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Difference between revisions of "George Reginald Carline"

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| birth_date        = 1885
 
| birth_date        = 1885
 
| death_date        = 1932
 
| death_date        = 1932
| address            = 3 Park Crescent, Oxford<br />Historical Medical Museum, 54a Wigmore Street, W.
+
| address            = 3 Park Crescent, Oxford<br />Historical Medical Museum, 54a Wigmore Street, W.<br />47 Downshire Hill, Hampstead, NW3 [1917]<br />Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford [1919]<br />Bankfield Museum, Halifax, Yorks [1925]
 
| occupation        = museum work
 
| occupation        = museum work
 
| elected_ESL        =  
 
| elected_ESL        =  
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| elected_LAS        =  
 
| elected_LAS        =  
 
| membership        = ordinary fellow
 
| membership        = ordinary fellow
| left              =  
+
| left              = 1932 deceased
 
| clubs              =  
 
| clubs              =  
 
| societies          = Folklore Society<br />Yorkshire Archaeological Society<br />Prehistoric Society of East Anglia<br />Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society
 
| societies          = Folklore Society<br />Yorkshire Archaeological Society<br />Prehistoric Society of East Anglia<br />Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society
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=== House Notes ===
 
=== House Notes ===
proposed by H. Balfour, seconded by A.C. Haddon 1912.11.26<br /><br />
+
1912.11.26 proposed by H. Balfour, seconded by A.C. Haddon <br /><br />death noted in Report of the Council 1932-1933<br />obituary in Man 1933, 55
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
 
George Reginald Carline (1885-1932) was educated at Repton and Exeter College, Oxford. He studied for the Diploma in Anthropology at the Pitt Rivers Museum. He worked on the staff of the Oxford English Dictionary and as an assistant curator at the Wellcome Historical Medical Museum. From 1919 to 1926 he worked at the Pitt Rivers museum as an assistant to Henry Balfour, the curator. He was the first president of the Oxford University Archaeological Society in 1919. He excavated with Gertrude Caton-Thompson and William Flinders Petrie in the Fayum in Egypt from 1925-6. From 1926 until his early death in 1932 he worked as Keeper at the Bankfield Museum in Halifax, Yorkshire. His folklore obituary records:<br />During the past year he had been working on the arrangment of a new Ethnograpical Room recently added to the Museum and formally opened about two months before his death. The method of arrangement was a new and experimental one, being an attempt to combine geographical sequence with a typographical arrangement, while laying emphasis on the aesthetic value of each specimen by its position. In replanning the whole collection, which contained exhibits of greatly varying range and merit, into an organic whole, he took endless trouble to satisfy the artistic sense he had inherited and developed. The work was heavy and the re-arrangements necessitated by the acquisition of the ethnographical section of the collection of the late John Speak possibly contributed to his breakdown. [HCL, 1933: 115]<br />Carline joined the Folklore Society in 1912 and was elected member of the Council in 1917. He collected in South and Central Africa, Central Europe and the Balkans which he visited on various occasions. The Folklore obituary remarks<br />He was keenly interested in Folk Museums, and in 1921 was sent to Sweden by the Anglo-Sweden Society to study the subject in Scandinavia, and after his return strongly advocated the establishment of a similar type of museum in England. [HCL, 1933: 116]<br />He attended the International Congress of Peasant Art at Prague in 1928 as one of three delegates from the Folklore Society. On his return he became a representative of the Society on the newly begun British National Committee for Folk Arts and Crafts. In 1929 he went to South Africa with the British Association for the Advancement of Science (Balfour was also on this trip). According to his obituary in Nature, 'afterwards spending some time in observation among the Mambwe tribe of Northern Rhodesia'.<br />Although he lived a long way from London in later years his Folklore obituary says that he was a regular attendant at Council and evening meetings. He did much work on British calendar customs. He also belonged to the Royal Anthropological Institute, the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia, and was President of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society. The obituary concludes:<br />His fellow members of the Council will sadly miss his absolute sense of rightness and his perfect courtesy, and many others a friend whom they will not easily replace.<br />
 
George Reginald Carline (1885-1932) was educated at Repton and Exeter College, Oxford. He studied for the Diploma in Anthropology at the Pitt Rivers Museum. He worked on the staff of the Oxford English Dictionary and as an assistant curator at the Wellcome Historical Medical Museum. From 1919 to 1926 he worked at the Pitt Rivers museum as an assistant to Henry Balfour, the curator. He was the first president of the Oxford University Archaeological Society in 1919. He excavated with Gertrude Caton-Thompson and William Flinders Petrie in the Fayum in Egypt from 1925-6. From 1926 until his early death in 1932 he worked as Keeper at the Bankfield Museum in Halifax, Yorkshire. His folklore obituary records:<br />During the past year he had been working on the arrangment of a new Ethnograpical Room recently added to the Museum and formally opened about two months before his death. The method of arrangement was a new and experimental one, being an attempt to combine geographical sequence with a typographical arrangement, while laying emphasis on the aesthetic value of each specimen by its position. In replanning the whole collection, which contained exhibits of greatly varying range and merit, into an organic whole, he took endless trouble to satisfy the artistic sense he had inherited and developed. The work was heavy and the re-arrangements necessitated by the acquisition of the ethnographical section of the collection of the late John Speak possibly contributed to his breakdown. [HCL, 1933: 115]<br />Carline joined the Folklore Society in 1912 and was elected member of the Council in 1917. He collected in South and Central Africa, Central Europe and the Balkans which he visited on various occasions. The Folklore obituary remarks<br />He was keenly interested in Folk Museums, and in 1921 was sent to Sweden by the Anglo-Sweden Society to study the subject in Scandinavia, and after his return strongly advocated the establishment of a similar type of museum in England. [HCL, 1933: 116]<br />He attended the International Congress of Peasant Art at Prague in 1928 as one of three delegates from the Folklore Society. On his return he became a representative of the Society on the newly begun British National Committee for Folk Arts and Crafts. In 1929 he went to South Africa with the British Association for the Advancement of Science (Balfour was also on this trip). According to his obituary in Nature, 'afterwards spending some time in observation among the Mambwe tribe of Northern Rhodesia'.<br />Although he lived a long way from London in later years his Folklore obituary says that he was a regular attendant at Council and evening meetings. He did much work on British calendar customs. He also belonged to the Royal Anthropological Institute, the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia, and was President of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society. The obituary concludes:<br />His fellow members of the Council will sadly miss his absolute sense of rightness and his perfect courtesy, and many others a friend whom they will not easily replace.<br />
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== Related Material Details ==
 
== Related Material Details ==
 
=== RAI Material ===
 
=== RAI Material ===
 
+
MS28 VIGNOLA, Amedée<br />Translation of the introductory chapters and tables, from the French, in Tous [sic] les femmes<br /><br />MS173 Newspaper and periodical cuttings arranged according to subject. 1931<br /><br />
 
=== Other Material ===
 
=== Other Material ===
 
English artefacts donated by Carline to the Pitt Rivers Museum<br />Carline donated a total of 11 artefacts to the Museum from England<br />
 
English artefacts donated by Carline to the Pitt Rivers Museum<br />Carline donated a total of 11 artefacts to the Museum from England<br />

Latest revision as of 06:46, 22 January 2021


George Reginald Carline
Carline, George Reginald.jpg
Born 1885
Died 1932
Residence 3 Park Crescent, Oxford
Historical Medical Museum, 54a Wigmore Street, W.
47 Downshire Hill, Hampstead, NW3 [1917]
Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford [1919]
Bankfield Museum, Halifax, Yorks [1925]
Occupation museum work
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
left 1932 deceased
elected_AI 1912.12.12
societies Folklore Society
Yorkshire Archaeological Society
Prehistoric Society of East Anglia
Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society



Contents

Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1912.11.26 proposed by H. Balfour, seconded by A.C. Haddon

death noted in Report of the Council 1932-1933
obituary in Man 1933, 55

Notes From Elsewhere

George Reginald Carline (1885-1932) was educated at Repton and Exeter College, Oxford. He studied for the Diploma in Anthropology at the Pitt Rivers Museum. He worked on the staff of the Oxford English Dictionary and as an assistant curator at the Wellcome Historical Medical Museum. From 1919 to 1926 he worked at the Pitt Rivers museum as an assistant to Henry Balfour, the curator. He was the first president of the Oxford University Archaeological Society in 1919. He excavated with Gertrude Caton-Thompson and William Flinders Petrie in the Fayum in Egypt from 1925-6. From 1926 until his early death in 1932 he worked as Keeper at the Bankfield Museum in Halifax, Yorkshire. His folklore obituary records:
During the past year he had been working on the arrangment of a new Ethnograpical Room recently added to the Museum and formally opened about two months before his death. The method of arrangement was a new and experimental one, being an attempt to combine geographical sequence with a typographical arrangement, while laying emphasis on the aesthetic value of each specimen by its position. In replanning the whole collection, which contained exhibits of greatly varying range and merit, into an organic whole, he took endless trouble to satisfy the artistic sense he had inherited and developed. The work was heavy and the re-arrangements necessitated by the acquisition of the ethnographical section of the collection of the late John Speak possibly contributed to his breakdown. [HCL, 1933: 115]
Carline joined the Folklore Society in 1912 and was elected member of the Council in 1917. He collected in South and Central Africa, Central Europe and the Balkans which he visited on various occasions. The Folklore obituary remarks
He was keenly interested in Folk Museums, and in 1921 was sent to Sweden by the Anglo-Sweden Society to study the subject in Scandinavia, and after his return strongly advocated the establishment of a similar type of museum in England. [HCL, 1933: 116]
He attended the International Congress of Peasant Art at Prague in 1928 as one of three delegates from the Folklore Society. On his return he became a representative of the Society on the newly begun British National Committee for Folk Arts and Crafts. In 1929 he went to South Africa with the British Association for the Advancement of Science (Balfour was also on this trip). According to his obituary in Nature, 'afterwards spending some time in observation among the Mambwe tribe of Northern Rhodesia'.
Although he lived a long way from London in later years his Folklore obituary says that he was a regular attendant at Council and evening meetings. He did much work on British calendar customs. He also belonged to the Royal Anthropological Institute, the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia, and was President of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society. The obituary concludes:
His fellow members of the Council will sadly miss his absolute sense of rightness and his perfect courtesy, and many others a friend whom they will not easily replace.

Publications

External Publications

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

MS28 VIGNOLA, Amedée
Translation of the introductory chapters and tables, from the French, in Tous [sic] les femmes

MS173 Newspaper and periodical cuttings arranged according to subject. 1931

Other Material

English artefacts donated by Carline to the Pitt Rivers Museum
Carline donated a total of 11 artefacts to the Museum from England