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Jane Ingham

Rose Marie "Jane" Ingham (née Tupper‑Carey /ˌtˈʌpə ˈkɛəri/ ; 15 August 1897 – 10 September 1982) was an English botanist and scientific translator. She was appointed research assistant to Joseph Hubert Priestley in the Botany Department at the University of Leeds, and together, they were the first to separate cell walls from the root tip of broad beans. They analysed these cell walls and concluded that they contained protein. She carried out experiments on the cork layer of trees to study how cells function under a change of orientation and found profound differences in cell division and elongation in the epidermal layer of plants.

Jane Ingham
Ingham (left) with Albert Ingham (right) in 1966
Born
Rose Marie Tupper‑Carey

(1897-08-15)15 August 1897
Leeds, England
Died10 September 1982(1982-09-10) (aged 85)
Cambridge, England
Alma materUniversity of Leeds (1928 (1928): MSc)
Spouse
(m. 1932; died 1967)
Children2
RelativesMichael Sadleir (brother-in-law)
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
ThesisGeotropism or Gravity and Growth (1928)
Academic advisorsJoseph Hubert Priestley

At Leeds, Ingham was appointed sub-warden of Weetwood Hall, and honorary secretary of the British-Italian League. In 1930, she joined the Imperial Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics at the School of Agriculture in Cambridge, England, as a scientific officer and translator. The bureau was responsible for publishing a series of abstract journals on various aspects of crop breeding and genetics. In 1932, she married Albert Ingham, then a fellow and director of studies at King's College, Cambridge. Ingham spent the war years in Princeton, New Jersey, with her two sons, not wishing to return to England after travelling to the US just before the outbreak of World War II. In the last years of her life, she and her husband travelled extensively, and in 1982, she died at Cambridge.

Early life edit

Ingham was born on (1897-08-15)15 August 1897, at Cromer House, Cromer Terrace, Leeds,[1] and baptised an Anglican in the Church of England at Donhead St Andrew, Wiltshire, on 14 September 1897.[2][a] She was the youngest daughter of Helen Mary Tupper‑Carey, née Chapman, and Albert Darell.[7] They had married at Donhead St Andrew on 16 May 1890.[8] Helen Mary was the daughter of Reverend Horace Edward Chapman, a former rector of Donhead St Andrew,[9] and Adelaide Maria, née Fletcher.[7][b]

 
The Reverend Tupper Carey, Ingham's paternal grandfather

Ingham's father was the son of the Reverend Tupper Carey and Helen Jane, née Sandeman.[10][11][c] He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, and trained at Cuddesdon Theological College. He was curate of Leeds before being appointed rector of St Margaret's Church, Lowestoft.[d] In 1910, he was appointed canon residentiary of York, and later, became vicar of Huddersfield. From 1938, he was Chaplain to the King and at Monte Carlo.[10] Despite his given name being Albert Darell, he was known as "Tupper" to his friends and was described by John Gilbert Lockhart in Cosmo Gordon Lang's biography as follows:[14]

He could get at once on the easiest terms with every sort of person, from the 'drunks' of Leeds and Lowestoft to the millionaires of Monte Carlo ... Mercurial, overflowing with high spirits, irrepressible, he was everybody's friend and had a smile and a word for every passer-by in the streets of his parish.

Ingham had four siblings.[7] Her eldest sister, Jacqueline Marjorie, married the Reverend Edgar James Mitchell, and after their marriage, they undertook missionary work in the Far East.[15][e] Ingham's elder sister, Edith, known as "Betty" to her friends and family,[17] married the author Michael Sadleir. Sadleir was the only son of Sir Michael Ernest Sadler, a former vice-chancellor of the University of Leeds.[18] Her elder brother, Humphrey Darell, was a tea planter in British East Africa before the outbreak of World War I. He was commissioned a lieutenant in the King's African Rifles, but was severely wounded in the right thigh during the East African campaign.[19] He married Marjorie Gertrude Drakes, née Bredin, the widow of Charles Henry Drakes.[20] In later life, he worked for the Colonial Service in Nigeria and was appointed a Companion of the Imperial Service Order in the Queen's 1959 Birthday Honours.[21][f] Her younger brother, Peter Charles Sandeman, was a captain in the Royal Navy. He married Anne Ethel Violet Montagu Dundas, the eldest daughter of Robert Neville Dundas and Cecil Mary, née Lancaster.[23][24]

Tupper-Carey family tree
Rev. Tupper CareyHelen Jane SandemanRev. Horace Edward ChapmanAdelaide Maria Fletcher
Canon Albert Darell Tupper-Carey
( Carey)[c]
Helen Mary Chapman
Jacqueline Marjorie Tupper-CareyRev. Edgar James MitchellEdith "Betty" Tupper-CareyMichael SadleirHumphrey Darell Tupper-Carey[f]Marjorie Gertrude Drakes (née Bredin)Rose Marie "Jane" Tupper-CareyAlbert Edward InghamPeter Charles Sandeman Tupper-CareyAnne Ethel Violet Montagu Dundas
Michael Frank InghamStephen Darell Ingham

Education edit

 
Botany House (south side) at the University of Leeds. Built in 1825, it is a Grade II listed building.

Ingham was educated at Claire House School,[25] an all girl school in North Parade, Lowestoft, which specialised in the teaching of French.[26][g] At the age of ten, she gained a prize in preliminary French examinations that were organised by the National Society of French Professors in England. She competed against candidates from the "best girls' schools in England",[27] the written tests consisting of translation and composition (prose and poetry), essay, and questions on 17th to 19th century French literature.[28] In the same year, she performed as Philaminte in the school's production of three scenes from Molière's Les Femmes Savantes.[25][h]

Ingham showed an early interest in botany. In her youth, she would collect wildflowers to display at local parish shows.[30] Her grandmother, Helen Jane Carey, was a keen amateur botanist and specimen collector,[31] a popular and fashionable pastime in Victorian England.[32]: 29  In 1916, Ingham entered the University of Leeds to study botany and,[4] within three years, was a research student in the botany department at Leeds, studying water absorption at the growing point of plant roots.[33] In 1919, Ingham studied general zoology at the Citadel Hill Laboratory of the Marine Biological Association, Plymouth.[34] Annie Redman King, her friend from Weetwood Hall in Leeds,[35] was a Ray Lankester investigator at the laboratory.[34][i]

Career edit

 
The Imperial Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics, Plant Breeding Institute, in the School of Agriculture, Downing Street, Cambridge. It now houses the Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge.

In January 1922, Ingham was appointed a research assistant in the botany department,[37] where Joseph Hubert Priestley was Dean of the Faculty of Science.[38] She and Priestley were the first to isolate cell walls from meristematic tissues in Vicia faba (broad beans). They analysed the walls for protein, cellulose, and pectin, and concluded that the walls contained protein.[39] They also studied when cellulose is first produced by plants,[37] the differences in shoot and root development,[40] and the role of the cork cambium.[41] These plant physiology studies were followed by two New Phytologist papers.[42] She later provided unpublished results from these experiments on broad bean embryos to the British botanist William Pearsall.[43] Described as a "brilliant scholar",[4] she was awarded a MSc degree on 28 June 1928, for her research work and thesis titled Geotropism or Gravity and Growth.[44]

In February 1930, Ingham joined the Imperial Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics, at the Plant Breeding Institute, Cambridge,[45]: 140  as a translator and scientific officer.[46] Sir Rowland Biffen was the first director of the Cambridge bureau, and her supervisor, Penrhyn Stanley Hudson,[47] was deputy director.[45]: 140 [j] She was fluent in French, Italian, German and Swedish,[4] and as a whole, the bureau had been capable of dealing with Spanish, Dutch, and Russian.[45]: 139  Abstracts were written on various aspects of plant breeding and genetics, with some of the foreign language papers requiring more complete translations. These abstracts were published in a quarterly journal called Plant Breeding Abstracts.[49] In 1931, she attended the eighth conference of the Association of Special Libraries and Information Bureaux (ASLIB) at Oxford,[50] where progress on ASLIB's newly-formed panel of expert translators was discussed.[51] After her marriage, she worked from home translating most of the German documents,[48] and in 1939, was put in charge of the bureau after Hudson fell ill.[52]

Personal life edit

Around 1922, Ingham sat for a portrait by William Roberts, the "English Cubist" artist. The finished painting was titled "Portrait of Miss Jane Tupper‑Carey" and was shown for the first time in November 1923 at New Chenil Galleries, Chelsea.[3] By 1926, she had been appointed sub-warden at Weetwood Hall, the then university hall of residence for women students.[53] In the same year, she was appointed the first honorary secretary of the Leeds branch of the British-Italian League. The League's aims were to found a chair in Italian at the University of Leeds and foster relations between the two countries.[54]

 
Weetwood Hall, the former University of Leeds hall of residence where Ingham was sub-warden

In the late 1920s, Ingham joined the Leeds University Amateurs, the university's amateur dramatics society, acting in several well-received roles, such as Sybil Bumont in The Watched Pot.[55] In December 1928, she took part in a fashion show of dresses through the ages at the Albion Hall, Leeds, in aid of St Faith's Homes. She wore a high-waisted, skin-tight coat of red cloth edged with fur, a long blue skirt trimmed with six rows of black velvet, and a feather toque. Her appearance was greeted with "shrieks of laughter" from the audience.[56]

They were ideally complementary, Jane as quick in thought and action as 'A. E.' was deliberate.

John Charles Burkill, Dictionary of National Biography (1981)

She married Albert Ingham on 6 July 1932 at St Edward's Church, Cambridge, in a private ceremony attended only by her parents, sister Edith, brother-in-law Michael Sadleir, who gave her away, and Redman King.[35] They had met after he had been appointed reader in mathematical analysis at the University of Leeds in 1926.[57][k] Their engagement announcement in May 1932 had come as surprise to their circle of friends in Leeds, as there had been no indication that they were romantically involved. However, they had been quietly engaged with plans to announce it after lectures ended.[4][58]

In July 1939, Albert was awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship to study analytic number theory at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in Princeton, New Jersey.[59][60] At that point, they had two sons, Michael Frank and Stephen Darell,[l] and the entire family sailed from Liverpool to New York on 1 September 1939.[61] However, just two days into their voyage, Britain declared war on Germany.[62] They were hesitant to bring their family back due to reports from Europe containing speculation of imminent total war.[63] Consequently, they made the decision to keep the family in Princeton, except for Albert, who had returned to England by 1942.[64] Alan Pars, godfather to their son Michael,[65] later recommended Albert for an Admiralty post in America knowing that Ingham and the children were still there.[64]

Later life and death edit

 
Punting on the River Cam in Cambridge.

The Inghams owned a punt, called Pete, moored in the River Cam, and it was used regularly during the summer for trips and picnics.[66]: 127  They also went on many trips abroad, including India,[66]: 15, 128  and walking holidays in the French Alps.[57]: 563  It was on such a holiday that Albert died of a heart attack on a high path near Haute-Savoie, south-eastern France.[67] After his death, she resisted offers for her husband's mathematical notes and papers, instead keeping the papers in a cupboard at the house.[66]: 46 

[She] was very wiry and fit ... [I have] an abiding memory of how fast and vigorously my grandmother would walk. She was always frustrated with my brother and I as we 'dawdled' fifty yards behind her. We just could not keep up with her furious pace.

— Dr Mark Ingham describing Jane Ingham, in Afterimages: Photographs as an External Autobiographical Memory System (2005), p. 46

Jane Ingham died at Cambridge on 10 September 1982,[5] and was cremated at the Cambridge City Crematorium, Huntingdon Road, Dry Drayton, on 20 September 1982.[68] Alan Pars, her friend and her husband's former colleague at Cambridge,[69] sent a wreath.[70]

Legacy edit

Discovery of protein in plant cell walls edit

Ingham and Priestley were the first to isolate cell walls from the middle lamella of the radicle and plumule meristems of Vicia faba.[71] They analysed the cell walls for protein, cellulose, and pectin. They noted that the cellulose walls of the radicle failed to react with iodine and sulphuric acid, or with chloriodide of zinc.[m] They showed that the cellulose in the wall of the radicle is masked by other substances,[73] particularly proteins and fatty acids.[74] In the plumule, cellulose is associated with greater quantities of pectin, but less protein and fatty acid, particularly when the adult parenchyma is grown in light.[74]

 
Cell wall and middle lamella (top)

They concluded that the meristematic cells had walls containing a protein‑pectin complex,[71]: 191  that is, these walls "... commencing as interfaces in a protein-containing medium may be regarded as composed at first mainly of protein."[75] Florence Mary Wood, a British postdoctoral researcher in biochemistry at Birkbeck College,[76] questioned their results and concluded that less than 0.001% of protein was found in the cell walls of the plants examined.[77]: 547, 569  Later researchers found protein in the cells but were unable to rule out the possibility of cytoplasmic contamination.[39] It is now known that the middle lamella consists of a pectic polysaccharide-rich material. However, the material properties and molecular organisation of the middle lamella are still not fully understood.[78]

 
Tunica‑Corpus model of the apical meristem (growing tip). The epidermal (L1) and sub-epidermal (L2) layers form the outer layers called the tunica. The inner L3 layer is called the corpus.

Differences in cell division and elongation in the epidermal layer of plants edit

Ingham found that in the arch of the hypocotyl from sunflower seeds, Helianthus annuus, there are considerably more cells on the outside than on the inside. Counting from the beginning to the end of the arch, the result was "3,299 cells on the upper side as against 1,531 on the lower." This result means that the convex side of the arch leads the concave side, not only in terms of cell extension, but also in cell division behaviour, such that a different division rate would cause the growth difference. Consequently, the concave and convex sides show profound physiological differences.[79] The observation that in the hypocotyl the cells on the convex side are considerably larger than those on the inside could be explained by the uneven transverse transport of the growth hormone auxin. Auxin has a strengthening effect on the elongation growth of the cells. In the case of nutation phenomena, it is possible that curvature only occurs in a narrowly limited section of the shoot.[80]: 2 

Harald Kaldewey, professor of botany at Saarland University in Saarbrücken, Germany,[81] measured the differences in the length of the sub-epidermal cells on the outer and inner periphery of the arch in the nutation curvature of the pedicels of snake's head fritillary, Fritillaria meleagris.[82] The result was expected if the curvature is based exclusively on differences in elongation growth. A difference in width between the sub-epidermal cells of the outer and inner periphery of the arch of curvature was not found. Sir Edward James Salisbury, the English botanist and ecologist,[83] found good agreement between the ratio of the epidermal cell lengths and the arch lengths of the nutation curvature of the epicotyl in seedlings of different woody plants. The findings of Ingham, Salisbury, and Kaldewey, do not necessarily contradict each other as the epidermis and sub-epidermal layer may well behave differently than cortical layers in terms of division and extension growth.[79]

Importance of cell orientation in cork edit

 
A tree that has been ring-barked

In Ingham's last study in the botany department at the University of Leeds, she ring-barked Laburnum and sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus) trees,[84] but left zigzag bridges of tissue with horizontal portions linking the bark above and below the cut.[41] At first, the lack of pressure within these bridges resulted in the formation of callus-like tissue, and the cambial initials, by repeated division, came to resemble ray cells. At a later stage, some of this mass of isodiametric (roughly spherical) cells became elongated horizontally in the direction of the bridge tissue.[85] Xylem and phloem formed in the horizontal portion of the bridge with its tracheary elements extended in a horizontal direction.[41] It has been postulated that calluses are formed because the cambium cells cannot function correctly under a change of orientation. For example, the altered direction of sap flow might affect the direction of cambial cell growth. Pressure, nutrient movements, and cambial basipetal auxin transport have also been suggested as causes.[84]

Publications edit

As author edit

  • Priestley, Joseph Hubert; Tupper-Carey, Rose Marie (7 November 1922). "Physiological Studies in Plant Anatomy IV. The Water Relations of the Plant Growing Point". New Phytologist. 21 (4). London: Wheldon & Wesley: 210–229. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.1922.tb07598.x. ISSN 0028-646X. JSTOR 2428025. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  • Tupper-Carey, Rose Marie; Priestley, Joseph Hubert (2 July 1923). "The composition of the cell- wall at the apical meristem of stem and root". Proceedings of the Royal Society. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character. 95 (665). London: Royal Society: 109–131. Bibcode:1923RSPSB..95..109T. doi:10.1098/rspb.1923.0026. ISSN 0950-1193. JSTOR 80874. Communicated by Frederick Blackman. Received 25 April 1923. Refereed by William Lawrence Balls in May 1923.[86]
  • Tupper-Carey, Rose Marie; Priestley, Joseph Hubert (23 July 1924). "The Cell Wall in the Radicle of Vicia faba and the Shape of the Meristematic Cells". New Phytologist. 23 (3). London: Wheldon & Wesley: 156–159. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.1924.tb06630.x. ISSN 0028-646X. JSTOR 2427781. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  • Tupper-Carey, Rose Marie (1928). Geotropism or Gravity and Growth (MSc). Leeds: University of Leeds. pp. 1–86. OCLC 1184171098. 30106005063069. Retrieved 26 December 2020. Ingham's MSc thesis.
  • Tupper-Carey, Rose Marie (1928). "The Development of the Hypocotyl of Helianthus annuus considered in connection with its Geotropic Curvatures". Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society. Science Section Part 2. 1925 to 1929 Parts 5 to 10. 1. Leeds: Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society: 361–368. ISSN 0024-0281. OCLC 848524378. Communicated by Joseph Hubert Priestley. Received 4 December 1928.
  • Tupper-Carey, Rose Marie (1930). "Observations on the anatomical changes in tissue bridges across rings through the phloem of trees". Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society. Science Section Part 2. December 1929 to May 1934. 2. Leeds: Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society: 86–94. ISSN 0024-0281. OCLC 848524378. Communicated by Joseph Hubert Priestley. Received 26 February 1930.

As experimental collaborator edit

  • Pearsall, William Harold; Ewing, James (1 March 1927). "The Absorption of Water by Plant Tissue in Relation to External Hydrogen-Ion Concentration" (PDF). The Journal of Experimental Biology. 4 (3). London: 245–257. doi:10.1242/jeb.4.3.245. ISSN 0022-0949. (PDF) from the original on 9 July 2020. Retrieved 21 September 2021. Ingham provided unpublished work on the swelling in buffer solutions of the air-dry, but living, embryos of broad bean seeds.
  • Priestley, Joseph Hubert (31 July 1926). "Light and Growth II. On the Anatomy of Etiolated Plants". New Phytologist. 25 (3). London: Wheldon & Wesley: 145–170. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.1926.tb06688.x. ISSN 0028-646X. JSTOR 2427687. Retrieved 3 January 2021.
  • Priestley, Joseph Hubert; Swingle, Charles Fletcher (December 1929). Vegetative Propagation from the Standpoint of Plant Anatomy. Technical Bulletin 151. Washington: United States Department of Agriculture. pp. 1–98. hdl:2027/uiug.30112019336897. OCLC 784311303.
  • Rhodes, Edgar; Woodman, Rowland Marcus (1925). "The Fatty Substances of the Plant Growing Point". Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society. 1925 to 1929. 1. Leeds: Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society: 27–36. ISSN 0024-0281. OCLC 848524378. Communicated by Professor Joseph Hubert Priestley. Received 21 October 1925.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ A number of sources call her by the name "Jane", including the title of her portrait by William Roberts,[3] engagement announcement,[4] death notice in The Times,[5] and her husband's Royal Society memoir,[6]: 272  and in most instances, note she was born Rose Marie.
  2. ^ Chapman was a son of banker David Barclay Chapman, who in 1875, purchased the advowson of St Andrew Donhead, and presented Horace Edward as the rector.[9]
  3. ^ a b On 3 November 1887, Albert Darell Carey changed his surname by deed poll to Tupper‑Carey.[12]
  4. ^ For a photograph of Albert Darell Tupper‑Carey taken at Lowestoft, see the photograph by Harry Jenkins at Lowestoft History.[13]
  5. ^ Mitchell was rector of Donhead St Andrew from 1932 to 1952.[16]
  6. ^ a b For more information on Humphrey Darell, and a photograph of him taken in British East Africa, see Europeans In East Africa.[22]
  7. ^ At the school, Ingham was commonly known as "Marie".[25]
  8. ^ Ingham's father was in the audience to see her performance, and after the play had finished, he addressed the audience in French.[25] Her mother was also fluent in French.[29]
  9. ^ Redman King was warden at the hall when Ingham was a post-graduate research student.[36]
  10. ^ Hudson ("Pen") was a remarkable linguist, who spoke most European languages fluently, including Russian and Ukrainian. His idea of a summer holiday was "to go to some distant place on a foreign freighter, practising the language, whatever it might be, with the crew."[48]
  11. ^ Albert, whose hobby was mountaineering, flew from a holiday in Central Europe for the interview in Leeds.[4]
  12. ^ In 1961, Michael was elected a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and later joined the staff of the University Observatory at Oxford.[6]: 273 
  13. ^ Cells that have cellulose in their walls are stained blue by chloriodide of zinc, or a solution of iodine followed by sulphuric acid.[72]: 77 

References edit

  1. ^ "Births". The Times. No. 35285. London. 18 August 1897. p. 1. ISSN 0140-0460. Gale CS17228050. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  2. ^ "Baptisms at Donhead St Andrew. 1858 to 1922" (1897) [Baptism register]. Parish Records of Donhead St Andrew, Series: Registers, ID: 1732/5, p. 77. Chippenham: Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b Cleall, David; Davenport, Bob (2019). "English Cubist. William Roberts. Portrait of Miss Jane Tupper-Carey". www.englishcubist.co.uk. Tenby: William Roberts Society. from the original on 19 October 2020. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Mather, Joyce (2 June 1932). "A Yorkshire Woman's Notes. A Later Development". Leeds Mercury. p. 8. OCLC 1016307518. Retrieved 26 December 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. ^ a b "Deaths". The Times. No. 61338. London. 15 September 1982. p. 26. ISSN 0140-0460. Gale CS436701999. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  6. ^ a b Burkill, John Charles (November 1968). "Albert Edward Ingham, 1900 to 1967". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 14. London: Royal Society: 271–286. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1968.0012. ISSN 0080-4606. JSTOR 769447.
  7. ^ a b c Hesilrige, Arthur George Maynard, ed. (1903). "The Baronetage. Fletcher". Debrett's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage and Companionage (190 ed.). London: Dean & Son. p. 232. OCLC 613690386. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  8. ^ "Donhead St. Andrew. Marriage of Miss Helen Mary Chapman and the Rev. A. D. Tupper Carey". Western Gazette. Yeovil. 19 September 1890. p. 8. OCLC 14708041. Retrieved 26 December 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  9. ^ a b Harding, Timothy David (2015). Joseph Henry Blackburne: A Chess Biography. Jefferson: McFarland & Company. p. 330. ISBN 978-0-7864-7473-8. OCLC 900306725. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  10. ^ a b "Obituary. Canon A. D. Carey". The Times. No. 49657. London. 22 September 1943. p. 8. ISSN 0140-0460. Gale CS135740726. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  11. ^ Frecker, Paul (2021). "Miss Helen Sandeman (1831–1900) 15 January 1861". paulfrecker.com. London: Paul Frecker Fine Photographs. from the original on 10 October 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  12. ^ Phillimore, William Phillimore Watts; Fry, Edward Alex (1905). An index to Changes of name: Under authority of act of Parliament or Royal license, and including irregular changes from I George III to 64 Victoria, 1760 to 1901. London: Phillimore & Co. p. 322. OCLC 60736898. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  13. ^ Jenkins, Harry (1910). "Reverend Albert Darell Tupper-Carey, Rector of St Margaret's, Lowestoft, 1901 to 1910". www.lowestofthistory.com. Arthur Taylor. Lowestoft: Lowestoft History. from the original on 12 October 2021. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  14. ^ Lockhart, John Gilbert (1949). "6. Oxford". Cosmo Gordon Lang. London: Hodder & Stoughton. p. 35. OCLC 1244583479. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  15. ^ "Miss Tupper-Carey and Mr. E. J. Mitchell". The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. Leeds. 23 April 1927. p. 16. OCLC 18793101. Retrieved 3 October 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  16. ^ Ball, Duncan; Ball, Mandy (9 July 2020). "Rectors of The Church of St. Andrew, Donhead St. Andrew, Wiltshire". www.oodwooc.co.uk. Swindon: D & M Ball. from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
  17. ^ "Noted Author's Home in the Cotswolds". Tatler. London. 19 April 1944. p. 81. ISSN 0263-7162. Retrieved 26 December 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  18. ^ "The Wedding of Mr. M. T. Sadler and Miss Edith Tupper Carey". The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. Leeds. 4 June 1914. p. 8. ISSN 0963-1496. OCLC 18793101. Retrieved 26 December 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  19. ^ "North Country Notes". Newcastle Journal. 4 October 1916. p. 4. ISSN 0307-3645. OCLC 926117601. Retrieved 3 October 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  20. ^ "Busy Cupid: Weddings and Engagements". Tatler. London. 22 March 1922. p. 48. ISSN 0263-7162. Retrieved 3 October 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  21. ^ "Imperial Service Order Companions". The London Gazette. No. 41727. 5 June 1959. p. 3724. OCLC 1013393168. (PDF) from the original on 3 October 2021. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
  22. ^ Ayre, Peter J.; Ayre, Carolyn O. (2021). "Tupper‑Carey, Humphrey Darell (Capt.)". www.europeansineastafrica.co.uk. Wellington: Europeans In East Africa. from the original on 18 May 2021. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  23. ^ "Wedding at St Mary's. Tupper Carey-Dundas". The Scotsman. Edinburgh. 8 July 1927. p. 8. ISSN 0307-5850. OCLC 624981792. Retrieved 3 October 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  24. ^ "It's a Long Way to Tipperary. An Irish Story of the Great War. A to Z". longwaytotipperary.ul.ie. Limerick: Glucksman Library, University of Limerick. 2021. from the original on 14 April 2021. Retrieved 13 October 2021. University of Limerick's World War I Online Exhibition.
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  26. ^ "Claire House School for Girls, North Parade, Lowestoft". Eastern Daily Press. Norwich. 7 January 1910. p. 2. ISSN 0307-0956. OCLC 1063250029. Retrieved 12 October 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
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  28. ^ "The Teaching of French". Boston Guardian. 7 March 1908. p. 5. OCLC 556439943. Retrieved 26 December 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  29. ^ "Mrs. A. D. Tupper-Carey". The Times. No. 48051. London. 20 July 1938. p. 16. ISSN 0140-0460. Gale CS270217972. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  30. ^ "Wild Flower Show at Lowestoft". Lowestoft Journal. 4 July 1908. p. 5. OCLC 900349662. Retrieved 26 December 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
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  32. ^ Shteir, Ann B. (1997). "Gender and 'Modern' Botany in Victorian England". Osiris. Women, Gender, and Science: New Directions. 12. Chicago: History of Science Society: 29–38. doi:10.1086/649265. ISSN 0369-7827. JSTOR 301897. PMID 11619778. S2CID 42561484.
  33. ^ "Botany" (PDF). Annual Report. 1919 to 1920. 16. Leeds: University of Leeds: 73. 1920. OCLC 499388156. (PDF) from the original on 9 September 2017. Retrieved 27 May 2021. Page 83 in the PDF.
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Further reading edit

  • Blight, Denis; Ibbotson, Ruth (2011). Hemming, David (ed.). CABI: a century of scientific endeavour (PDF). CABI International. Malta: Gutenberg Press. ISBN 978-1-84593-873-4. OCLC 1040280202. (PDF) from the original on 29 July 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  • Ede, Ronald, ed. (1930). "Members of Staff at the School of Agriculture, Downing Street, Cambridge". Cambridge University Agricultural Society Magazine. Vol. 3. Cambridge University Agricultural Society. Cambridge: W. Heffer & Sons. p. 74. OCLC 43472660. Penrhyn Stanley Hudson and Ingham are photographed seated together, on the left, at the front.
  • Lang, Cosmo Gordon (1945). Tupper (Canon A. D. Tupper-Carey): A Memoir of a Very Human Parish Priest. London: Constable & Co. OCLC 931231033. Archbishop Cosmo Lang's biography of Ingham's father.
  • Priestley, Joseph Hubert; Scott, Lorna Iris; Harrison, Edith (1964) [First published in 1938]. An Introduction to Botany, with special reference to the structure of the flowering plant. Illustrated by Marjorie Edith Malins and Lorna Iris Scott. London: Longmans Green & Co. OCLC 1150024139. Retrieved 26 December 2020.

External links edit

  • Portrait of Ingham by William Roberts, circa 1922, "An English Cubist".
  • Afterimages: Photographs as an External Autobiographical Memory System and a Contemporary Art Practice, University of the Arts London Research Online. Photographs of Jane Ingham, taken by Albert Ingham, for Mark Ingham's PhD thesis at Goldsmiths, University of London.
  • Works by Ingham at WorldCat.
  • Lorna Scott and her Mortar Board by Margaret Stewart, for Egham Museum, on botanist Lorna Iris Scott, Joseph Hubert Priestley's collaborator after Ingham left for Cambridge.

jane, ingham, rose, marie, jane, ingham, née, tupper, carey, ɛər, august, 1897, september, 1982, english, botanist, scientific, translator, appointed, research, assistant, joseph, hubert, priestley, botany, department, university, leeds, together, they, were, . Rose Marie Jane Ingham nee Tupper Carey ˌ t ˈ ʌ p e ˈ k ɛer i 15 August 1897 10 September 1982 was an English botanist and scientific translator She was appointed research assistant to Joseph Hubert Priestley in the Botany Department at the University of Leeds and together they were the first to separate cell walls from the root tip of broad beans They analysed these cell walls and concluded that they contained protein She carried out experiments on the cork layer of trees to study how cells function under a change of orientation and found profound differences in cell division and elongation in the epidermal layer of plants Jane InghamIngham left with Albert Ingham right in 1966BornRose Marie Tupper Carey 1897 08 15 15 August 1897Leeds EnglandDied10 September 1982 1982 09 10 aged 85 Cambridge EnglandAlma materUniversity of Leeds 1928 1928 MSc SpouseAlbert Ingham m 1932 died 1967 wbr Children2RelativesMichael Sadleir brother in law Scientific careerFieldsApical meristems Gravitropism Plant genetics Plant physiology Secondary growthInstitutionsCitadel Hill Laboratory Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom Plymouth Botany Department University of Leeds Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics CambridgeThesisGeotropism or Gravity and Growth 1928 Academic advisorsJoseph Hubert PriestleyAt Leeds Ingham was appointed sub warden of Weetwood Hall and honorary secretary of the British Italian League In 1930 she joined the Imperial Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics at the School of Agriculture in Cambridge England as a scientific officer and translator The bureau was responsible for publishing a series of abstract journals on various aspects of crop breeding and genetics In 1932 she married Albert Ingham then a fellow and director of studies at King s College Cambridge Ingham spent the war years in Princeton New Jersey with her two sons not wishing to return to England after travelling to the US just before the outbreak of World War II In the last years of her life she and her husband travelled extensively and in 1982 she died at Cambridge Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Career 4 Personal life 5 Later life and death 6 Legacy 6 1 Discovery of protein in plant cell walls 6 2 Differences in cell division and elongation in the epidermal layer of plants 6 3 Importance of cell orientation in cork 7 Publications 7 1 As author 7 2 As experimental collaborator 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editIngham was born on 1897 08 15 15 August 1897 at Cromer House Cromer Terrace Leeds 1 and baptised an Anglican in the Church of England at Donhead St Andrew Wiltshire on 14 September 1897 2 a She was the youngest daughter of Helen Mary Tupper Carey nee Chapman and Albert Darell 7 They had married at Donhead St Andrew on 16 May 1890 8 Helen Mary was the daughter of Reverend Horace Edward Chapman a former rector of Donhead St Andrew 9 and Adelaide Maria nee Fletcher 7 b nbsp The Reverend Tupper Carey Ingham s paternal grandfatherIngham s father was the son of the Reverend Tupper Carey and Helen Jane nee Sandeman 10 11 c He was educated at Eton and Christ Church Oxford and trained at Cuddesdon Theological College He was curate of Leeds before being appointed rector of St Margaret s Church Lowestoft d In 1910 he was appointed canon residentiary of York and later became vicar of Huddersfield From 1938 he was Chaplain to the King and at Monte Carlo 10 Despite his given name being Albert Darell he was known as Tupper to his friends and was described by John Gilbert Lockhart in Cosmo Gordon Lang s biography as follows 14 He could get at once on the easiest terms with every sort of person from the drunks of Leeds and Lowestoft to the millionaires of Monte Carlo Mercurial overflowing with high spirits irrepressible he was everybody s friend and had a smile and a word for every passer by in the streets of his parish Ingham had four siblings 7 Her eldest sister Jacqueline Marjorie married the Reverend Edgar James Mitchell and after their marriage they undertook missionary work in the Far East 15 e Ingham s elder sister Edith known as Betty to her friends and family 17 married the author Michael Sadleir Sadleir was the only son of Sir Michael Ernest Sadler a former vice chancellor of the University of Leeds 18 Her elder brother Humphrey Darell was a tea planter in British East Africa before the outbreak of World War I He was commissioned a lieutenant in the King s African Rifles but was severely wounded in the right thigh during the East African campaign 19 He married Marjorie Gertrude Drakes nee Bredin the widow of Charles Henry Drakes 20 In later life he worked for the Colonial Service in Nigeria and was appointed a Companion of the Imperial Service Order in the Queen s 1959 Birthday Honours 21 f Her younger brother Peter Charles Sandeman was a captain in the Royal Navy He married Anne Ethel Violet Montagu Dundas the eldest daughter of Robert Neville Dundas and Cecil Mary nee Lancaster 23 24 Tupper Carey family treeRev Tupper CareyHelen Jane SandemanRev Horace Edward ChapmanAdelaide Maria FletcherCanon Albert Darell Tupper Carey ne Carey c Helen Mary ChapmanJacqueline Marjorie Tupper CareyRev Edgar James MitchellEdith Betty Tupper CareyMichael SadleirHumphrey Darell Tupper Carey f Marjorie Gertrude Drakes nee Bredin Rose Marie Jane Tupper CareyAlbert Edward InghamPeter Charles Sandeman Tupper CareyAnne Ethel Violet Montagu DundasMichael Frank InghamStephen Darell InghamEducation edit nbsp Botany House south side at the University of Leeds Built in 1825 it is a Grade II listed building Ingham was educated at Claire House School 25 an all girl school in North Parade Lowestoft which specialised in the teaching of French 26 g At the age of ten she gained a prize in preliminary French examinations that were organised by the National Society of French Professors in England She competed against candidates from the best girls schools in England 27 the written tests consisting of translation and composition prose and poetry essay and questions on 17th to 19th century French literature 28 In the same year she performed as Philaminte in the school s production of three scenes from Moliere s Les Femmes Savantes 25 h Ingham showed an early interest in botany In her youth she would collect wildflowers to display at local parish shows 30 Her grandmother Helen Jane Carey was a keen amateur botanist and specimen collector 31 a popular and fashionable pastime in Victorian England 32 29 In 1916 Ingham entered the University of Leeds to study botany and 4 within three years was a research student in the botany department at Leeds studying water absorption at the growing point of plant roots 33 In 1919 Ingham studied general zoology at the Citadel Hill Laboratory of the Marine Biological Association Plymouth 34 Annie Redman King her friend from Weetwood Hall in Leeds 35 was a Ray Lankester investigator at the laboratory 34 i Career editSee Legacy and Publications for details of Ingham s academic papers nbsp The Imperial Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics Plant Breeding Institute in the School of Agriculture Downing Street Cambridge It now houses the Department of Plant Sciences University of Cambridge In January 1922 Ingham was appointed a research assistant in the botany department 37 where Joseph Hubert Priestley was Dean of the Faculty of Science 38 She and Priestley were the first to isolate cell walls from meristematic tissues in Vicia faba broad beans They analysed the walls for protein cellulose and pectin and concluded that the walls contained protein 39 They also studied when cellulose is first produced by plants 37 the differences in shoot and root development 40 and the role of the cork cambium 41 These plant physiology studies were followed by two New Phytologist papers 42 She later provided unpublished results from these experiments on broad bean embryos to the British botanist William Pearsall 43 Described as a brilliant scholar 4 she was awarded a MSc degree on 28 June 1928 for her research work and thesis titled Geotropism or Gravity and Growth 44 In February 1930 Ingham joined the Imperial Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics at the Plant Breeding Institute Cambridge 45 140 as a translator and scientific officer 46 Sir Rowland Biffen was the first director of the Cambridge bureau and her supervisor Penrhyn Stanley Hudson 47 was deputy director 45 140 j She was fluent in French Italian German and Swedish 4 and as a whole the bureau had been capable of dealing with Spanish Dutch and Russian 45 139 Abstracts were written on various aspects of plant breeding and genetics with some of the foreign language papers requiring more complete translations These abstracts were published in a quarterly journal called Plant Breeding Abstracts 49 In 1931 she attended the eighth conference of the Association of Special Libraries and Information Bureaux ASLIB at Oxford 50 where progress on ASLIB s newly formed panel of expert translators was discussed 51 After her marriage she worked from home translating most of the German documents 48 and in 1939 was put in charge of the bureau after Hudson fell ill 52 Personal life editAround 1922 Ingham sat for a portrait by William Roberts the English Cubist artist The finished painting was titled Portrait of Miss Jane Tupper Carey and was shown for the first time in November 1923 at New Chenil Galleries Chelsea 3 By 1926 she had been appointed sub warden at Weetwood Hall the then university hall of residence for women students 53 In the same year she was appointed the first honorary secretary of the Leeds branch of the British Italian League The League s aims were to found a chair in Italian at the University of Leeds and foster relations between the two countries 54 nbsp Weetwood Hall the former University of Leeds hall of residence where Ingham was sub wardenIn the late 1920s Ingham joined the Leeds University Amateurs the university s amateur dramatics society acting in several well received roles such as Sybil Bumont in The Watched Pot 55 In December 1928 she took part in a fashion show of dresses through the ages at the Albion Hall Leeds in aid of St Faith s Homes She wore a high waisted skin tight coat of red cloth edged with fur a long blue skirt trimmed with six rows of black velvet and a feather toque Her appearance was greeted with shrieks of laughter from the audience 56 They were ideally complementary Jane as quick in thought and action as A E was deliberate John Charles Burkill Dictionary of National Biography 1981 She married Albert Ingham on 6 July 1932 at St Edward s Church Cambridge in a private ceremony attended only by her parents sister Edith brother in law Michael Sadleir who gave her away and Redman King 35 They had met after he had been appointed reader in mathematical analysis at the University of Leeds in 1926 57 k Their engagement announcement in May 1932 had come as surprise to their circle of friends in Leeds as there had been no indication that they were romantically involved However they had been quietly engaged with plans to announce it after lectures ended 4 58 In July 1939 Albert was awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship to study analytic number theory at the Institute for Advanced Study IAS in Princeton New Jersey 59 60 At that point they had two sons Michael Frank and Stephen Darell l and the entire family sailed from Liverpool to New York on 1 September 1939 61 However just two days into their voyage Britain declared war on Germany 62 They were hesitant to bring their family back due to reports from Europe containing speculation of imminent total war 63 Consequently they made the decision to keep the family in Princeton except for Albert who had returned to England by 1942 64 Alan Pars godfather to their son Michael 65 later recommended Albert for an Admiralty post in America knowing that Ingham and the children were still there 64 Later life and death edit nbsp Punting on the River Cam in Cambridge The Inghams owned a punt called Pete moored in the River Cam and it was used regularly during the summer for trips and picnics 66 127 They also went on many trips abroad including India 66 15 128 and walking holidays in the French Alps 57 563 It was on such a holiday that Albert died of a heart attack on a high path near Haute Savoie south eastern France 67 After his death she resisted offers for her husband s mathematical notes and papers instead keeping the papers in a cupboard at the house 66 46 She was very wiry and fit I have an abiding memory of how fast and vigorously my grandmother would walk She was always frustrated with my brother and I as we dawdled fifty yards behind her We just could not keep up with her furious pace Dr Mark Ingham describing Jane Ingham in Afterimages Photographs as an External Autobiographical Memory System 2005 p 46 Jane Ingham died at Cambridge on 10 September 1982 5 and was cremated at the Cambridge City Crematorium Huntingdon Road Dry Drayton on 20 September 1982 68 Alan Pars her friend and her husband s former colleague at Cambridge 69 sent a wreath 70 Legacy editDiscovery of protein in plant cell walls edit Ingham and Priestley were the first to isolate cell walls from the middle lamella of the radicle and plumule meristems of Vicia faba 71 They analysed the cell walls for protein cellulose and pectin They noted that the cellulose walls of the radicle failed to react with iodine and sulphuric acid or with chloriodide of zinc m They showed that the cellulose in the wall of the radicle is masked by other substances 73 particularly proteins and fatty acids 74 In the plumule cellulose is associated with greater quantities of pectin but less protein and fatty acid particularly when the adult parenchyma is grown in light 74 nbsp Cell wall and middle lamella top They concluded that the meristematic cells had walls containing a protein pectin complex 71 191 that is these walls commencing as interfaces in a protein containing medium may be regarded as composed at first mainly of protein 75 Florence Mary Wood a British postdoctoral researcher in biochemistry at Birkbeck College 76 questioned their results and concluded that less than 0 001 of protein was found in the cell walls of the plants examined 77 547 569 Later researchers found protein in the cells but were unable to rule out the possibility of cytoplasmic contamination 39 It is now known that the middle lamella consists of a pectic polysaccharide rich material However the material properties and molecular organisation of the middle lamella are still not fully understood 78 nbsp Tunica Corpus model of the apical meristem growing tip The epidermal L1 and sub epidermal L2 layers form the outer layers called the tunica The inner L3 layer is called the corpus Differences in cell division and elongation in the epidermal layer of plants edit Ingham found that in the arch of the hypocotyl from sunflower seeds Helianthus annuus there are considerably more cells on the outside than on the inside Counting from the beginning to the end of the arch the result was 3 299 cells on the upper side as against 1 531 on the lower This result means that the convex side of the arch leads the concave side not only in terms of cell extension but also in cell division behaviour such that a different division rate would cause the growth difference Consequently the concave and convex sides show profound physiological differences 79 The observation that in the hypocotyl the cells on the convex side are considerably larger than those on the inside could be explained by the uneven transverse transport of the growth hormone auxin Auxin has a strengthening effect on the elongation growth of the cells In the case of nutation phenomena it is possible that curvature only occurs in a narrowly limited section of the shoot 80 2 Harald Kaldewey professor of botany at Saarland University in Saarbrucken Germany 81 measured the differences in the length of the sub epidermal cells on the outer and inner periphery of the arch in the nutation curvature of the pedicels of snake s head fritillary Fritillaria meleagris 82 The result was expected if the curvature is based exclusively on differences in elongation growth A difference in width between the sub epidermal cells of the outer and inner periphery of the arch of curvature was not found Sir Edward James Salisbury the English botanist and ecologist 83 found good agreement between the ratio of the epidermal cell lengths and the arch lengths of the nutation curvature of the epicotyl in seedlings of different woody plants The findings of Ingham Salisbury and Kaldewey do not necessarily contradict each other as the epidermis and sub epidermal layer may well behave differently than cortical layers in terms of division and extension growth 79 Importance of cell orientation in cork edit nbsp A tree that has been ring barkedIn Ingham s last study in the botany department at the University of Leeds she ring barked Laburnum and sycamore Acer pseudoplatanus trees 84 but left zigzag bridges of tissue with horizontal portions linking the bark above and below the cut 41 At first the lack of pressure within these bridges resulted in the formation of callus like tissue and the cambial initials by repeated division came to resemble ray cells At a later stage some of this mass of isodiametric roughly spherical cells became elongated horizontally in the direction of the bridge tissue 85 Xylem and phloem formed in the horizontal portion of the bridge with its tracheary elements extended in a horizontal direction 41 It has been postulated that calluses are formed because the cambium cells cannot function correctly under a change of orientation For example the altered direction of sap flow might affect the direction of cambial cell growth Pressure nutrient movements and cambial basipetal auxin transport have also been suggested as causes 84 Publications editAs author edit Priestley Joseph Hubert Tupper Carey Rose Marie 7 November 1922 Physiological Studies in Plant Anatomy IV The Water Relations of the Plant Growing Point New Phytologist 21 4 London Wheldon amp Wesley 210 229 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 1922 tb07598 x ISSN 0028 646X JSTOR 2428025 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Tupper Carey Rose Marie Priestley Joseph Hubert 2 July 1923 The composition of the cell wall at the apical meristem of stem and root Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B Containing Papers of a Biological Character 95 665 London Royal Society 109 131 Bibcode 1923RSPSB 95 109T doi 10 1098 rspb 1923 0026 ISSN 0950 1193 JSTOR 80874 Communicated by Frederick Blackman Received 25 April 1923 Refereed by William Lawrence Balls in May 1923 86 Tupper Carey Rose Marie Priestley Joseph Hubert 23 July 1924 The Cell Wall in the Radicle of Vicia faba and the Shape of the Meristematic Cells New Phytologist 23 3 London Wheldon amp Wesley 156 159 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 1924 tb06630 x ISSN 0028 646X JSTOR 2427781 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Tupper Carey Rose Marie 1928 Geotropism or Gravity and Growth MSc Leeds University of Leeds pp 1 86 OCLC 1184171098 30106005063069 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Ingham s MSc thesis Tupper Carey Rose Marie 1928 The Development of the Hypocotyl of Helianthus annuus considered in connection with its Geotropic Curvatures Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society Science Section Part 2 1925 to 1929 Parts 5 to 10 1 Leeds Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society 361 368 ISSN 0024 0281 OCLC 848524378 Communicated by Joseph Hubert Priestley Received 4 December 1928 Tupper Carey Rose Marie 1930 Observations on the anatomical changes in tissue bridges across rings through the phloem of trees Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society Science Section Part 2 December 1929 to May 1934 2 Leeds Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society 86 94 ISSN 0024 0281 OCLC 848524378 Communicated by Joseph Hubert Priestley Received 26 February 1930 As experimental collaborator edit Pearsall William Harold Ewing James 1 March 1927 The Absorption of Water by Plant Tissue in Relation to External Hydrogen Ion Concentration PDF The Journal of Experimental Biology 4 3 London 245 257 doi 10 1242 jeb 4 3 245 ISSN 0022 0949 Archived PDF from the original on 9 July 2020 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Ingham provided unpublished work on the swelling in buffer solutions of the air dry but living embryos of broad bean seeds Priestley Joseph Hubert 31 July 1926 Light and Growth II On the Anatomy of Etiolated Plants New Phytologist 25 3 London Wheldon amp Wesley 145 170 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 1926 tb06688 x ISSN 0028 646X JSTOR 2427687 Retrieved 3 January 2021 Priestley Joseph Hubert Swingle Charles Fletcher December 1929 Vegetative Propagation from the Standpoint of Plant Anatomy Technical Bulletin 151 Washington United States Department of Agriculture pp 1 98 hdl 2027 uiug 30112019336897 OCLC 784311303 Rhodes Edgar Woodman Rowland Marcus 1925 The Fatty Substances of the Plant Growing Point Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society 1925 to 1929 1 Leeds Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society 27 36 ISSN 0024 0281 OCLC 848524378 Communicated by Professor Joseph Hubert Priestley Received 21 October 1925 See also editAlbert InghamLyn IrvineIrene MantonMeristemMichael SadleirPlant developmentDepartment of Plant Sciences University of CambridgeUniversity of LeedsFootnotes edit A number of sources call her by the name Jane including the title of her portrait by William Roberts 3 engagement announcement 4 death notice in The Times 5 and her husband s Royal Society memoir 6 272 and in most instances note she was born Rose Marie Chapman was a son of banker David Barclay Chapman who in 1875 purchased the advowson of St Andrew Donhead and presented Horace Edward as the rector 9 a b On 3 November 1887 Albert Darell Carey changed his surname by deed poll to Tupper Carey 12 For a photograph of Albert Darell Tupper Carey taken at Lowestoft see the photograph by Harry Jenkins at Lowestoft History 13 Mitchell was rector of Donhead St Andrew from 1932 to 1952 16 a b For more information on Humphrey Darell and a photograph of him taken in British East Africa see Europeans In East Africa 22 At the school Ingham was commonly known as Marie 25 Ingham s father was in the audience to see her performance and after the play had finished he addressed the audience in French 25 Her mother was also fluent in French 29 Redman King was warden at the hall when Ingham was a post graduate research student 36 Hudson Pen was a remarkable linguist who spoke most European languages fluently including Russian and Ukrainian His idea of a summer holiday was to go to some distant place on a foreign freighter practising the language whatever it might be with the crew 48 Albert whose hobby was mountaineering flew from a holiday in Central Europe for the interview in Leeds 4 In 1961 Michael was elected a Fellow of King s College Cambridge and later joined the staff of the University Observatory at Oxford 6 273 Cells that have cellulose in their walls are stained blue by chloriodide of zinc or a solution of iodine followed by sulphuric acid 72 77 References edit Births The Times No 35285 London 18 August 1897 p 1 ISSN 0140 0460 Gale CS17228050 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Baptisms at Donhead St Andrew 1858 to 1922 1897 Baptism register Parish Records of Donhead St Andrew Series Registers ID 1732 5 p 77 Chippenham Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre Retrieved 27 May 2021 a b Cleall David Davenport Bob 2019 English Cubist William Roberts Portrait of Miss Jane Tupper Carey www englishcubist co uk Tenby William Roberts Society Archived from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 27 December 2020 a b c d e f Mather Joyce 2 June 1932 A Yorkshire Woman s Notes A Later Development Leeds Mercury p 8 OCLC 1016307518 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive a b Deaths The Times No 61338 London 15 September 1982 p 26 ISSN 0140 0460 Gale CS436701999 Retrieved 4 June 2021 a b Burkill John Charles November 1968 Albert Edward Ingham 1900 to 1967 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 14 London Royal Society 271 286 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1968 0012 ISSN 0080 4606 JSTOR 769447 a b c Hesilrige Arthur George Maynard ed 1903 The Baronetage Fletcher Debrett s Peerage Baronetage Knightage and Companionage 190 ed London Dean amp Son p 232 OCLC 613690386 Retrieved 10 October 2021 Donhead St Andrew Marriage of Miss Helen Mary Chapman and the Rev A D Tupper Carey Western Gazette Yeovil 19 September 1890 p 8 OCLC 14708041 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive a b Harding Timothy David 2015 Joseph Henry Blackburne A Chess Biography Jefferson McFarland amp Company p 330 ISBN 978 0 7864 7473 8 OCLC 900306725 Retrieved 26 December 2020 a b Obituary Canon A D Carey The Times No 49657 London 22 September 1943 p 8 ISSN 0140 0460 Gale CS135740726 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Frecker Paul 2021 Miss Helen Sandeman 1831 1900 15 January 1861 paulfrecker com London Paul Frecker Fine Photographs Archived from the original on 10 October 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 Phillimore William Phillimore Watts Fry Edward Alex 1905 An index to Changes of name Under authority of act of Parliament or Royal license and including irregular changes from I George III to 64 Victoria 1760 to 1901 London Phillimore amp Co p 322 OCLC 60736898 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Jenkins Harry 1910 Reverend Albert Darell Tupper Carey Rector of St Margaret s Lowestoft 1901 to 1910 www lowestofthistory com Arthur Taylor Lowestoft Lowestoft History Archived from the original on 12 October 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2021 Lockhart John Gilbert 1949 6 Oxford Cosmo Gordon Lang London Hodder amp Stoughton p 35 OCLC 1244583479 Retrieved 4 October 2021 Miss Tupper Carey and Mr E J Mitchell The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer Leeds 23 April 1927 p 16 OCLC 18793101 Retrieved 3 October 2021 via British Newspaper Archive Ball Duncan Ball Mandy 9 July 2020 Rectors of The Church of St Andrew Donhead St Andrew Wiltshire www oodwooc co uk Swindon D amp M Ball Archived from the original on 14 August 2020 Retrieved 3 October 2021 Noted Author s Home in the Cotswolds Tatler London 19 April 1944 p 81 ISSN 0263 7162 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive The Wedding of Mr M T Sadler and Miss Edith Tupper Carey The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer Leeds 4 June 1914 p 8 ISSN 0963 1496 OCLC 18793101 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive North Country Notes Newcastle Journal 4 October 1916 p 4 ISSN 0307 3645 OCLC 926117601 Retrieved 3 October 2021 via British Newspaper Archive Busy Cupid Weddings and Engagements Tatler London 22 March 1922 p 48 ISSN 0263 7162 Retrieved 3 October 2021 via British Newspaper Archive Imperial Service Order Companions The London Gazette No 41727 5 June 1959 p 3724 OCLC 1013393168 Archived PDF from the original on 3 October 2021 Retrieved 3 October 2021 Ayre Peter J Ayre Carolyn O 2021 Tupper Carey Humphrey Darell Capt www europeansineastafrica co uk Wellington Europeans In East Africa Archived from the original on 18 May 2021 Retrieved 4 October 2021 Wedding at St Mary s Tupper Carey Dundas The Scotsman Edinburgh 8 July 1927 p 8 ISSN 0307 5850 OCLC 624981792 Retrieved 3 October 2021 via British Newspaper Archive It s a Long Way to Tipperary An Irish Story of the Great War A to Z longwaytotipperary ul ie Limerick Glucksman Library University of Limerick 2021 Archived from the original on 14 April 2021 Retrieved 13 October 2021 University of Limerick s World War I Online Exhibition a b c d Claire House School Lowestoft Journal 5 December 1908 p 5 OCLC 900349662 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Claire House School for Girls North Parade Lowestoft Eastern Daily Press Norwich 7 January 1910 p 2 ISSN 0307 0956 OCLC 1063250029 Retrieved 12 October 2021 via British Newspaper Archive Scholastic Successes Lowestoft Journal 25 July 1908 p 5 OCLC 900349662 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive The Teaching of French Boston Guardian 7 March 1908 p 5 OCLC 556439943 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Mrs A D Tupper Carey The Times No 48051 London 20 July 1938 p 16 ISSN 0140 0460 Gale CS270217972 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Wild Flower Show at Lowestoft Lowestoft Journal 4 July 1908 p 5 OCLC 900349662 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive An Important Discovery Helen J Tupper Carey Ebbesborne Wake Salisbury Leeds Mercury 13 August 1883 p 8 OCLC 1016307518 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Shteir Ann B 1997 Gender and Modern Botany in Victorian England Osiris Women Gender and Science New Directions 12 Chicago History of Science Society 29 38 doi 10 1086 649265 ISSN 0369 7827 JSTOR 301897 PMID 11619778 S2CID 42561484 Botany PDF Annual Report 1919 to 1920 16 Leeds University of Leeds 73 1920 OCLC 499388156 Archived PDF from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Page 83 in the PDF a b Report of the Council Occupation of Tables PDF Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom New series 12 2 Plymouth Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 369 July 1920 ISSN 0025 3154 OCLC 1167043554 Archived PDF from the original on 15 January 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2021 a b Mather Joyce 3 August 1932 The Tupper Carey Wedding Leeds Mercury p 6 OCLC 1016307518 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive King Annie Redman King Annie Redman 1911 to 1948 1932 Boxes Personalia ID LUA PER 045 Leeds University of Leeds Retrieved 27 May 2021 a b Departmental Reports Botany PDF Annual Report 1921 to 1922 18 Leeds University of Leeds 94 95 1922 OCLC 499388156 Archived PDF from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Pages 426 to 427 in the PDF The Officers of the University PDF Annual Report 1921 to 1922 18 Leeds University of Leeds 5 1922 OCLC 499388156 Archived PDF from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Page 337 in the PDF a b Lamport Derek Thomas Anthony 1965 The Protein Component of Primary Cell Walls I Introduction B Historical Perspective 1888 to 1959 In Preston Reginald Dawson ed Advances in Botanical Research Vol 2 London Academic Press p 152 OCLC 879904706 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Tupper Carey amp Priestley 1923 p 129 a b c Societies and Academies Leeds Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society Nature 125 3155 London Nature Portfolio 622 19 April 1930 Bibcode 1930Natur 125 621 doi 10 1038 125621a0 ISSN 1476 4687 Retrieved 27 January 2020 Priestley amp Tupper Carey 1922 Tupper Carey amp Priestley 1924 Pearsall amp Ewing 1927 p 252 University News Leeds June 28 The Times No 44932 London 29 June 1928 p 18 ISSN 0140 0460 Gale CS302587613 Retrieved 4 June 2021 a b c Hudson Penrhyn Stanley May 1931 Imperial Bureau of Plant Genetics for crops other than Herbage Plant Breeding Institute School of Agriculture Downing Street Cambridge England The Journal of the Ministry of Agriculture 38 2 Ministry of Agriculture Cambridge HMSO 138 142 OCLC 860139833 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Diels Ludwig Merrill Elmer Drew Chipp Thomas Ford et al eds 1931 International Address Book of Botanists Bentham Trustees London Bailliere Tindall amp Cox p 204 OCLC 877383380 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Queen s Birthday Honours 1957 Officers of the Order of the British Empire OBE Civil Division The London Gazette No 41089 4 June 1957 p 3380 OCLC 1013393168 Archived PDF from the original on 21 July 2019 Retrieved 12 October 2021 a b Ellerton Sydney 2020 Chapter 9 Clouds Loom Over England PDF Sugar Beet and World Travel A Short Autobiography of Dr Sydney Ellerton 1914 to 2011 Booklet Kew Shon Ellerton p 70 Archived PDF from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Willis John Christopher ed September 1931 485 Plant Breeding Abstracts The Empire Cotton Growing Review 8 3 Empire Cotton Growing Corporation London P S King amp Son 264 ISSN 0010 9819 OCLC 70734842 Retrieved 12 October 2021 List of Visitors Report of Proceedings 8th Conference 8 London Association of Special Libraries and Information Bureaux 9 September 1931 OCLC 706048068 A Key To Information Value of Expert Translators The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer Leeds 26 September 1931 p 8 OCLC 18793101 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Imperial Agricultural Bureaux Executive Council 1940 C The Bureaux The Personnel Annual Report 1938 to 1939 10 London HMSO 6 OCLC 950895993 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Halls of Residence for Women PDF Annual Report 1925 to 1926 22 Leeds University of Leeds 57 1926 OCLC 499388156 Archived PDF from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Page 226 in the PDF Letter to the Editor The British Italian League in Leeds Leeds Mercury 20 November 1926 p 4 OCLC 1016307518 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Leeds University Amateurs The Stage London 5 December 1929 p 26 ISSN 0038 9099 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Mather Joyce 7 December 1928 Fashions Through the Ages A Leeds Parade Nothing New in Dresses To day Leeds Mercury p 3 OCLC 1016307518 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive a b Burkill John Charles 1981 Ingham Albert Edward In Williams Edgar Trevor Nicholls Christine Stephanie eds Dictionary of National Biography 1961 to 1970 Vol 8 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 562 563 ISBN 978 0198652076 OCLC 1038051360 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Forthcoming Marriages The Times No 46146 London 30 May 1932 p 15 ISSN 0140 0460 Gale CS252651198 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Leverhulme Fellowships The Scotsman Edinburgh 13 July 1939 p 6 ISSN 0307 5850 OCLC 624981792 Retrieved 26 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Bulletin No 9 PDF Report IAS Publications Collection Princeton Institute for Advanced Study April 1940 p 12 hdl 20 500 12111 5956 Archived PDF from the original on 12 October 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 S S Vandyck Departed Liverpool 1 September 1939 13 September 1939 JPEG Book Indexes for New York Passenger Lists Series 1 January 1906 to 1 April 1942 ID T715 157914759 p 183 Washington National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved 10 January 2023 History of the BBC Anniversaries Chamberlain announces Britain is at war with Germany BBC Online London BBC 2021 Archived from the original on 3 September 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Pars Leopold Alexander Letter from A E Ingham at Berkeley California 1930 Letter Papers of Leopold Alexander Pars Series Correspondence ID JCPP Pars 1 1930 Cambridge Jesus College Retrieved 27 May 2021 a b Pars Leopold Alexander About a job that A E Ingham was offered in America 1942 Letter Papers of Leopold Alexander Pars Series 161 letters ID JCPP Pars 1 1942 Cambridge Jesus College Retrieved 27 May 2021 Pars Leopold Alexander Letter from Pars s godson Michael Ingham and to him 1980 Letter Papers of Leopold Alexander Pars Series 235 letters ID JCPP Pars 1 1973 Cambridge Jesus College Retrieved 27 May 2021 a b c Ingham Mark 1 June 2005 Afterimages Photographs as an External Autobiographical Memory System and a Contemporary Art Practice PhD Goldsmiths University of London Visual Arts Department Fine Art London OCLC 1006191005 7465 Archived from the original on 21 August 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2021 via PhilPapers Burkill John Charles 2004 Ingham Albert Edward 1900 1967 mathematician Maths History St Andrews Revised by Paul Cohn St Andrews Oxford University Press 34099 Archived from the original on 7 February 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Cambridge City Crematorium 20 September 1982 Cremation Register Book Cremations 1 to 104 953 dated 21 December 1938 to 28 June 1996 Girton Cambridge City Council Register Entry 635576 Retrieved 3 January 2022 via Deceased Online Pars Leopold Alexander Death of Theodora Alberta Pars 1980 Letter Papers of Leopold Alexander Pars Series 218 letters ID JCPP Pars 1 1980 Cambridge Jesus College Retrieved 27 May 2021 Pars Leopold Alexander Letter from Michael Ingham 1982 Letter Papers of Leopold Alexander Pars Series 146 letters ID JCPP Pars 1 1982 Cambridge Jesus College Retrieved 27 May 2021 a b McPherson D C 23 October 1939 Cortical Air Spaces in the Roots of Zea mays New Phytologist 38 3 London Cambridge University Press 190 202 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 1939 tb07098 x ISSN 1469 8137 JSTOR 2428235 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Sifton Harold Boyd 29 February 1940 Lysigenous Air Spaces in the Leaf of Labrador Tea Ledum Groenlandicum Oeder New Phytologist 39 1 London Cambridge University Press 75 79 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 1940 tb07122 x ISSN 1469 8137 JSTOR 2428866 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Office of Experiment Stations 1924 Recent Work in Agricultural Science Agricultural Botany Experiment Station Record July to December 1924 51 4 Washington Department of Agriculture 330 331 ISSN 0097 689X OCLC 869754915 Retrieved 26 December 2020 a b Societies and Academies London Royal Society Nature 112 2801 London Nature Portfolio 26 7 July 1923 Bibcode 1930Natur 125 621 doi 10 1038 112026a0 ISSN 1476 4687 Retrieved 27 January 2020 Tupper Carey amp Priestley 1923 p 110 Rayner Canham Marelene F Rayner Canham Geoffrey William 2008 2 The Professional Societies The Chemical Society The Lesser Known Initial Members Chemistry Was Their Life Pioneer British Women Chemists 1880 1949 London Imperial College Press pp 79 82 ISBN 978 1 86094 986 9 OCLC 768046657 Retrieved 6 October 2021 Wood Florence Mary July 1926 Further Investigations of the Chemical Nature of the Cell membrane Annals of Botany 40 3 Oxford Oxford University Press 547 570 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals aob a090037 ISSN 0305 7364 JSTOR 43236554 Retrieved 29 January 2021 Zamil Mohammad Shafayet Geitmann Anja 16 February 2017 The middle lamella more than a glue Physical Biology 14 1 Bristol IOP Publishing 015004 Bibcode 2017PhBio 14a5004Z doi 10 1088 1478 3975 aa5ba5 ISSN 1478 3975 PMID 28140367 S2CID 25394535 a b Halbsguth Wilhelm 2020 1965 3 Induktion von Dorsiventralitat bei Pflanzen 5 Krummungen e Vergleich von Krummungen und Dorsiventralitat 3 Induction of Dorsiventrality in Plants 5 Curvatures e Comparison of Curvatures and Dorsiventrality In Ruhland Wilhelm ed Handbuch der Pflanzenphysiologie Differenzierung und Entwicklung Encyclopedia of Plant Physiology Differentiation and Development Part III Growth Development Movement in German Vol 15 1 Heidelberg Springer Verlag p 370 doi 10 1007 978 3 662 36273 0 11 ISBN 978 3 662 36273 0 OCLC 913814739 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Kunze Henning 1977 Nutation und Wachstum III Nutation and Growth III Elemente der Naturwissenschaft Elements of Science in German 27 Goetheanum Natural Science Section at the Goetheanum 1 11 doi 10 18756 EDN 27 1 OCLC 720264704 Archived from the original on 15 January 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Edelbluth Eckhardt Kaldewey Harald January 1976 Auxin in scapes flower buds flowers and fruits of daffodil Narcissus pseudonarcissus L Planta 131 3 Bonn Springer Science Business Media 285 291 doi 10 1007 BF00385428 ISSN 0032 0935 JSTOR 23372225 PMID 24424832 S2CID 6834483 Kaldewey Harald June 1957 Wachstumsverlauf Wuchsstoffbildung und Nutationsbewegungen von Fritillaria meleagris L im Laufe der Vegetationsperiode Growth Pattern Growth Substance Formation and Nutation Movements of Fritillaria meleagris L in the Course of the Vegetation Period Planta in German 49 3 Bonn Springer Science Business Media 300 344 doi 10 1007 BF01911291 ISSN 1432 2048 JSTOR 23363315 S2CID 41817628 Clapham Arthur Roy November 1980 Edward James Salisbury 16 April 1886 to 10 November 1978 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 26 London Royal Society 502 526 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1980 0014 ISSN 0080 4606 JSTOR 769791 a b Sinnott Edmund Ware 1960 Part Two The Phenomena of Morphogenesis 6 Polarity Plant Morphogenesis McGraw Hill publications in the botanical sciences Vol 2 New York Academic Press pp 128 129 hdl 2027 uc1 b3741908 OCLC 325141 Philipson William Raymond Ward Josephine Margaret Butterfield Brian Geoffrey 1971 10 Experimental Control of Cambial Development The Vascular Cambium Its development and activity London Chapman amp Hall p 156 ISBN 978 0 412 10400 8 OCLC 144649 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Balls William Lawrence Referee s report on The composition of the cell wall at the apical meristem of stem and root by R M Tupper Carey and J H Priestley May 1923 Item Referees reports on scientific papers submitted to the Royal Society for publication Series Referees reports volume 29 peer reviews of scientific papers submitted to the Royal Society for publication ID RR 29 62 pp 1 4 London Royal Society Retrieved 27 May 2021 Further reading editBlight Denis Ibbotson Ruth 2011 Hemming David ed CABI a century of scientific endeavour PDF CABI International Malta Gutenberg Press ISBN 978 1 84593 873 4 OCLC 1040280202 Archived PDF from the original on 29 July 2021 Retrieved 31 January 2021 Ede Ronald ed 1930 Members of Staff at the School of Agriculture Downing Street Cambridge Cambridge University Agricultural Society Magazine Vol 3 Cambridge University Agricultural Society Cambridge W Heffer amp Sons p 74 OCLC 43472660 Penrhyn Stanley Hudson and Ingham are photographed seated together on the left at the front Lang Cosmo Gordon 1945 Tupper Canon A D Tupper Carey A Memoir of a Very Human Parish Priest London Constable amp Co OCLC 931231033 Archbishop Cosmo Lang s biography of Ingham s father Priestley Joseph Hubert Scott Lorna Iris Harrison Edith 1964 First published in 1938 An Introduction to Botany with special reference to the structure of the flowering plant Illustrated by Marjorie Edith Malins and Lorna Iris Scott London Longmans Green amp Co OCLC 1150024139 Retrieved 26 December 2020 External links editPortrait of Ingham by William Roberts circa 1922 An English Cubist Afterimages Photographs as an External Autobiographical Memory System and a Contemporary Art Practice University of the Arts London Research Online Photographs of Jane Ingham taken by Albert Ingham for Mark Ingham s PhD thesis at Goldsmiths University of London Works by Ingham at WorldCat Lorna Scott and her Mortar Board by Margaret Stewart for Egham Museum on botanist Lorna Iris Scott Joseph Hubert Priestley s collaborator after Ingham left for Cambridge Portals nbsp Biography nbsp History of science nbsp Botany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jane Ingham amp oldid 1204868230, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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