User:Carcharoth/Article incubator
What it says on the tin.
Plymouth memorials
[edit]Testing links for articles on Plymouth war memorials.
Plymouth Hoe, Plymouth Sound, Commonwealth War Graves Commission, World War I, World War II, Royal Navy, naval memorials to the missing: Chatham, Plymouth and Portsmouth. Sir Robert Stodart Lorimer, Portland stone, Prince George, Duke of Kent, Sir Edward Maufe, Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon.
Royal Air Force, Allies of World War II, Second World War, Don Bennett, Sir John Curtiss, granite, RAF Bomber Command.
Spanish Armada, Herbert Gribble, Britannia, Tercentenary, Queen Victoria, granite, bronze, Francis Drake, England expects that every man will do his duty, Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, He blew with His winds, and they were scattered, John Hawkins, Lord Henry Seymour, Battle of Trafalgar, Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.
Second Boer War, Prince Christian Victor of Schleswig-Holstein, Redvers Buller, granite, Elizabeth Thompson (Lady Butler), William Francis Butler. Battles mentioned: Wagon Hill*, Ladysmith, Bergendal, Colenso, Spion Kop, Monte Christo* (also spelt 'Monte Cristo'), Vaalkrantz* (Vaal Krantz), Pieter's Hill* (Peter's Hill), Laing's Nek, Belfast, Diamond Hill, Johannesburg, Wittebergen*, Buteaville (?), Lombard's Kop*, Tugela Heights*, Kimberley, Elandslaagte, Rietfontein*, Driefontein*, Paardeberg*. (See here for list of battles, sieges and incidents in the Second Boer War - red-links with an * are there).
Norwegian churches
[edit]- details here.
- Great Sheffield Flood already exists.
- General notes - 3,240 years old at the time of the War of the Ring;
- Tolkien Encyclopedia: Stone-land references (examples of monumental architecture - quote from book); names involving stone as seen in the Rohirrim and the Woses; identification of Isildur, Anarion and Elendil with the three main cities (heraldic symbols); White Tree and palantiri; songs (rhyme of lore and "between the mountains and the sea"; Kin-strife and Ruling Stewards and the Return of the King. Real world analogues: Normams, Byzantium, Egypt, Rome (Aeneas-Elendil).
Eddington experiment
[edit]The best account on-wiki seems to be Tests of general relativity#Deflection of light by the Sun. The article mentioned there, Kepler problem in general relativity, turns out to be a general article about the mathematics of the general problem. I'm wondering what the best title for the experiment would be. Category:Physics experiments has articles closest to what I'm thinking of (though the Category:Experiments looks like it needs re-organising). I'm thinking either "experiment" or "expedition". We have Category:Scientific expeditions. The article could also focus on the eclipse, though that distracts from the expedition and experiments. Seeing as the article should cover the results and the impact and the later history, it should be "experiment". Maybe Eddington experiment and/or 1919 Solar Eclipse Expeditions? There are also (though less widespread) the names Dyson-Eddington experiment and Dyson-Eddington-Davidson experiment. People: Arthur Stanley Eddington, Frank Watson Dyson, Charles Rundle Davidson [1]. Paper: "F. W. Dyson, A. S. Eddington, and C. Davidson, Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. London. Series A 220 (1920) 291-333".
Zoological Society of London awards
[edit]Marsh Award for Conservation Biology
[edit]Could add to Marsh Award for Conservation Biology. [2]
- 2007 Dr Stuart Butchart
- 2006 Professor Sarah Wanless
- 2005 Professor Bill Sutherland (wrong person)
- 2004 Professor Chris Thomas (dab page, no article)
- 2003 Professor Stuart Pimm
- 2002 Professor Callum Roberts
- 2001 Dr Eleanor Jane Milner-Gulland
- 2000 Dr Andrew Balmford
- 1999 Dr John Croxall
- 1998 Professor Peter S. Maitland
- 1997 Dr Rhys E. Green
- 1996 Dr Jeremy A. Thomas
- 1995 Dr John D. Goss-Custard
- 1994 Professor Ian Newton
- 1993 Dr Georgina M. Mace
- 1992 Dr Derek A. Ratcliffe
- 1991 Professor Robert M. May
Frink Medal for British Zoologists
[edit]- Section blanked, see Frink Medal.
Stamford Raffles Award
[edit]- Section blanked, see Stamford Raffles Award.
Silver Medal
[edit]- Section blanked, see Silver Medal (Zoological Society of London).
Zoological Record Award
[edit]- 2007 Matthew Cobb
- 2006 Simon King
- 2005 Charles Clover
- 2004 Dr Armand Leroi
- 2003 Dr Olivia Judson
Honorary Fellows
[edit]- Section blanked, see Zoological Society of London#Honorary Fellows.
Environmental book prizes
[edit]- Natural World Book of the Year
Only a few scattered references:
- Oliver Rackham - The History of the Countryside (1986)
- Norman W. Moore - The Bird of Time (1987)
- David W. Macdonald - Running with the Fox (1988)
- Janet Kear - Man and Wildfowl (1990)
- J. A. Thomas and R. Lewington - The Butterflies of Britain and Ireland (1991)
- Richard Fortey - Hidden Landscape (1993)
- David W. Macdonald - European Mammals (1995)
- David Attenborough - The Life of Birds (1998)
http://www.studentbookworld.com/browse/the-student-book-awards.html
- BP Natural World Book Prize
http://home.comcast.net/~netaylor1/naturalworld.html
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/six-line-up-for-lesserspotted-booker-prize-1188261.html
http://www.thisishoop.com/work/238
- 2002 - Edward O. Wilson - The Future of Life
- 2001 - No Award
- 2000 - (wrong page) Brian Clarke - The Stream
- 1999 - Steve Jones - Almost Like a Whale
- 1998 - David Attenborough - Life of Birds
- 1997 - (wrong page) Graham Harvey - The Killing of the Countryside
- 1996 - David Quammen - The Song of the Dodo
- 1995 - Colin Tudge - The Day Before Yesterday
- 1994 - Oliver Rackham - The Illustrated History of the Countryside
- 1993 - Edward O. Wilson - The Diversity of Life
- 1992 - Iain Douglas Hamilton, Oria Douglas Hamilton - Battle for the Elephants
- 1991 - George Monbiot - Amazon Watershed
- 1990 - Jonathan Kingdon - Island Africa: The Evolution of Africa's Rare Animals and Plants
- 1989 - Philip Wayre - Operation Otter
- 1988 - Jeremy Purseglove - Taming of the Flood
- 1987 - Chris Baines - The Wild Side of Town
National war graves agencies
[edit]- Commonwealth War Graves Commission
- American Battle Monuments Commission
- French equivalent (good basis for an article - National Commission for French Military Graves)
- Also: are there equivalents in Russia and other countries in Europe?
World War One memorials and related topics
[edit]If the memorial commemorates a large number, and the designer, date of unveiling, and who unveiled it, are known, then that should be enough for an article on it. Smaller memorials can be noted in the article on the battles.
- Arras Memorial (created)
- Loos Memorial (created from a redirect)
- Pozieres Memorial (created)
- Le Touret Memorial (created from a redirect)
- Villers-Bretonneux Memorial (created)
- Vis-en-Artois Memorial (created from a redirect)
- Soissons Memorial (created)
- Delville Wood Memorial (created)
- Beaumont-Hamel Memorial (already written)
- Messines Ridge Memorial
- Arras Flying Services Memorial
- Sir Gilbert Dyett (created) (1891-1964), an Australian Victorian-born Gallipoli veteran, founder and President of the Returned Services League 1919 to 1946 ([4], [5], [6], [7], [8], [9], [10], [11]).
- Lieutenant-General Sir Louis Vaughan (created) (1875-1942). Nicknamed 'Father', Louis Ridley Vaughan was chief of staff to General Sir Julian Byng, commander of the Third Army from May 1917 until the end of the war (this army fought at the Battle of Cambrai), and was Byng's representative at the unveiling of the Cambrai Memorial ([12], 'Byng of Vimy: An Appreciation', Army Quarterly, LXXI (October 1935), pp. 11–16 by Lieutenant-General Sir Louis Vaughan, [13], [14], "The best known photo of Louis Vaughan (5th from the left in the back row - Cambrai, 11/11/18)", "Obituary from the The Times, Tuesday, Dec 08, 1942; pg. 6; Issue 49413; col E".).
- If we have an article on Cross of Sacrifice, we can have one on Stone of Remembrance (created) as well. See the Commonwealth War Graves Commission#Cemetery design section.
- A fascinating overlap between war poetry and commemoration is The King's Pilgrimage (created), a poem and book about the trip undertaken by King George V in 1922, touring the war cemeteries and memorials in France and Belgium.
- American Battle Monuments Commission - they have excellent details on their website of the WWI memorials they are responsible for. And there are a number of redlinks that can be filled in (11 redlinks for WWI monuments), and articles expanded (the eight WWI cemeteries and memorials are articles already, but some may only be stubs). Examples: Suresnes American Cemetery and Memorial ([15]), and Luxembourg American Cemetery and Memorial ([16]).
- The CWGC produced a massive set of registers of the dead, and published and still do publish updates as well. For an example, see here. For a big listing of them, see here. These can be used to describe the memorials (the area of the battlefields they covered, the time period, and the forces inscribed on them), and can be used for consistent and reliable descriptions. An example of the later CWGC updates and corrections is here.
- An additional CWGC resource is here, though note that the CWGC provide a lot of documentation freely through their website, and that will be more up-to-date.
- It may be possible to find some of the inscriptions on Flickr, and then search for the text online to confirm and find a source. For examples, see here and here.
- There is a heart-rending story here about a German set of statues known as 'The Mourning Parents'. We have an article an picture already, but possibly could be expanded a bit.
- A very nice introduction here to the series of articles from 'Your Archives'.
- The Times Digital Archive - search for "La Ferte sous Jouarre" brought up 20 hits, of which several are excellent articles on that memorial and the WWI memorials in general.
Other World War I ideas
[edit]Some ideas here for other WWI article and image and sound work.
- Sounds
File:Bombers of WW1.ogg (featured), File:Pershing - Address from France.ogg, File:Watson - The German Peril.ogg, File:AlbertFarrington-ItsaLongLongWaytoTipperary1915a.ogg, File:HelenClark-PackUpYourTroublesInYourOldKitBagAndSmileSmileSmile1917edisonCylinder.ogg, File:It's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary (1915).ogg, File:American's Choice and Opportunity (Newton D. Baker).ogg, File:The American Soldier (Warren G. Harding).ogg, File:Nl-Eerste Wereldoorlog inleiding-article.ogg (in category World War I, but don't know what it is), File:Tanks of WWI.ogg (featured).
- Artworks
World War I in art and literature#Art; Commons:Category:World War I in art; File:NashOverTheTop.jpg, File:Arthur Streeton portrait (George Lambert).jpg, File:Amiens the key of the west.jpg, File:Gassed.jpg, File:Ghosts of Vimy Ridge.jpeg.
- Photography
Commons:Category:The War Illustrated; File:Returning from World War I.jpg, File:Villa Giusti Gemälde.jpg, File:Prussian soldier 155th IR.jpg, File:Marie-Eugène Debeney.jpg, File:Manifesti su Vienna.jpg, File:JWLevett.jpeg, File:Donmartin France Soldiers Mass in a bombed chapel WWI.jpg, File:Armistice Day, Wall Street.JPG, File:Bayonet.jpg, File:Bundesarchiv Bild 136-B1356, Kasernenhof - Fechten.jpg, File:Bundesarchiv Bild 105-DOA3049, Deutsch-Ostafrika, Askari beim Übungsschießen.jpg, File:12inchRailwayHowitzerShell444SiegeBatteryAndKitten19July1918.jpg.
- Video
Don't forget the online archive of Pathe News. Some amazing clips there.
- Articles
- 'The Gardener' (short story by Kipling - also look at his other war poetry, fiction and reports).
- Disambiguate The Gardener to list several meanings for this phrase.
- Full text (poor OCR) of the book The King's Pilgrimage is here: [17]; [18]; [19]; [20].
- Other Kipling short stories related to the war are: 'Mary Postgate' and 'The Debt'.
- Ideas for Kipling's war poetry and stories: 1) Short stories "The Gardner", "Mary Postgate", "The Debt": [21], [22], [23]; 2) Look at the Kipling Society for a good overview of his war ouvre: [24]; "Kipling and Shaw’s attitudes to war" (no link), [25], [26], [27]; 3) General listing of Kipling's war works: [28] - seems not to include poetry; 4) General WWI poetry again: [29].
- Gilbert Clayton (created) looks interesting ([30]) - was found on requested articles at the WWI portal.
- List of Colonel Generals has several Austro-Hungarian generals that could be filled in using this website.
- Specifically Leopold Freiherr von Hauer, covered here, and also found on requested articles at the WWI portal.
- Follow up on the TV documentary Not Forgotten: Soldiers Of Empire ([31]) - in particular the West Indies bit, and also a much more ambitious article on British Empire and World War I and/or British Empire in World War I ([32]). What we have seems to be what is currently at British Empire#First World War.
- The Muse in Arms (created) - relatively famous book of poetry published during the war (for an example of an article on a WWI poetry anthology published much later, see Up the Line to Death).
- Lots and lots of WWI war poets could have articles - need to be selective here.
- Guerres Mondiales et Conflits Contemporains ([33]) - major history journal on the world wars - others include Journal of Contemporary History and Vingtième Siecle.
- Ireland and World War One - excellent article (in fact that whole BBC site is excellent) - some names and articles include: Ireland and World War I, Francis Ledwidge, Tom Kettle, 36th (Ulster) Division, 10th (Irish) Division, 16th (Irish) Division, Tom Barry, John Redmond and his brother Willie Redmond, James Connolly, Patrick Pearse, James Larkin, "The 12 July Orange parades were cancelled, and five minutes' silence was observed in Belfast that day" - cover the reasons for joining up to fight in the war, the Rising during the war, the links with Germany (e.g. Roger Casement), different responses after the war by Protestant (Unionist) and Catholic (Nationalist) communities, and the various memorials.
- Something could be written on the official war artists (most or all of whom have articles). The beginnings of lists are at war artist, but the details of how the UK handled this in WWI and WWII are here and here and here and here. The War Artists' Advisory Committee was set up for World War II, and for World War I the official body was a committee at the "Ministry of Information" (something also needs to be written about that, as it seems several different organisations in the UK in WWI had responsbility for propaganda and wartime information), and the key point is here: "In 1916 the Ministry launched the Official War Artists scheme". Find a name for that scheme and that can be the starting point for a short article mentioning who organised this and who the artists were.
- Delville Wood Commemorative Museum is another possibility (it covers three wars, but is on site of Delville Wood Memorial, so close ties to the WWI battlefield and memorials). Also note (if not done already) the bit about how Delville Wood was replanted with acorns from South Africa, themselves from trees descended from acorns brought to South Africa from Europe ([34]).
- The Ypres League (created) looks like a fascinating story. See here.
- Australian Historical Mission has lots of material available: [35], [36], [37]
- St Barnabas Society (not to be confused with the current Catholic converts organisation, or the shelter for the homeless in Hong Kong, but some sources are here:[38], [39], [40], [41], [42], [43], [44], [45]).
- A fantastic resource on New Zealand in WWI is here.
- There are numerous personal accounts of the war online, such as this one. A project space list of such resources might be useful.
- An article on the Graves Concentration Units might be possible. See the pdf linked here, and here. For a list of such subsidiary units of the British Army in WWI, see here and similar lists elsewhere (easy to overdo this, there are a lot of these support units, though in this war in particular, the ration of support units to combat units was increasing).
- Memorial Gates (created) on Constitution Hill. See here and here and image here.
- Lists
- If redlinks filled in on List of Colonel Generals, work some more on that.
- More work on List of Commonwealth War Graves Commission World War I memorials to the missing in Belgium and France (co-ords, fill in redlinks, get map sorted, and so on).
- List of the 16 Great War Poets commemorated at Westminster Abbey (source). They are already listed at Poets’ Corner (with other poets), but a separate list would allow more freedom to annotate and give the context: Richard Aldington, Laurence Binyon, Edmund Blunden, Rupert Brooke, Wilfrid Gibson, Robert Graves, Julian Grenfell, Ivor Gurney, David Jones, Robert Nichols, Wilfred Owen, Herbert Read, Isaac Rosenberg, Siegfried Sassoon, Charles Sorley, Edward Thomas.
- List of British Army generals who died during World War I (see here).
- List of the commanders (Corps generals and above) of the British Army in World War I. See List of British corps in World War I, Category:Corps of the British Army in World War I, and chapter 7 ('The Donkeys') in Mud, Blood and Poppycock (Corrigan, 2003). See also the painting 'Some Generals of the Great War' (1922, John Singer Sargent) which is captioned by Corrigan in his book (centrefold spread of photos and paintings). See also here (NPG) and here (Wikimedia Commons). There is an equivalent commission for the politicians, see here (NPG) and here (Wikimedia Commons). For a larger challenge, extend this to other branches of the British Armed Services, to all the high levels of military leadership in the war, include some politicians, and include all combatant nations. Start has been made here.
- List of official histories of World War I. Maybe extend more generally to other wars and other official histories. See Official History of the Canadian Army in the Second World War, Official History of Australia in the War of 1914-1918, History of the Great War, History of the Second World War. Some links: [46], [47]. If Official Histories is too vague or narrow, then look at categorising or listing multi-volume history works, such as [48], [49], [50], [51]. The second one is not an official history. The third and fourth could be merged. A good list of official histories is here.
- List of World War I anthologies is possible, using resources like this Word document from the Birmingham Centre for First World War Studies (HTML version), the Echenberg War Poetry Collection, and other sites such as Poetry of the First World War (from Scuttlebutt and Small Chow), and also the Oxford site and others listed elsewhere on this page or on the "to improve" page. More poetry links: [52], [53], [54], [55], [56], [57], [58].
- Look for other lists to start or work on.
- Alerts
- Keep an eye on Template:WPMILHIST Announcements/World War I and Wikipedia:WikiProject Military history/World War I task force/Article alerts - those pages seems to be key to following content matters on WWI that the task force is aware of, and both look very helpful.
Journals ideas
[edit]- Pick 6-8 major sciences, and the most prestigious current journals for those sciences.
- Do the same, but for countries and going back in time, to get idea of how this has changed over time.
- For the same 6-8 major sciences, pick out the oldest journals, with the longest history.
Major sciences
[edit]- Physics
- Chemistry
- Earth science
- Astronomy
- Botany
- Zoology
- Biochemistry
- Medicine
- Mathematics
The above is a bit subjective, of course.
Royal Geographical Society lists
[edit]- Template:RGSPresidents has two redlinks, but if that completes it, then turn into a list.
- Gold Medal (RGS) - rename to expand abbreviation, and then carry on where someone else left off here.
Biology and genetics redlinks
[edit]A new mini-list, from April 2015:
- Edward Laurens Mark (1847-1946)
- Winthrop Osterhout (1871-1964)
- John Whittemore Gowan (1893-1967)
- Andre Dreyfus (1897-1952)
- Warren P. Spencer (1898-1969)
- Jack Schultz (1904-1971)
- Hans Gustav Emil Bauer (1904-1988)
- Benjamin Paul Sonnenblick (1909-1998)
- Maurice Whittinghill (1909-1998)
- Alvin Nason (1919-1978)
Lists of Oxford professors
[edit]See List of professorships at the University of Oxford.
Dr Lee's Professor of Experimental Philosophy
[edit]- See Category:Dr Lee's Professors of Experimental Philosophy and Dr Lee's Professor of Experimental Philosophy
Previously just 'Professor of Experimental Philosophy' and before that a Readership. The transition between 'reader' and 'professor' took place in the time of Robert Walker, FRS. More on the early history here.
"The duties (very much part-time) of a Readership in Experimental Philosophy, founded in the eighteenth century, were carried out mainly by the professors of Astronomy. From 1839 it became a full-time post..."[59]
The post is associated with a fellowship at Wadham College and is formally called 'Dr Lee's Professor of Experimental Philosophy'.
- James Bradley (1693–1762), Reader of Experimental Philosophy from 1749 to 1762
- Thomas Hornsby (1733–1810), Reader of Experimental Philosophy from 1763 to 1810
- Stephen Peter Rigaud (1774–1839), Reader of Experimental Philosophy from 1810 to 1839
- Robert Walker (1801-1865), Reader and later Professor of Experimental Philosophy from 1839 to 1865
- Robert Bellamy Clifton (1836–1921), Professor of Experimental Philosophy from 1865 to 1915
- Frederick Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell (1886–1957), Professor of Experimental Philosophy from 1919 to 1956
- Francis Simon (1893–1956), elected Professor of Experimental Philosophy in 1956 but died before taking up office
- Brebis Bleaney (1915–2006), Professor of Experimental Philosophy from 1957 to 1976
- Edgar William John Mitchell (1925–2002), Professor of Experimental Philosophy from 1977 to 1987
- Roger Arthur Cowley (1939–2015), Professor of Experimental Philosophy from 1988 to 2007
- Paolo Radaelli (born 1961), Professor of Experimental Philosophy since 2008
Dr Lee's Professor of Chemistry
[edit]- Frederick Soddy (1877–1956) [1919 to 1936]
- Cyril Norman Hinshelwood (1897–1967) [1937 to 1964]
- Rex Richards (born 1922) [1964 to 1973]
- John Shipley Rowlinson (born 1926) [1974 to 1993]
- John Philip Simons (born 1934) [1993 to 1999]
- Jacob Klein (born 1949) [2000 to 2008]
- Carol V. Robinson (born 1956) [2009 to present] Described in sources as 'Dr Lee's Professor of Chemistry-elect'
Dr Lee's Professor of Anatomy
[edit]- Arthur Thomson (1858–1935) [1919 to 1933]
- Wilfrid Le Gros Clark (1895–1971) [1934 to 1962]
- Geoffrey Wingfield Harris (1913–1971) [1962 to 1971]
- Charles Garrett Phillips (1916–1994) [1975 to 1983]
- Ray Guillery (born 1929) [1984 to 1996]
- Kay Davies (born 1951) [1998 to present]
Wykeham Professor of Physics
[edit]- John Sealy Townsend (1868–1957) [1900 to 1941]
- Maurice Pryce (1913–2003) [1946 to 1955]
- Victor Weisskopf (1908–2002) [1955 to 1956 - Visiting Professor]
- Willis Lamb (1913–2008) [1956 to 1962]
- Rudolf Peierls (1907–1995) [1963 to 1974]
- Roger James Elliott (born 1928) [1974 to 1989]
- David Sherrington (born 1941) [1989 to 2008; Emeritus since 2008]
Professorship associated with New College, Oxford. According to the New College website, "[the] appointment of the next Wykeham Professor of Physics, replacing Professor David Sherrington FRS, is in progress."[60]
Frink Medal redlinks
[edit]Some redlinks from Frink Medal:
- Vera Fretter (1905-1992) - The Conchological Society of Great Britain and Ireland Journal of Molluscan Studies
- James Desmond Smyth (1917-1999) - Obituaries Australia EOAS Int J Parasitol
- James Munro Dodd (1915-1986) - JSTOR RSBM template:Cite doi/10.1098.2Frsbm.1991.0007
- James Eric Smith (1909-1990) - Marine Biological Association ODNB JSTOR template:Cite doi/10.1098.2Frsbm.1992.0017
- Alastair Graham (1906-2000) - Malacological Society of London RSBM template:Cite doi/10.1098.2Frsbm.2002.0008
- Ernest James William Barrington (1909-1985) - JSTOR RSBM template:Cite doi/10.1098.2Frsbm.1990.0002
Oxford professor redlinks
[edit]From several lists of Oxford professorships.
- Robert Walker (1801-1865)
- Paolo Radaelli (born 1961)
- John Philip Simons (born 1934)
- Geoffrey Wingfield Harris (1913–1971)
- Charles Garrett Phillips (1916–1994)
- David Sherrington (born 1941)
Malacological Society of London
[edit]Presidents of the Malacological Society of London:
- Henry Woodward (geologist) - 1893-95
- George Bond Howes - 1895-97
- Henry Haversham Godwin-Austen - 1897-99
- William Thomas Blanford - 1899-1901
- Edgar Albert Smith - 1901-04
- Ernest Ruthven Sykes - 1904-07
- Bernard Barham Woodward - 1907-10
- Richard Bullen Newton - 1910-13
- Alfred Hands Cooke - 1913-16 ([61])
- John Read le Brockton Tomlin - 1916-19
- Gerard Pierre Laurent Kalshoven Gude - 1919-22
- Alfred Santer Kennard - 1922-25 ([62])
- Alfred James Peile - 1925-27 ([63])
- Arthur Edwin Boycott - 1927-29
- James Cosmo Melvill (naturalist) - 1929 (elected for the year 1929-30; died in office on 4 November 1929)
- Guy Coburn Robson - 1930-33
- Albert Edward Salisbury - 1933-36 ([64])
- A. Morley Davies - 1936-39
- Ronald Winckworth - 1939-42
- Arthur Tindell Hopwood 'Tindell' - 1942-45 ([65] - see also Jubilee year article - Hopwood was the "20th president")
- Arthur George Wrigley - 1945-48 ([66])
- Nellie Barbara Eales - 1948-51 ([67])
- Hamilton Ernest Quick - 1950-54 ([68])
- Alastair Graham - 1954-57 ([69])
- Leslie Reginald Cox - 1957-60
- George Ivor Crawford - 1960-63 ([70])
- William James Rees - 1963-66 ([71])
- Vera Fretter - 1966-69
- Richard Denison Purchon - 1969-71 ([72] [73])
- Reginald Harold Nisbet - 1972-73; 1974-76 (???)
- Thomas Everett Thompson - 1976-79 ([74])
- Edwin Royden Trueman 'Ted' - 1979-82 ([75])
- John A. Allen - 1982-83 (possibly [76])
- 1983-6
- Alasdair D. Berrie - 1986-87 ([77])
- John D. Taylor - 1987-88 ([78])
- 1988-1990
- Alan Bebbington - 1990-93 ([79])
- John D. Taylor - 1993-94 ([80])
- Peter William Skelton - 1994-95; 1996-97 ([81])
- David G. Reid - 1997-99 (possibly [82])
- Robert Cameron (malacologist) - 1999-2002 ([83])
- 2002-03
- Stuart Edwin Roger Bailey 'Bill' - 2003-04 ([84][85])
- 2004-06
- Georges B. J. Dussart - 2006-09 ([86])
- Mark S. Davies - 2009-11 ([87])
- Anthony J. Walker 'Tony' - 2011-14 ([88])
- Suzanne Williams (malacologist) (current President, 2014-16, possibly [89])
Surveyor of the Fabric of St Paul's Cathedral
[edit]- The draft below published with additions at Surveyor of the Fabric of St Paul's Cathedral.
Some accounts start with Inigo Jones, appointed Surveyor of the Works in 1628, but this list starts with the appointment of Wren to build the new cathedral following the destruction of the old one in the Great Fire of London in 1666.
- Christopher Wren (1675-1723)
- John James (1723-1746)
- Henry Flitcroft (1746-1756)
- Stiff Leadbetter (1756-1766)
- Robert Mylne (1766-1811)
- Samuel Pepys Cockerell (1811-1819)
- Charles Robert Cockerell (1819-1852)
- Francis Penrose (1852-1897)
- Somers Clarke (1897-1931)
- Mervyn Edmund Macartney (1906-1931)
- Walter Godfrey Allen (1931-1956)
- John Seely, Lord Mottistone (1956-1963)
- Paul Edward Paget (1963-1969)
- Bernard Feilden (1969-1977)
- Robert Potter (1978-1984)
- William Whitfield (1985-1990)
- Martin Stancliffe (1990-2011)
- Oliver Caroe (2011-present)
- The Guildhall Library Archives relating to St Paul's Cathedral includes the leaflet St Paul's Cathedral by Peter Burman, which contains a "list of Surveyors to the Cathedral Fabric, 1675-1987" (p.181)
- For a fuller history of the 20th-century surveyorships, see Peter Burman's 'Decoration, Furnishings and Art since 1900', forming chapter 23 of St. Paul's: The Cathedral Church of London, 604-2004 (2004)
- 'St Paul's at 300' - lecture in 2011 by Martin Stancliffe (Part 1 and Part 2)
RTS public lectures
[edit]- User:Carcharoth/Article incubator/Huw Wheldon Memorial Lecture
- User:Carcharoth/Article incubator/Fleming Memorial Lecture
- User:Carcharoth/Article incubator/Shoenberg Memorial Lecture
Also the RTS/IET Joint Lecture since 2014 (Michael Richard Lynch, Demis Hassabis, Paul Nurse, Tim Peake).
Alexander Hamilton Award
[edit]Alexander Hamilton Award administered by the Manhattan Institute: list of awards.
- 2018: Stanley F. Druckenmiller and Nikki Haley
- 2017: William J. Bratton and Ravenel B. Curry III
- 2016: Harvey A. Silverglate and Bruce Kovner
- 2015: George L. Kelling and Eva Moskowitz
- 2014: Paul Ryan, Thomas W. Smith and Jeb Bush
- 2013: Kenneth G. Langone and Bobby Jindal
- 2012: Timothy Michael Dolan, Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr. and James Q. Wilson
- 2011: Joel I. Klein and Mortimer B. Zuckerman
- 2010: Wendy Kopp and Robert Rosenkranz
- 2009: Raymond W. Kelly and Henry A. Kissinger
- 2008: Herman Badillo and Maurice R. Greenberg
- 2007: Edward I. Koch and K. Rupert Murdoch
- 2006: Rudolph W. Giuliani and Tom Wolfe
- 2005: Hugh L. Carey, Ron Chernow and Roger Hertog
- 2004: William F. Buckley Jr., Peter M. Flanigan and Robert L. Bartley
- 2003: Chuck Brunie, Walter Mintz and Philippe de Montebello
- 2002: Ellen V. Futter, Richard Gilder and Betsy Barlow Rogers
- 2001: Daniel Patrick Moynihan and William C. Steere, Jr.
Links for the four redlinks: Charles H. 'Chuck' Brunie (1930-2017), Walter Mintz (1929-2004). William C. Steere, Jr. (born 1936) was chief executive of Pfizer, see for example William and Lynda Steere - not to be confused with his father (William C. Steere) and his son William C. Steere III. See also Pfizer past CEO Steere, a key company builder, retires from its board (from 2011). Still involved with the Pfizer Foundation (philanthropic organisation). Thomas 'Tom' William Smith is founder of Prescott Investors; the generic name makes it difficult to find some details, but an article from 2017 authored by him is here: Confessions of a Climate Change 'Denier'.
Walter Mintz: http://www.reed.edu/reed_magazine/autumn2006/features/hedge_funds/index.html, http://www.reed.edu/reed_magazine/autumn2006/features/hedge_funds/mintz_legacy.html, https://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/17/classified/paid-notice-deaths-mintz-walter.html, https://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/22/business/walter-mintz-75-investor-and-hedge-fund-cofounder-is-dead.html, http://www.reed.edu/reed_magazine/feb2005/columns/NoC/mintz.html, http://www.reed.edu/reed-magazine/in-memoriam/obituaries/february2005/walter-mintz-1950.html, http://spartacus.blogs.com/spartacus/2004/11/obituary_of_the.html, https://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/alexander-hamilton-2003-award-dinner-7717.html, https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.obituaries/H9HoNaHTQkM, https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vienna-Paradox-Memoir-Directions-Paperbook/dp/0811215717, http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803100200434, https://www.nytimes.com/1972/05/15/archives/richard-schueller-diplomat-teacher-101-dies.html, https://www.nytimes.com/1972/05/15/archives/richard-schueller-diplomat-teacher-101-dies.html, https://austria-forum.org/af/Biographien/Sch%C3%BCller,_Richard, https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Fy2SAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA150. Reed College; Manhattan Institute for Policy Research; Marjorie Perloff.
WWI and WWII ships on Tower Hill Memorial
[edit]Attempt to find other ships as well as RMS Lusitania that are listed on the WWI memorial at the Tower Hill Memorial. After some abortive attempts, finally found the obvious Category:World War I merchant ships of the United Kingdom. This will have the vast majority of the merchnat shipping on the Tower Hill WWI memorial that have articles. Some WWII ships located as well.
WWI
[edit]- SS Wimmera
- SS Athenia (1903)
- HMAS Berrima
- RMS Franconia (1910)
- SS Iberian (1900)
- SS Inkosi (1902)
- SS Malakand (1905)
- SS Prunelle (1874)
- SS Saint Ninian
- RMS Carpathia
WWII
[edit]People
[edit]- Marc Armand Ruffer (on a ship, but on different memorial)
Hayden Memorial Geological Award
[edit]As of the date of writing, one red-link left (fr:Gustave Dewalque), also need to check whether the awards have ended or if updates are needed.
Cunningham Medal
[edit]One red-link is John Christian Malet (1847-1901). It is not that easy to find more than fragmentary biographical information. He was Professor of Mathematics at Queen's College, Cork (now University College Cork) from 1880 to 1887 (pp.105-106 in Mathematics in Victorian Britain, 2011). And he was a student at Trinity College Dublin. Try to find obituary in usual places. Death announced in: Science, New Series, Vol. 14, No. 365 (Dec. 27, 1901), pp. 1021-1024 [90]. His publications are under "John C. Malet". [91]
Actonian Prize
[edit]Has two red-links: George Warington [1840-1874] (difficult, died young in Africa of consumption aged 34 on 25 February 1874, see here) and Benjamin Thompson Lowne (easier - see here). Carcharoth (talk) 13:06, 10 September 2023 (UTC)