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・ William Henry Anderdon
・ William Henry Anderson
・ William Henry Andrews
・ William Henry Ansell
・ William Henry Appleton
・ William Henry Ashley
・ William Henry Ashurst (judge)
・ William Henry Ashurst (solicitor)
・ William Henry Aspinwall
・ William Henry Atkinson
・ William Henry Augustus Bissell
・ William Henry Babcock
・ William Henry Bailey
・ William Henry Baldwin
・ William Henry Baldwin, Jr.
William Henry Balgarnie
・ William Henry Barbour, Jr.
・ William Henry Barlow
・ William Henry Barnum
・ William Henry Bartlett
・ William Henry Bateman Hope
・ William Henry Bateson
・ William Henry Battle
・ William Henry Bay
・ William Henry Baynes
・ William Henry Beach
・ William Henry Beaglehole
・ William Henry Beatty
・ William Henry Beaumont de Horsey
・ William Henry Becker


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William Henry Balgarnie : ウィキペディア英語版
William Henry Balgarnie

William Henry Balgarnie (12 May 1869 – c. July 1951) was a schoolmaster at Elmfield College, Woodbridge School and The Leys School, and is believed to have been the inspiration for the character Mr Chips in the book ''Goodbye, Mr. Chips'', written by one of his students at The Leys, James Hilton.〔Timothy Carroll, (Who was the real Mr Chips? ), ''The Daily Telegraph'', 9 December 2002〕
==Life==
Born at Woolwich, the son of a Presbyterian minister, Balgarnie studied at and taught at Elmfield College before going to The Leys. In the 1890s he gathered with other Old Elmfieldians in London for a country walk followed by tea, which was invariably accompanied with recitations and ballads around the piano.
Balgarnie was the first Elmfieldian M.A. (1891), and went from Elmfield to Fowey Grammar School, in Cornwall.
In 1894, Balgarnie was awarded a sizarship at Trinity College, Cambridge, from which he duly exited with an first-class Honours degree in classics. There he met W. W. Gibberd, the mathematician, through the Cambridge University Hare and Hounds, the cross-country club.
What must be unique to Balgarnie is that he was followed at Trinity by his ''elder'' brother, Edward, who entered Trinity in 1897 at the age of 30. (Balgarnie had been 25, itself a somewhat advanced age.)
Thus, although not intellectually outstanding, before he was 30 Balgarnie was associated with three universities - he had M.A.s from London and Cambridge, and had worked for a year or two as assistant Professor of Greek at Glasgow University under the young Gilbert Murray. His academic output included translations of Sophocles, Euripides and Lysias.
He died at Porthmadog, Wales, after a heart attack.〔(Milestones ), ''Time magazine'', 30 July 1951〕〔Obituary, ''The Times'', 2 Aug 1951〕

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