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Matches 1,401 to 1,450 of 4,172

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1401 crossed thru: married 29yrs, children 11:10:1 Ann (I3456)
 
1402 crossed thru: married 2yrs, children 1:1:0 BYGRAVE, Emma Elizabeth (I942)
 
1403 crossed thru: married 30yrs, children 5:4:1 HUTSON, Edith Elizabeth (I8509)
 
1404 crossed thru: married 32 yrs, children 4:4:0; house of five rooms MOORE, Christiana (I6641)
 
1405 crossed thru: married 38yrs, children 12:11:1; house of five rooms MOORE, George (I972)
 
1406 crossed thru: married 40yrs, children 7:6:1 CHILDES, Frances Wickham (I1459)
 
1407 crossed thru: married 43yrs, children 15:7:8; house of six rooms MARSH, Emily Jane (I878)
 
1408 crossed thru: married 43yrs, children 7:1:6; house of eight rooms BENNETT, Mary Ann (I3008)
 
1409 crossed thru: married 48 yrs, children 6:6:0 FLISHER, Mary Jane (I1454)
 
1410 crossed thru: married 54yrs, children 8:6:2 HADDRELL, Martha Maria (I235)
 
1411 crossed thru: no children; house of seven rooms GARKA, Susanna (I4627)
 
1412 Culpan John of 5 Mitchell-street West Bowling Yorkshire warp dresser died 24 December 1892 Administration Wakefield 22 July to Ann Culpan widow. Effects: £344 6s 7d. CULPIN, John (I3455)
 
1413 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I3238)
 
1414 CULPIN George Passed away peacefully on 9th June 2013, aged 94 years in a Worthing Nursing Home. Formerly of Brunswick Square, Hove. A survivor of Dunkirk and the Burma Campaign, he subsequently worked for many years in Ghana. Funeral Service at the H. D. Tribe Chapel, Broadwater Road, Worthing on Wednesday, 10th July at 1.00 p.m. Family flowers only please, but any donations to either Age UK or the RNLI may be sent c/o H. D. Tribe Ltd, 130 Broadwater Road, Worthing, BN14 8HU. Tel 01903 234516. Source: The Argus (Brighton), www.theargus.couk CULPIN, George E (I3644)
 
1415 Culpin Georgina of 7 Newark Road Croydon Surrey widow died 3 May 1947 Probate London 26 July to Amy May Culpin spinster. Effects: £345 5s 2d. CHARTER, Georgina (I45488)
 
1416 Culpin Inquest

An inquest into the death of Mr. William Andrew Culpin was further, adjourned by the Coroner (Mr. W. H. Hall) today until May 26.

Evidence of a postmortem examination conducted by the Acting-Government Medical Officer ( Dr. Dunne) was heard on Friday. He said Mr. Culpin died from brain injuries.

Mr. R. Hudson applied for an adjornment when the inquest was resumed today He said he had only recently received instructions from Mr. Culpin'S ; widow. Mr. Beerworth, appearing for Keith Young, of Cornish Street, did not oppose the adjournment.

Mr. Culpin died in hospital last Friday. He was alleged to have been knocked down by a car driven by Young in Argent Street on Wednesday night.

Barrier Miner, Broken Hill, 12 May 1952 
CULPIN, William Andrew (I12666)
 
1417 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I3545)
 
1418 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I3554)
 
1419 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I18040)
 
1420 Culpin Thomas Norman of 24 Swallow-lane Golcar Huddersfield died 16 May 1950 Administration Wakefield 6 July to Sarah Culpin widow. Effects: £485 8s. CULPIN, Thomas Norman (I3675)
 
1421 CULPIN, Ewart Gladstone (b. 3 December 1877 - d. 1 December 1946) JP, FRIBA; Officier de l'Ordre de la Couronne de la Belgique; Grand Officer of the Crown of Roumania; Commander of Order of the Black Star of Benin; Trustee, Official Czech Refugee Trust Fund; son of Ben Ephraim Lamartine and Eliza Culpin; married 1903, Nora Driver; two sons. Education: Alleynes Gram. School, Stevenage; Hitchin Gram. Sch. Work: Sec. Garden City Association 1905; Founded International Garden Cities and Town Planning Association 1907; President Societe Belge our la reconstruction de la Belgique; Chairman, Standing Conference on London Regional Planning, 1926 -1946. Labour candidate North Islington, 1924; Alderman, LCC,; Vice-Chm, LCC, 1934-1937; Chairman, 1938-1939; Pres. Incorporated Assoc of Architects and Surveyors, 1930; Pres. TPI, 1937-1938. Publications: A number of booklets on Housing and Town Planning. Address: 18 Selwyn House, Manor Fields, Putney Hill, London SQ15. Telephone: Putney 4659. Clubs: Athenaeum. CULPIN, Ewart Gladstone (I731)
 
1422 Culpin, Millais (1874?1952), psychologist, was born on 6 January 1874 in Baldock Street, Ware, Hertfordshire, the second of six children of Millice Culpin (1844?1942), a leather seller, and his wife, Hannah Louisa Munsey (c.1850?1937). The family moved to Stoke Newington, in north London. Millais attended the Grocers' Company's School, Hackney, and became one of a group of young entomologists, the North London Natural History Society (later part of the London Natural History Society). This hobby remained a lifelong interest. In 1891 Millice Culpin, now a qualified doctor, and his family emigrated to Brisbane, Queensland. Young Millais spent four formative years as a ?bush schoolmaster? in north Queensland; the lively letters he wrote from there to his former schoolmates were published, edited by his daughter, as Letters from Laura (University of Townsville, 1987) and show a gift for scientific and human observation and his lasting affection for the country.

Millais returned in 1897 to enter the London Hospital, where, after winning various prizes and qualifying in 1902, he graduated FRCS in 1907. He held various appointments there before taking up a practice in Shanghai; there he met, and married in 1913, Ethel Maude Bennett (1874?1966) of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, a London Hospital trained nursing sister who had come to take up the post of matron of the Shanghai-Nanking (Nanjing) Railway Hospital, the chief British hospital. Both experienced, in their professional roles, the revolution of 1911, and both retained a warm interest in the Chinese people. Culpin's two sojourns in the tropics were to lead to an interesting paper, ?Neurasthenia in the tropics? (The Practitioner, August 1935).

After a visit to his family in Australia, where the only child of the marriage, a daughter, Frances, was born, they returned to England in 1914, just as war broke out. Culpin joined the Royal Army Medical Corps as a surgeon, but soon his obstinate truth seeking led him to question the diagnoses of his seniors in recognizing and treating hysterical / psychosomatic disorders (shell-shock). He worked as a surgeon in the Queen Alexandra Hospital, Portsmouth. Culpin was in France in 1916, but meanwhile in 1915 he and Dr E. G. Fearnsides wrote one of the first articles on the war neuroses (BMJ, 9 January 1916). Finally Colonel Aldren Turner, a neurologist, sent Culpin to Maghull for training under, among others, T. H. Pear and Bernard Hart, only for Culpin to find fresh hostility to the psychoanalytical view when he moved to Moneyhull, Birmingham. Later, at Ewell Military Hospital, he met with understanding and co-operation, and the support of Colonel C. S. Myers. In these struggles Culpin must often have felt isolated and despairing: it is a tribute to him and his fellow workers in the field that their findings were accepted and acted upon in the Second World War.

Culpin was demobilized in 1919. He took a London MD and never practised surgery again. His thesis, published in 1920 as The Psychoneuroses of War and Peace, was followed by Spiritualism and the New Psychology (1920), and The Nervous Patient (1924). He had by now thrown in his lot with the practitioners of psychological medicine. Just after the First World War he was appointed lecturer in psychoneuroses at the London Hospital, the first post of its kind, which he held until 1939, and he began private practice as a psychotherapist in Queen Anne Street, London. This he continued through the Second World War, and later practised in Guildford and St Albans. The family had been for some time settled in Loughton, Essex, near Epping Forest, the scene of his early ?bug-hunting? cycle rides from Stoke Newington and where friends from his student days were already living. In 1932 the family moved to Park Village East, on Regent's Park Canal in north London, until they were bombed out ten years later.

In the early 1920s Culpin was called on to work for the Industrial Health Research Board (A Study of Telegraphists' Cramp, by May Smith, Culpin, and Eric Farmer, 1927). He himself valued most his work for the Medical Research Council on miner's nystagmus (?The occupational neuroses (including miner's nystagmus)?, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1933). While chairman of the industrial section of the British Psychological Society he investigated the bus drivers under treatment for gastric disorders at Manor House, the trade union hospital, revealing psychosomatic symptoms in a stressful job. This type of research became the basis of many job selection procedures in business and industry.

In 1931 Culpin became professor of medical industrial psychology at the School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine at London University. He enjoyed his work there, the research, the students, and appreciated his colleagues, but remained unimpressed by the trappings of prestige or position. In 1944 he was elected president of the British Psychological Association; he never forgot his debt to Freud's theory of the unconscious which, he told a young colleague years later, he was reminded of every day of his working life, and he enjoyed a friendship with the German analyst Georg Groddeck, whom he visited several times at Baden-Baden. Culpin's chief publications were Medicine: and the Man (1927), The Nervous Temperament (1930), Recent Advances in the Study of the Psychoneuroses (1931), and Mental Abnormality: Facts and Theories (1948).

During the years just before the Second World War, Culpin was active in the China medical aid committee and the Academic Assistance Fund (aiding professionals from Nazi Germany) and during the war he followed with interest the development of the provision of care and treatment for the psychiatric casualties of war through his son-in-law, Lieutenant-Colonel Stephen MacKeith RAMC.

Culpin's father was a stern rationalist, but Millais described himself as a ?cheerful agnostic?. Physically he was tall, dark, regular featured, and mild mannered. He never owned a car, walked with a swift stride, and remained in good health until his death on 14 September 1952 at his home in Hatfield Road, St Albans, of a pulmonary embolism. His ashes were scattered at Wicken Fen, Cambridgeshire, haunt of his favourite swallowtail butterfly. Culpin's nature was as gentle as his mind was keen, and he led a quiet, fairly abstemious life, enjoying until the end a good game of bridge, the Times crossword, the company of his family, and the first brimstone butterfly of spring.

Frances Millais MacKeith
Sources

M. Culpin, ?An autobiography?, Occupational Psychology (July 1947) · personal knowledge (2004) · BMJ (27 Sept 1952), 727?8 · The Lancet (27 Sept 1952) · b. cert. · d. cert. Wealth at death £8208 3s. 2d.: administration, 9 Jan 1953, CGPLA Eng. & Wales © Oxford University Press 2004?5
All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press

Frances Millais MacKeith, ?Culpin, Millais (1874?1952)?, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/51592, accessed 7 Dec 2005]

Millais Culpin (1874?1952): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/51592 
CULPIN, Millais (I724)
 
1423 CULPIN, Millais (b. Ware 1874 - d. 14 September 1952)
MD, FRCS; lately Lecturer on Psychoneurosis, London Hosp. Medical Coll., and Prof. of Medical-Industrial Psychology, University of London; son of Millice Culpin, LRCP and S; married 1913, Ethel Maude, daughter of E. Dimery Bennett; one daughter. Education: Grocers' Company School; London Hospital. Work: Formerly Rec. Room Officer, House Surgeon, Ophthalmic House Surgeon and Surgical Registrar, London Hospital; War service, 1914-1919; Surgical Specialist, 1914-1917; Neurological Specialist, 1917-1919. Publications: Spiritualism and the new Psychology; Psychoneuroses of Peace and War; The Nervous Patient; Mental Abnormality: Facts and Theories; various articles. Address: 17a Hatfield Road, St Albans, Herts. Telephone: St Albans 6010. 
CULPIN, Millais (I724)
 
1424 Culpin, Sarah Ann, age 28, spinster, a dressmaker of Church Street, Shillington, dau of Benjamin Culpin a congregational minister, married RO Ampthill to Charles Prutton. Family: Charles PRUTTON / Sarah Ann CULPIN (F434)
 
1425 CULPIN. — On November 25. at Ballarat Catherine beloved wife of the !ate George Culpin, and loving mother of George (Ballarat), Mary (Mrs. Donovan, dec), Bill (dec), Jack (dec), Bert (Melbourne), Jim (Port Pirie), Manie (dec) and Nick (Sydney). In her 94th year. Requiescat in pace. BOND, Catherine (I12680)
 
1426 DAPHNE YETTON 1919-2009
Daphne Yetton died on 14 November aged 90 after a short illness. She had been a Playford resident from 1935 to 2007 when she moved to be near her son Rex, his wife Jenny and grandchildren in Brighton.
Daphne was born in 1919. Her father, Henry Fielding Bond, had a large engineering business on the Woodbridge Road. It is still running as H F Bond & Co Ltd, it is still independently owned and is now based on Clopton Commerical Park. Henry Bond bought Archway House in around 1935 by which time Daphne had already lost her mother to septicaemia before the introduction of penicillin. Her father subsequently married Joan Keeble and when he died just before the outbreak of war, Joan married Charles Bristo in 1941. Charles Bristo had a Vauxhall dealership on the Woodbridge Road, a company that still bears his name. When Joan died in 1963, Archway House was sold and, with the help of Charles Lofts, Daphne bought Mill Cottage where she lived until moving in 2007.
Daphne was educated at the Ipswich High School for Girls and then trained in physiotherapy at Guys Hosiptal. She qualified just as the Second World War began and spent the war years driving ambulances and troop carriers. For a time she lived in a tent in the North African desert.
After the war, in 1948, she married Bill Yetton in St Andrew's Cathedral in Singapore. Bill had been captured by the Japanese when Singapore fell in 1942 and he spent the rest of the war as a Japanese PoW on the Burma-Siam Railway. They had a son, Rex, in 1951. Daphne was widowed in 1953 when Bill mysteriously was lost at sea when travelling from Nigeria to England.
Daphne spent her working life as a physiotherapist in various parts of the world. She worked in Singapore, Gambia, Morocco, Aden, Cyprus and latterly at the Ipswich Hospital until her retirement at 65. A keen sportswoman, she was captain of the Singapore Hockey Club and would often be seen playing tennis on the grass court at Hill House here in Playford.
Her last ten years were marred by polyomyositis, an autoimmune muscle disease that causes muscle weakness and difficulty in swallowing. When she had to stop driving and her garden became too much, she moved to be near Rex and Jenny and her three grandchildren in Southwick near Brighton. She loved the short walk to the beach where she would enjoy coffee and toast in the beach cafe. A viral illness which followed the flu jab complicated her immune system and she died peacefully in Worthing Hospital.
Rex Yetton.

Daphne YETTON, formerly of Playford, Ipswich, Suffolk, died on 14th November aged 90. Mother of Rex, mother in law to Jenny, and grandmother of Michelle, Alex and Katie, Daphne was a physiotherapist. She worked in Singapore, Morocco, The Gambia, Aden and Cyprus, as well as the Ipswich hospital. Widowed in 1953, she was a keen sportswoman. Her son Rex remembers being escorted by the Corona Society from boarding school across London to various airports to visit her abroad. 
BOND, Daphne Evelyn (I1311)
 
1427 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I12866)
 
1428 date confirmed by Family Tree online @ Ancestry Family: Walter William COVEY-CRUMP / Hilda Sophia PORTER (F1545)
 
1429 Date from 1901 census BIGLEY, Luke (I2166)
 
1430 date not confirmed WESLEY, Sarah Ann (I2677)
 
1431 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I8927)
 
1432 dau of Charles & Elizabeth, tailor LING, Mary Bell (I99)
 
1433 dau of Henry & Sarah, lab, of Walton CULPIN, Elizabeth (I6886)
 
1434 dau of Henry & Sarah, lab, of Walton CULPIN, Alice (I6885)
 
1435 dau of James (servant) and Charlotte CULPIN, Mary Ann (I3482)
 
1436 daughter of Ann BLINMAN, Selina (I1201)
 
1437 daughter of Arthur, pawnbroker KIRBYSHIRE, Mary Elizabeth (I1196)
 
1438 daughter of Bartholomew & Dorothy PACKSTONE, Mary (I3084)
 
1439 daughter of Bartholomew & Dorothy PACKSTONE, Mary (I21570)
 
1440 daughter of Bartholomew & Dorothy PACKSTONE, Mary (I17570)
 
1441 daughter of Bartholomew & Dorothy PACKSTONE, Mary (I39872)
 
1442 daughter of Bartholomew & Dorothy PACKSTONE, Mary (I58174)
 
1443 daughter of Benjamin & Elizabeth (Phillip) CUTLER, Ruby Jane (I8455)
 
1444 daughter of Benjamin & Elizabeth (Phillip) CUTLER, Ruby Jane (I2391)
 
1445 daughter of Benjamin Munsey MUNSEY, Hannah Louise (I666)
 
1446 daughter of Charles & Jane (nee Degrace) HALL, Pansy Margaret (I12711)
 
1447 daughter of Charles & Sarah DIMOCK, Sarah Ann (I8443)
 
1448 daughter of Charles Colman & Emma Pearce COLMAN, Hilda Emma (I2278)
 
1449 daughter of Edmund & Marianne MUNCEY, Adeline Ann (I5264)
 
1450 Daughter of Edward Dimock of Stretham, baker DYMOCK, Mary (I291)
 

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