economy, education and health. Working with another naturalist, Tom Harrison, he showed an aptitude for report writing in clear, non-technical English, and for summarising complex information in accessible form. He brought this talent to bear on his subsequent posting to Mass Observation, which applied the principles of social science to build up a picture of ordinary life Britain. His work in PEP and Mass Observation gave Fitter a broad perspective of the social community which he brought into his observations of birdlife. He later summed up his life's main occupation as 'observing wild and human life'. The first fruit of this fusion was his great book London's Natural History (1945), published as one of the first volumes in the still-running Collins New Naturalist library. The first fully comprehensive urban natural history, and making use of the notes he had accumulated since childhood, Fitter traced the changing nature of the city's wildlife, including its most recent manifestation, the greening of bomb sites in the East End of London. Fitter wrote the book with Trollopian regularity, devoting to it two hours every evening after his day time war service at the Operational Research Station of Coastal Command. The book was published just as the European war ended in May 1945. Helped by its ground-breaking colour photographs, over 40,000 copies were sold to a war-weary public. Denied access to the countryside for much of the war, townies were keen to see what home ground could offer. Fitter's all-round knowledge of nature and his experience with social report-writing led to an invitation to serve as secretary to the Wildlife Conservation Special Committee chaired by Julian Huxley charged with making proposals for nature conservation as part of the post-war construction. Fitter visited many of the places proposed as nature reserves, finding many of them much damaged by military use, or even ploughed-up during the national emergency. His recommendations helped to frame the 'shopping list' which resulted in Britain's first National Nature Reserves. In need of more regular employment, Fitter and his family left London in 1946 for the pleasant Cotswold town of Burford, where he became deputy to John Cripps at The Countryman magazine. For eight years he was also 'open air correspondent' for The Observer, contributing a column called 'Fitter's Rural Rides'. Although written in the spirit of William Cobbett, Fitter's perambulations were principally about the gentler pleasures of roaming and observing wildlife, especially in the Home Counties. Having witnessed the loss of many of the places he knew in pre-war days, Fitter became an active conservationist. He helped to set up BBONT, the naturalist's trust for the home counties of 'Bucks, Berks and Oxon'. With his wife, Maisie, who edited its magazine, Oryx, he joined the Fauna Preservation Society (now Fauna and Flora International), becoming its Honorary Secretary in 1964 and effectively running its British business. Fitter travelled extensively on society business and represented it at conservation meetings in Britain. His other conservation-related activities included his membership of the Species Survival Commission of the IUCN (International Union for the Conservation of Nature), which he joined in 1963, later becoming chairman of its steering committee. He also had a stint as information officer for the Council for Nature and as secretary and treasurer of the British Trust for Ornithology. He was involved in the preparatory work that led to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). In later years, Fitter became fascinated by the Galapagos Islands, where his son Julian had settled as a wildlife guide in the 1970s. Most of his conservation work was voluntary and unpaid. From 1953, when he and Maisie bought their beautiful family home on the crest of the downs at Chinnor, Oxfordshire, RichardFitter earned his living from writing. He was author of nearly 30 books, with a range of subjects scarcely rivalled by any other natural history writer. They included a popular Penguin Dictionary of Natural History (1967), The Penitent Butchers (1979), a history of the Fauna Preservation Society written with Peter Scott, a biographical work, Six Great Naturalists (1959), and The Ark in our Midst (1961), a study of animals introduced to Britain. Above all, he will be remembered for the field guides, covering not only wild flowers and birds but freshwater life, grasses and ferns and the countryside, as well as locality-based books on finding wildlife. He possessed to an unusual degree the necessary persistence, encyclopaedic knowledge, card-index memory and literary method to produce one field guide after another without apparent strain while continually inventing new ways of bringing user and subject together. He was an ideal companion in the field, happy, relaxed and with an interesting " but never overwhelming " view on everything he saw. His family shared the wildlife bug " his wife and lifelong natural- history partner Maisie, whom he married in 1938, and his sons Julian and Alastair, were also distinguished naturalists. Richard Sidney Richmond Fitter, writer and naturalist: born London 1 March 1913; research staff, Political and Economic Planning (PEP) 1936-40; research staff, Mass Observation 1940-42; assistant editor, The Countryman 1946-59; director of Intelligence Unit, Council of Nature 1959-63; member, Species Survival Commission, IUCN (International Union for the Conservation of Nature) 1963-88; Honorary Secretary, Fauna Preservation Society 1969-81; married 1938 Maisie Stewart (died 1996; two sons, one daughter); died Cambridge 3 September 2005. Marren, Peter (5 September 2005). "Obituary: Richard Fitter". The Independent. London.

References[edit]

Kenneth Watkins MBE OBE[edit]

Kenneth Watkins (6 December 1909–13 November 1996) was a businessman, motor racer, and conservationist who founded the Woodland Trust

Honours[edit]

  • 1971 MBE for work with the Devon Trust for Nature Conservation Ltd
  • 1989 OBE for services to conservation
  • 1995 Peter Scott Memorial Award from the British Naturalists’ Association.


References[edit]

MegaLab UK[edit]

References[edit]

East Keswick[edit]

History[edit]

The first mention of the area is in 1086 in the Domesday Book as the manor of Chesinc [1](p3) In 1166 someone is referred to as Affric de Keswick,(p6) and in 1284 the village is referred to as Estkesewyk.(p7)

In 1525 the Lay subsidy rolls recorded 14 taxpayers in the village: two tenant farmers and the rest labourers.(p16) The 1672 Hearth Tax listed 36 households in the village suggesting a population of about 150 or so.(p24)

While the basic economy was farming, lime began to be quarried from 1700 and it became a substantial supplier of limestone for building in the 19th century.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b The South & West Yorkshire Village Book. Newbury: Countryside Books. 1991. p. 80-81. ISBN 1853061360.

Pestfix[edit]

PestFix is the trading name of Crisps Websites, a UK company based in Littlehampton. Its registration number is 04600829.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).. It sells material for pest control use, including PPE.

Haakon Chevalier[edit]

Born Haakon Maurice Chevalier. Parents Emile and Thérése (Roggen) Chevalier. Marriages 1) Ruth Bosley, 1922 (divorced, 1931); 2) Barbara Lansburgh, 1931 (divorced, 1950); 3) Carol Lansburgh, 1952. Children One son, Jacques Anatole, from first marriage; one son, Haakon Lazarus, and one daughter, Suzanne Andrée, from second marriage; one daughter, Karen Anne, from third marriage. Emigration Left United States for France, 1950. Education Stanford University, 1918-20; University of California, AB 1923, AM 1925, PhD 1929. Career Professor of French, University of California, Berkeley, 1929-46; French interpreter, United Nations Conference, San Francisco, California, 1945; French interpreter, War Criminal trials, Nuremberg, West Germany, 1945—46; French interpreter, United Nations, Lake Success, New York, 1946; full-time writer and translator, 1946 onwards; falsely implicated by Dr Robert Oppenheimer of “un-American activities”, 1947; continued writing and translating, Paris, France, 1950— 85. Offices and memberships Member: international association of Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists and Novelists; Author’s League of America; Association Internationale des Interprétes de Conférence; Association des Traducteurs Littéraires de France. Publications The Ironic Temper: Anatole France and His Time, 1932; For Us the Living, 1949, The Man Who Would Be God, 1959; Oppenheimer: The Story of a Friendship, 1965; The Last Voyage of the Schooner Rosamund, 1970; also contributed articles to Nation, New Republic, Collier’s, Kenyon Review, Books Abroad, Twice-a-Year, French Review, Life, Saturday Review of Literature. Translated works André Malraux, Man’s Fate, 1934; Malraux, Days of Wrath, 1936; Louis Aragon, Residential Quarter, 1938; Salvador Dali, The Secret Life of Salvador Dali, 1942; Vladimir Pozner, The Edge of the Sword, 1942; Pozner, First Harvest, 1943; Gontran de Poncins, Home Is the Hunter, 1943; André Maurois, Seven Faces of Love, 1944; Dali, Hidden Faces, 1944; Joseph Kessel, Army of Shadows, 1944; Denis de Rougemont, Devil’s Share, 1944, reissued as The Devil’s Share: An Essay on the Diabolic in Modern Society, 1956; Maurois, Franklin: The Life of an Optimist, 1945; Vercors, Three Short Novels by Vercors, 1947; Simon Gantillon; Vessel of Wrath, 1947; Dali, 50 Secrets of Magic Craftmanship, 1948; Dali, Dali on Modern Art: The Cuckolds of Antiquated Modern Art, 1957; (translator and editor) Stendhal, A Roman Journal, 1957; René Grousset, Chinese Art and Culture, 1959; Michel Seuphor, The Sculpture of This Century: Dictionary of Modern Sculpture, 1959, reissued as The Sculpture of This Century, 1960; Louis Aragon, Holy Week, 1961; Seuphor, Abstract Painting: Fifty Years of Accomplishment, From Kandinsky to the Present, 1962, published in England as Abstract Painting from Kandinsky to the Present, 1962; Henri Michaux, Light Through Darkness, 1963, published in England as Light Through Darkness: Explorations Among Drugs, 1964; Seuphor, Abstact Painting in Flanders, 1963; Robert Descharnes and Jean-Frangois Chabrun, Auguste Rodin, 1968; Bob Claessens and Jeanne Rousseau, Our Breugel, 1969; Pierre Galante, Malraux, 1971; Jerzy Szablowski, Sophie Schneebalg-Perelman and Adelbrecht L. J. van de Walle, The Flemish Tapestries at Wawel Castle in Cracow: Treasures of King Sigismund Augustus Jagiello, 1972. Cause of death Undisclosed, at age 83.

[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Annual obituary, 1985 Reference Publishers International (London) 1988 Patricia Burgess (ed) 341-2

Leeds United[edit]

https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/sport/football/leeds-united/latest-leeds-united-news/history-entwined-leeds-united-and-citys-jewish-community-1827439

https://www.leedsunited.com/news/centenary/25665/ceremony-takes-place-at-salem-chapel#:~:text=A%20special%20ceremony%20has%20today%20taken%20place%20at,who%20had%20been%20expelled%20from%20the%20Fooball%20League.

Fullers Earth[edit]

Robertson, Robert H. S. (1986). Fuller's Earth: A History. Volturna Press: Hyde, Kent.

References[edit]

LNPB[edit]

The Loch Ness Phenomena Investigation Bureau (LNPIB) was a UK-based society formed in 1961 and first served as an information clearing house, but started active investigation in 1962.[1]. The founders were Norman Collins, R. S. R. Fitter, politician David James, Peter Scott and Constance Whyte[2] "to study Loch Ness to identify the creature known as the Loch Ness Monster or determine the causes of reports of it".[3] The society's name was later shortened to the Loch Ness Investigation Bureau (LNIB), and it disbanded in 1972. The LNIB had an annual subscription charge, which covered administration. Its main activity was encouraging groups of self-funded volunteers to watch the loch from vantage points with film cameras with telescopic lenses. From 1965 to 1972 it had a caravan camp and viewing platform at Achnahannet, and sent observers to other locations up and down the loch.[4][5] According to the bureau's 1969 annual report[6] it had 1,030 members, of whom 588 were from the UK.

Was founded in 1961, and first served as an information clearing house, but started active investigation in 1962. In 1967 it received a grant of $20,000 from World Book Encyclopedia to fund a 2-year programme of daylight watches from May to October. The principal equipment was 35 mm movie cameras on mobile units with 20 inch lenses, and one with a 36 inch lens at Achnahannet, near the midpoint of the loch. With the mobile units in laybys about 80% of the loch surface was covered. [1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Spector, Leo (14 September 1967). "The Great Monster Hunt". Machine Design. Cleveland, Ohio: The Penton Publishing Co.
  2. ^ Henry H. Bauer, The Enigma of Loch Ness: Making Sense of a Mystery, page 163 (University of Illinois Press, 1986). ISBN 0-252-01284-4
  3. ^ Rick Emmer, Loch Ness Monster: Fact or Fiction?, page 35 (Infobase Publishing, 2010). ISBN 978-0-7910-9779-3
  4. ^ Holiday, F. W. (1968). The Great Orm of Loch Ness: A Practical Inquiry into the Nature and Habits of Water-monsters. London: Faber & Faber. pp. 30–60, 98–117, 160–173. ISBN 0-571-08473-7.
  5. ^ Tim Dinsdale (1973) The Story of the Loch Ness Monster Target Books ISBN 0-426-11340-3
  6. ^ "1969 Annual Report: Loch Ness Investigation" (PDF). Retrieved 8 July 2009.

J. Arthur Reavell[edit]

James Arthur Reavell M.I.Mech.E., M.I.Chem.E., F.Inst.F., F.I.M. was a British chemical engineer, who created a major company and was one of the founders and a president of the Institution of Chemical Engineers.[1]

Life[edit]

Reavell was born 10 June 1872 in Alnwick,[1][2] the son of George and Martha Reavell.[3] He attended Alnwick Grammar School and Silcoates School.[1] He married Emma Mabel Clowes on 24 May 1898,[3] and they had two sons, and one daughter.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). One of his sons, Brian Noble Reavell, was also a Chemical Engineer, and took over as Chairman when he retired from his business in 1960.[2]

He died 26 August 1973.[4]

Career[edit]

He wanted to be a chemist, but instead served an apprenticeship in electrical engineering,[5] and had several positions, rising to be manager for the European operations of an American chemical engineering company Worthington Pumps then manager of Manlove, Alliott & Co. Ltd.,[6] dealing with sugar refining, of which a particular aspect is evaporation.[2] In 1907 he set up his own company Kestner Evaporator and Engineering Co., to deal with the British and Empire market of an improved design of evaporator patented by his friend, French inventor Paul Kestner.[7][8] During the First World War his engineering expertise was applied to solving the shortage of explosives in a team headed by Lord Moulton.[2] He continued as Chairman of Kestner until 1960, when he stepped down in favour of his son, Brian, but continued as President until 1963.[2] The company made a variety of chemical plants with subsidiaries in India and South Africa.

Institutions[edit]

As Chairman of the Chemical Engineering Group of the Society of Chemical Industry (SCI) he was one of the small group of enthusiasts who founded the Institution of Chemical Engineers, becoming its President 1929.[1][2] He continued to be active in the SCI, being Vice-President from 1931-4.[2]

He was also a Member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers;[7] a Fellow of Institute of Fuel;[7] and a Fellow, Institute of Metals;[7] Chairman of the the British Chemical Plant Manufacturers' Association;[2] Chairman of the chemical engineering industry section of the British Standards Institute;[1] and President of the Combustion Appliance Manufacturer's Association[1] from which he formed the British Coal Utilisation Research Association,[9] and was its Vice-President.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Who's Who 1951. A & C Black. 1951. p. 2365.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Mr J. A. Reavell: Chemical Engineering Pioneer". Times. London. 4 September 1973. p. 16.
  3. ^ a b "Marriages". Times. London. 31 May 1898.
  4. ^ "Obituary". Daily Telegraph. London. 4 September 1973. p. 166.
  5. ^ Kestner Golden Jubilee Book (forward), p. 1
  6. ^ "Personal and Business News". The Engineer. 104: 584. 6 December 1907. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d Anonymous. "A Company and its Chairmen celebrate their Golden Jubilee". British Chemical Engineering. 3: 515. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  8. ^ GB 189924024A, Kestner, Paul, "Improvements in Apparatus for Concentrating Distilling and or Elevating Liquids.", published 1900-10-13 
  9. ^ "Research into Use of Coal". Times. London. 31 March 1938. p. 9.
  • The Kestner Golden Jubilee Book. London: The Kestner Evaporator & Engineering Co. Ltd. 1958.

Kestner Evaporator and Engineering Co.[edit]

The Kestner Evaporator & Engineering Co. Ltd was a major British manufacturer of equipment for the process industries.

Origin[edit]

Kestner Evaporator[edit]

The Kestner Evaporator was novel equipment by French inventor Paul Kestner for concentrating liquids.[1] Unlike the existing technology it did not have a horizontal liquid surface but instead vaporization occurred on a thin film moving up inside vertical tubes. It was the first of what is now known as a climbing film evaporator. They were often used in series at progressively lower pressures, known as a Multiple-effect evaporator.[2]

A 1926 handbook said this: "The Kestner Evaporator has been discussed in the technical literature more than any other kind of evaporator. It has vertical tubes with liquor inside and steam on the outside, but its distinguishing feature is the ratio of tube length to tube diameter, up to 23 feet long 1 ¼ to 1 ¾ inches in diameter."[3]

The principle is that liquid is fed into the bottom of vertical tubes, each of which is surrounded by a rapid stream of steam. This causes the liquid to boil, the vapour produced going upwards and dragging a film of liquid up the inside of the tubes. The vapour and liquid are separated by passage through curved vanes giving a centrifugal effect.[4] The high velocity inside and outside the tubes gives a high rate of heat transfer.[4] Because the liquid is only in contact with the hot surface for a short time (20 seconds compared with up to an hour in traditional evaporators)[5] thermally sensitive substances such as fruit juice, sugar and dyestuffs are not damaged.[4][5]

For more viscous materials a falling film version of the Kestner evaporator was produced, and a climbing film followed by a falling film is used in combination in some processes.[3]

UK Company[edit]

The evaporator and other inventions of Kestner were sold in continental Europe, but in 1908 a British friend, J. Arthur Reavell set up a company in the UK deal with Kestner's patents for the British Empire market.[6][7] It initially consisted only of Reavell, another engineer and a secretary, their task being to design process plant for others to build, but expanded to three floors and a laboratory, then a workshop and ultimately acquired other businesses making parts.[8]

Kestner South Africa Pty was set up in 1949 and Kestner Australia Pty in 1950.[9]

In 1967 the company was acquired by APV holdings.[10]


Other Products[edit]

As well as climbing and falling-film evaporators, the company made reactors, crystallisers, spray dryers, drum dryers, low pressure dryers to concentrate heat sensitive materials at temperatures below ambient, and infra-red dryers for powdered or granular material. In addition composite resins with the trade names Keebush and Keeglas were introduced for acid and other corrosive service. They introduced Heat-transfer fluid systems with oil and then Perolene, a eutectic mixture of diphenyl and diphenyl oxide.

References[edit]

  1. ^ GB 189924024A, Kestner, Paul, "Improvements in Apparatus for Concentrating Distilling and or Elevating Liquids.", published 13 October 1900 
  2. ^ Viola, M. E. (June 1911). "Evaporators and Vacuum Pans". Metallurgical and Chemical Engineering. IX (6): 306–7. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  3. ^ a b Badger, W. I. (1926). Handbook of Heat Transfer and Evaporation. USA: The Chemical Catalog Company,Inc. pp. 103–6.
  4. ^ a b c Allen, Alfred Frederick (1920). An introduction to chemical engineering; an elementary textbook for the use of students and users of chemical machinery. London: Sir Isaac Pitman. pp. 134–7.
  5. ^ a b Rumford, Frank (1951). Chemical Engineering Operations. London: Constable and Co. Ltd. pp. 163–4.
  6. ^ Anonymous. "A Company and its Chairmen celebrate their Golden Jubilee". British Chemical Engineering. 3: 515. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  7. ^ Kestner Golden Jubilee Book, p. 2
  8. ^ Kestner Golden Jubilee Book, p. 1-16
  9. ^ Kestner Golden Jubilee Book, p. 98
  10. ^ "Company Meeting: A. P. V. Holdings". Times. London. 19 May 1967. p. 22.
  • The Kestner Golden Jubilee Book. London: The Kestner Evaporator & Engineering Co. Ltd. 1958.

Edwin Kitson Clark[edit]

Edwin Kitson Clark (18 April 1866 - 15 April 1943) was a British locomotive engineer and the 46 president of the IMechE. Picture in National Portrait Gallery. Obit in Times.

https://archives.imeche.org/archive/institution-history/president-gallery/593836-1931-lieutenant-colonel-edwin-kitson-clark

https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Edwin_Kitson_Clark

https://www.icevirtuallibrary.com/doi/10.1680/ijoti.1943.13883

Chapel Allerton[edit]

Clarke, Eric (1987). Chapel Allerton: an outline history of an urban village. Leeds Flower Fund Homes for the Elderly.

Tucker, Janet (1987). Chapel Allerton Historic and Architectural Trail. Leeds: Manpower Services Commission.

George C. Eltenton[edit]

Dr George Charles Eltenton, F.Inst.P. (1905 - 1991) was an English physicist, specialising in chemical physics and a pioneer of mass spectrometry.[1][2] He was a Fellow of the Physical Society.[3] He and his wife were suspected of being agents of the USSR looking for US atom bomb secrets.[4] He was named in the House Un-American Activities Committee as the instigator of the Chevalier Incident where Robert Oppenheimer was interviewed by the Atomic Energy Commission and stripped of his security clearance.

Professional Life[edit]

After university in 1930 he began work at the British Cotton Research Institute.[5] Following a 1931 summer visit to a friend he had known at Cambridge, Yulii Khariton, at the Institute of Problems of Chemical Physics in Leningrad,[6] he was offered a post there, which he took up in 1933 and stayed till 1938,[7] only leaving because, with the Soviet Great Purge, there was suspicion of foreigners and like many others his visa was not renewed, so he returned to England.[8]

The same year he published a paper in the prestigious journal Nature showing the first identification of free radicals by mass spectrometer,[9] and was invited to the research laboratories of Shell Development Corporation, California to build one of the first mass spectrometers in the US.[10] Here he produced significant work on free radical mass spectrometry.[11]

In 1947 he returned to England, joining the research laboratory of Shell plc at Ellesmere Port, later transferring to the physics laboratory of Stanlow Refinery and producing a number of patents.[7]

Personal Life[edit]

Eltenton was born 14 April 1905[12] in Manchester and studied physics at the University of Cambridge.[7] He married Ada Dorothea Hamilton (1904 - 2001)[12][7] (known as Dorothea or Dolly) and they had three children: a son, Michael, and two daughters, Ann and Jane.[13] Ann became a ballerina under the stage name Anya Linden. Jane was born in Russia.[14] He died 26 April 1991[12] in Heswall, Merseyside.

USSR 1933-8[edit]

Dorothea Eltenton wrote a book describing the family's life in the USSR.[15] This was a happy time, despite primitive conditions compared with England, and she writes admiringly of the socialist society they experienced as it developed, with its community spirit, sexual equality and people's local democratic participation in decisions relating to work and public services.[16] In particular they appreciated the free education and free health service. Her experience of maternity and post-natal care was favourably compared with that in the UK (a decade before the introduction of the National Health Service).[17]

On vacations George Eltenton was able to enjoy his passions for motorcycling[18] and rock climbing.[19]

USA 1938-1947[edit]

Eltenton was an open admirer of the USSR and its people.[10] Both he and his wife gave lectures at the California Labor School on Russian life, and were active in the American Russian Institute.[7] He was also a trade union activist for the Federation of Architects, Engineers, Chemists and Technicians at Shell, but which also had members whom he knew at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, including Robert Oppenheimer.[20]

In 1939, with the beginning of the Second World War he contacted the British Embassy to volunteer, but was told his work for the oil company was better use of his talents.[21] In 1941 the USSR was invaded by Germany, and he and his wife became active members of the Russian War Relief organization.[21]

In May 1942, after the US had also joined the war and was therefore an ally of the USSR, the Eltentons had Poitr Ivanov, the third secretary at the Soviet Consulate as a dinner guest. It was there that Ivanov raised the possibility of atomic research being shared between the US and the USSR, and suggested three scientists who might be prepared to do so, if discretion could be assured. Eltenton was doubtful, but agreed to ask a mutual friend Haakon Chevalier to suggest this to Oppenheimer.[22] Chevalier reported back that Oppenheimer was not interested, but when the fact of the approach was revealed by Oppenheimer in 1946, Eltenton was interviewed by the FBI.[23]

UK 1947-[edit]

Shortly after being named in testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee, the Eltentons returned to England.[24] He first took a senior position at the Shell physics research laboratory, but after investigation by MI5 was moved to an area solely concerned with refinery operations.[25]

Publications[edit]

  • Eltenton, G. C. (1938). "Direct Evidence for the N2H+ Ion in the Discharge Reaction between N2 and H2". Nature. 141: 975–976. doi:10.1038/141975b0.
  • Eltenton, G. C. (1942). "The Detection of Free Radicals by Means of a Mass Spectrometer". Journal of Chemical Physics. 10: 403. doi:10.1063/1.1723738.
  • Eltenton, G. C. (1947). "The Study of Reaction Intermediates by Means of a Mass Spectrometer Part I. Apparatus and Method". Journal of Chemical Physics. 15: 455–481. doi:10.1063/1.1746565.
  • Eltenton, G. C. (1954). "Some instruments for quality control in petroleum refineries". Journal of Applied Chemistry. 4 (5): 245–256. doi:10.1002/jctb.5010040503.

Patents[edit]

ignoring equivalents in other countries

  • US2569127A, "Refractive index measurement of fluids", issued 1951 
  • US2501598A, "Magnetic method of pipe-line inspection", issued 1950 
  • US2501599A, "Photoelectric colorimeter", issued 1950 
  • GB676606A, "Process for the purification of spent sulphuric acid", issued 1951 
  • DE1005495B, "Process for removing coal and carbonaceous material from used sulfuric acid", published 1957 
  • GB1006694A, "A method of and apparatus for separating liquid phases", published 1965 
  • US2674696, "Infrared gas analyzer", issued 1954 
  • GB768744A, "Improvements in or relating to apparatus for measuring vapour pressure", published 1957 
  • GB795172A, "Improvements in and relating to the preparation of basic polyvalent metal salts of organic acids", published 1958 
  • AU1721856A, "Improvements in and relating to the preparation of oil solutions of highly basic polyvalent metal salts of organic acids", published 1958 
  • GB855774A, "Sulphonation of organic liquids", published 1960 
  • CA714896A, "Rotary separation of viscous pseudo-plastics", published 1965 

References[edit]

  1. ^ McDowell, Charles (1963). Mass Spectrometry. McGraw-Hill. p. 56,443, 542.
  2. ^ Burk, R. E.; Grummitt, Oliver (1949). Frontiers in Chemistry Vol VII. Interscience. p. 199.
  3. ^ Hume, C W (1933). "Proceedings at Meetings". Proceedings of the Physical Society. 45: xiv.
  4. ^ Rosenfeld, Seth (9 June 2002). "THE CAMPUS FILES - The FBI's secret UC files". San Francisco Chronicle. p. F2.
  5. ^ Eltenton 1998, p. 1.
  6. ^ Eltenton 1998, pp. 14–16.
  7. ^ a b c d e The National Archives' reference KV 2/2166
  8. ^ Eltenton 1998, pp. 191–200.
  9. ^ Eltenton 1938.
  10. ^ a b Carleton, Lee (1992). "Letters" (PDF). Engineering & Science. Caltech.
  11. ^ Lossing, F P (1957). "Mass spectrometry of free radicals". Annals of the NY Academy of Sciences. 67 (9): 499–517. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1957.tb46074.x.
  12. ^ a b c General Register Office for England and Wales
  13. ^ US Census 1940
  14. ^ Eltenton 1998, p. 165-174.
  15. ^ Eltenton, Dorothea (1998). Laughter in Leningrad - An English family in Russia 1933-38. Anya Sainsbury.
  16. ^ Eltenton 1998, pp. 188–190.
  17. ^ Eltenton 1998, pp. 177–178.
  18. ^ Eltenton 1998, pp. 14, 121–138.
  19. ^ Eltenton 1998, pp. 57, 132.
  20. ^ U S Atomic Energy Commission (1970). In the matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer: transcript of hearing before Personnel Security Board and texts of principal documents and letters. MIT. p. 134. ISBN 0262210037.
  21. ^ a b Eltenton, 1998 & Introduction by Michael Eltenton, p. xii.
  22. ^ Herken, Gregg (2002). Brotherhood of the Bomb. New York: Henry Holt. p. 92. ISBN 0805065881.
  23. ^ Herken 2002, p. 161.
  24. ^ "ACCUSED PHYSICIST REPORTED ABROAD; Eltenton, Linked to Testimony on Espionage, Said to Have Taken Job in England". New York Times. October 31, 1937.
  25. ^ The National Archives' reference KV 2/2167:Letter from Shell, 8 May 1951