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Barnaby Miln : ウィキペディア英語版 | Barnaby Miln
Barnaby Kemp Graham Miln (born 6 August 1947) is a British social activist and former magistrate. He was the first lay person to come out as gay in the General Synod of the Church of England and thereby the most publicly gay magistrate in England and Wales.〔Daily Telegraph, London, Tuesday 9 February 1988, page 8〕〔Daily Mail newspaper, London, Saturday 30 May 1992, pages 1 and 2〕〔The Independent newspaper, London, Friday 4 December 1992, page 3 with photograph 〕〔Daily Mirror newspaper, London, Saturday 5 December 1992, page 3〕〔The Independent newspaper, London, Saturday 5 December 1992, page 3 〕〔News of the World newspaper, London, 6 December 1992, pages 4 and 5 with photographs〕〔Sunday Press newspaper, Dublin, 3 January 1993, page 3 with photographs〕〔The Sun newspaper, London, Monday 29 March 1999, pages 12 and 13 with photographs〕〔Daily Mail newspaper, London, Tuesday 30 March 1999, page 27 with photographs〕〔The Sun newspaper, London, Saturday 24 April 1999, page 15 with photographs〕〔The People newspaper, London, 21 September 2003, pages 6 and 7 with photographs〕 The Miln family originates in Barry, a village near Carnoustie in Angus in Scotland and their genealogy back to 1614 is recorded in Burke's Landed Gentry.〔Burke's Landed Gentry of Great Britain, 19th edition, Volume 1, page 1021, ISBN 0-9711966-0-5〕 Miln's coat of arms was granted and matriculated at the Court of the Lord Lyon King of Arms on 8 August 1967,〔James Balfour Paul, An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland. 2nd edition, Lyon Office, Edinburgh, 1977, ISBN 0-9505299-0-7〕 and re-matriculated on 12 October 1998, after his father’s death.〔Captain William Wallace Graham Miln (1919 - 1994) 1st Battalion, The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) 1939-1946〕 ==Early life and education== He was educated at Mostyn House School, once a prestigious preparatory boarding school〔The Rise of the English Prep School by Donald Leinster-Mackay, Falmer Press Ltd, 1984, ISBN 0-905273-74-5〕 for 160 boys from 8 to 13 years, in Parkgate on the Wirral Peninsula in Cheshire where his end of term reports show that he was happy, an all-rounder and clever. This was followed by Loretto School, Musselburgh, close to Edinburgh, the smallest of the great public schools〔The Public School Phenomenon, Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy, Hodder and Stoughton, 1977, ISBN 0-340-22373-1 page 441〕 with 240 boys with a reputation for being spartan, sporty and very strict.〔Dymock, Eric. Jim Clark: Racing Legend. London: J.H. Haynes & Co. Ltd., 1997. ISBN 0-85429-982-3. pages 54 to 60〕 After a year as farm student with Tommy Dale,〔The Scotsman, Edinburgh, 6 September 1988, obituary〕 of Scoughall〔The Scots Magazine, Dundee, Vol 88, No 6, March 1968, pages 530-539〕 in East Lothian, he was the third generation of his family to be a graduate of the Edinburgh School of Agriculture. He was elected a member of the Edinburgh University Students' Representative Council and was present and on duty when Malcolm Muggeridge, rector of Edinburgh University, used a sermon at St. Giles' Cathedral in January 1968,〔Thorns and Thistles, Dr Harry Whitley, Edina Press Limited, Edinburgh, p 15, ISBN 0-905695-01-1〕 to resign the post in protest against the Student Representative Council's liberal views on "pot and pills."
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