Event class: years, became, position, moved, later, returned, appointed, two, school, london

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18001820184018601880190019201940196019802000Distribution of this event class over time. Normalize to adjust counts by total yearly volume.0246810121416182022242628Count/Ratio

Events with high posterior probability

Hayyim Jonah GurlandIn 1873 Gurland was appointed inspector of the normal colleges for teachers at Jitomir, a position which he held for seven years.
Don WelshIn 1962 he worked for the London County Council Education Department as a Football Coach/Teacher at Tollington Park School in North London.
Ma XiaotianIn 1983, he became the deputy headmaster, and was then promoted to headmaster.
Mary CreaghShe taught entrepreneurship at the Cranfield University School of Management from 1997 until her election to Westminster, and spent seven years as a trustee with Rathbone, a national charity.
Thomas Welsh (general)He was appointed Weigh Master in 1850, and lock superintendent a few years later.
David CarmichaelIn 1997 Carmichael took up the position of Head Pastry Chef at Oceana where he would remain in charge for ten years.
Dorian BaxterHe has been an educator for 33 years commencing his career as a classroom teacher with the York County Board of Education in 1970.
Augustine UkattahIn 1963, he became Assistant Superintendent of Schools, a position he held until the end of Nigeria Civil war.
Owen CoppIn 1885, he was appointed assistant physician at Taunton State Hospital (formerly known as the State Lunatic Hospital at Taunton) in Massachusetts and later served as assistant superintendent for the hospital.
Mary Alice Sarvis In 1946, soon after she moved to the Bay Area, Dr. Sarvis became a consultant in individual guidance and development for the Oakland Public Schools, a position she held until her death.
Derwent Coleridge In 1841 he was appointed first principal of St. Mark's College, Chelsea, just established by the National Society.
Bernard SpilsburyIn October 1905, he was appointed resident assistant pathologist at St Mary's Hospital when the London County Council requested all general hospitals in its area appoint two qualified pathologists to perform autopsies following sudden deaths.
Frank MerriamAfter a brief career in education as a school superintendent in Wisner, Nebraska After graduating from Lenox College at Hopkinton in 1888, Merriam served as the principal of the Hopkinton's schools for two years and superintendent of schools at Postville for one year.
Alex Binnie (tattoo artist)He became a medical artist in 1985, first an AV technician at Royal Postgraduate Medical School, then a medical illustrator at United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy's and St Thomas' Hospitals.
George OsbornGeorge was educated at Dr. Hulett's school at Brompton, and, entering the Wesleyan ministry in 1828, was in the following year appointed to the Brighton circuit, where he laboured successfully for two years.
Patrick Allen (Jamaica)Following his graduation, he taught at the Water Valley All-Age School in St. Mary for three years before being appointed Principal of the Robins Bay Primary School in St. Mary in 1976.
Columba Cary-ElwesAfter taking his degree, Columba returned to Ampleforth, where he served as Monastic Librarian, as a teacher in the school, and housemaster of St. Wilfrid's House (1937 -- 51).
Ron TupaSen. Tupa has taught high school social studies as a teacher or substitute teacher for the last 11 years, starting in 1995.
Alfred D?blinOn 15 October 1906 he took up a position at the Berlin psychiatric clinic in Buch where he worked as an assistant doctor for nearly two years.
John Waterhouse (headmaster) In September 1883 Joseph Coates successfully applied for the headmastership of the soon to be established Sydney Boys' High School and Waterhouse as head of Maitland High School.
Archibald LampmanIn 1883, after a frustrating attempt to teach high school in Orangeville, Ontario, he took an appointment as a low-paid clerk in the Post Office Department in Ottawa, a position he held for the rest of his life.
Fyodor SologubIn 1899 he was appointed principal of the Andreevskoe municipal school and relocated to their premises on Vasilievsky Island ; he also became a member of the St. Petersburg District School Council.
Charles SingerHe returned to England and took a position at Sussex County Hospital in Brighton, and in 1907 left for Singapore.
John Ward StudebakerAfter college, he served as principal of a public school, and in 1914 became assistant superintendent of schools in Des Moines, Iowa.
John Burdon-SandersonSettling in London, he became Medical Officer of Health for Paddington in 1856 and four years later physician to the Middlesex Hospital and the Brompton Consumption hospitals.
Ellen KarcherAs of 2010, Karcher is a substitute teacher at an alternative school called Collier High School in Marlboro.
James Henry PopeIn 1864 Pope moved to Dunedin, New Zealand to become assistant master at the High School of Otago (later Otago Boys High School).
Charles Rattray SmithHis first appointment was as assistant teacher, Bathurst High School on its opening in October 1883 but soon after took up his first of three appointments at Sydney Boys High School.
William J. McNamaraIn 1900 he was hired as the first teacher at Lone Spruce School, an Edmonton boys' school.
Nathan C. BrooksHe held this position for two years before opening a private school in Baltimore, Maryland in 1826, where he remained for five years.
Yaakov Ben Zion MendelsonIn 1905, he took a new position as rabbi of Gateshead, and later, as rabbi of Glasgow, Scotland.
George Wallis In 1858 George Wallis joined the South Kensington Museum as Senior Keeper of the Art collection, a post which he kept for three decades and left just prior to his death.
Lowitja O'DonoghueShe qualified as a nurse and worked at the Royal Adelaide until 1961, being appointed a charge nurse just before leaving.
Heinrich Agathon BernsteinHere he immediately became the first physician of the Health Establishment at Gadok near Buitenzorg (Jakarta), and remained in post until 31 October 1860.
Frances LinfieldWhile devoting much of her time to care for her aged parents, she was appointed head of the department of modern languages at South Side High School (later Lewis and Clark High School), a position she held for seventeen years, until 1912.
Ulysses G. DenmanHe was named Superintendent of the Public Schools of Willshire in 1889, which he retained for three years.
Peter PitchlynnIn 1840 the Council appointed Pitchlynn as a teacher and superintendent of the Choctaw Academy.
Daniel Hack TukeIn 1853 he visited a number of foreign asylum s, and later returning to York he became visiting physician to the York Retreat and the York Dispensary, lecturing also to the York School of Medicine on mental diseases.
Anthony Burgess Burgess left the army in 1946 with the rank of sergeant-major and was for the next four years a lecturer in speech and drama at the Mid-West School of Education near Wolverhampton and at the Bamber Bridge Emergency Teacher Training College near Preston.
John Amyas AlexanderJohn then took up a teaching post at the secondary school at Hantoub, south of Khartoum in what was then Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, working for the Sudan Government Service, moving to Ahlia School, Omdurman in 1950.
Michael Brand After completing his studies, Brand worked as the founding head of Asian art at the National Gallery of Australia and in 1996 unsuccessfully applied for the directorship there He left for the Queensland Art Gallery later that year, and spent four years working as assistant director.
Paul Lange (musician)In 1880, Lange moved to Constantinople, where he assumed a position as music teacher at the German School (Alman Lisesi) as well as organist of the Chapel of the German Embassy.
Golding BirdIn 1843, he was appointed assistant physician at Guy's, a position for which he had lobbied hard, and in October that year he was put in charge of the children's outpatient s ward.
Olaf Alfred HoffstadIn 1924, then aged 59, he was appointed principal of the school -- he quit teaching at Sandefjord Technical Evening School () in the same year, where he had lectured concurrently with his teaching at the Upper Secondary School.
Charles Murchison (physician)In October 1855, Murchison left the service and settled in London as a physician, commencing the long series of his medical appointments by becoming physician to the Westminster General Dispensary.
Bob Mitchell (British politician)He taught mathematics and science at several schools before eventually finding a position as Senior Master and Head of the Mathematics and Science Department of Bartley County Secondary School, becoming Deputy Head in 1965.
Robert Hamilton RussellOn his return to Australia he took up his work again at the Alfred and Children's hospitals, but resigned his Alfred hospital appointment in 1920 and five years later retired from the children's hospital.
Lancelot BavinPhillips remained at Mowbray House until his return to Sydney Grammar in 1924, where he ultimately became Headmaster.
Henry Clarence WhaiteFor the next twenty years, however, he remained based in Manchester, living in Stretford and becoming a member of the newly established Manchester Academy of Fine Arts in 1859.
Arthur Sanders (footballer)After retiring from competitive football in 1933 he returned to teaching and took up a post at the Raglan school in the Bush Hill Park area of Enfield and later became headmaster until the 1960s.
Graham George AbleIn that year he took up the position of Second Master at Barnard Castle School and in 1988 he left Barnard Castle School and went on to become the Headmaster of Hampton School.
William John MorrellIn 1907 he was appointed Rector of Otago Boys' High School, Dunedin, and thus began a long association with the Morrell family and the city of Dunedin.
Hugo AlpenHe moved to Sydney in 1880 to work as a singing master for the newly established Department of Public Instruction (now the Department of Education), teaching at Fort Street and Hurlstone teacher training colleges.
John Syer BristoweIn 1849 he was house surgeon at St. Thomas's Hospital, and in the following year he was appointed curator of the museum and pathologist to the hospital.
?tefan DimitrescuHe became a teacher at the Iași National School of Fine Arts in 1927, and, during the next year, he was named its headmaster (a position he held until his death).
Charlotte SharmanHe was accepted there in September 1873 and after nine years left Muller's homes to be apprenticed as a shoemaker in Street, Somerset.
Sidney LanierIn 1867, he moved to Prattville, at that time a small town just north of Montgomery, where he taught and served as principal of a school.
Solomon SchonfeldIn 1933 he became the rabbi of the Adath Yisroel Synagogue in North London, and succeeded his father as principal of the fledgling Jewish Secondary School.
Sandy PhillipsPhillips remained at Mowbray house until his return to Sydney Grammar in 1924.
John Fairfax Fairfax worked as a compositor for some months then on 1 April 1839 was appointed librarian of the Australian subscription library.
Louisa MartindaleShe started her own general practice and very soon was asked to join the Lewes Road Dispensary for Women and Children (which in 1911 became the Lady Chichester Hospital, Brighton Branch) as a visiting medical officer.
Rudolph Carl Bigalke Bigalke left Kimberley in 1964 to take up the position as Principal Research Officer for the Natal Parks Board in Pietermaritzburg.
Michoel FisherHe became Rabbi of the Alie Street Federation synagogue in London's East End in 1939.
Eliyahu KitovIn 1941 he established a school for Chareidi children, where he served as principal for about eight years.
Thomas BerwickAfter receiving his ticket of leave, by 1878 he was working as an unofficial school teacher at Jarrahdale, with his salary being paid by the local road board.
Otto LindbladIn the spring of 1847 he took up the position of parish clerk and organist in Mellby.
Kenneth W. MacKenzieThat same year, he moved to Lethbridge, Alberta where he spent two years as a school principal for two years before moving to Edmonton in 1895.
Andr? Henri Constant van HasseltTwo years later he was appointed special inspector to the normal schools and kept this job until he died at Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, a suburb of Brussels, on 1 December 1874.
Patrick Allen (Jamaica)In 1978 he became Principal of the Hillside Primary School in St. Mary, which had an enrollment four times the size of Robins Bay All-Age School.
Peter G. FletcherAt the age of 30, after 4 years at Beverley, he left Yorkshire to become Staff Inspector of Music with the Inner London Education Authority in 1966.
Charles RileyHe became vicar of St Paul's, Preston, in 1885, a position he held for nine years.
Fred RocheHe remained in London for three years working as a housing architect but in 1958 moved to Coventry where he became an architect specialising in schools.
Gina KrogShe later worked as an autodidact teacher in private schools for several years, until 1880.
Euan UglowRefusing compulsory military service, Uglow was registered as a conscientious objector in 1954, and spent two years undertaking community work, assisting in the restoration of a war-damaged church by Christopher Wren in the City of London, redecorating the house of the artist Patrick George, and helping on a farm in Surrey.
Clement HowellAfter completing his studies, he was appointed as Headteacher of the Blue Hills Primary School and continued in this post until he was transferred to the District Administration Department as District Commissioner for Providenciales in 1976.
Sabine Baring-GouldBaring-Gould became the rector of East Mersea in Essex in 1871 and spent ten years there.
Charles Stewart (zoologist)After practising for four years at Plymouth, he was appointed in 1866 curator of the museum at St. Thomas's Hospital, then situated in the Surrey Gardens.
Henry Mills HurdHe became assistant Superintendent in 1878 but left a few months later to become the superintendent of the newly opened Eastern Michigan Asylum in Pontiac where he remained for 11 years.
Eric OllerenshawHe taught in three comprehensive schools - two of which were social priority schools - and in 1986 gained his first elected position on the Inner London Education Authority.
Marie PopelinIn 1882 Marie returned to Brussels, to head the middle school in Laeken, but was removed from her post the following year.
Z. K. MatthewsIn 1924 he was appointed head of the high school at Adams College in Natal, where Albert Luthuli was also a teacher.
Rocksborough SmithHe then held a similar post at the Diocesan High School for Europeans in Rangoon until 1914 when he became Vicar of Broadstone, Dorset.
Anna LeonowensLeonowens served at court until 1867, a period of nearly six years, first as a teacher and later as language secretary for the king.
Sydney Patterson In 1923 Patterson left the institute to take an appointment as a clinician at Ruthin Castle, a private hospital in Wales (the successor of a hospital at Duff House in Scotland).
Stephen SpenderSpender spent the winter of 1940 teaching at Blundell's School, having taken the position left vacant by Manning Clark, who returned to Australia as a consequence of the war to teach at Geelong Grammar.
Konstantin AndreevSimultaneously, he became director of Alexander School of Business (at Basman), which post he held until 1907, and spent much time working for secondary education system.
Peter McGinnityOn qualifying as a PE instructor in 1976, Peter taught in Belfast for three years before returning to his own alma mater of St Michael's, where he has remained since.
Lew MayneHe was the principal at the town's junior high and high school and later became the district superintendent before retiring in 1982.
George Quinlan RobertsIn 1892 he was appointed house-governor of London Hospital and over the years trained the rowing crews of the London Hospital.
Minette WaltersDuring a gap year between school and Durham University, 1968, she went to Israel as a volunteer with The Bridge in Britain, working on a kibbutz and in a delinquent boys' home in Jerusalem.
Archibald Duncan WilsonHe then spent a year teaching in Westminster School and then joined the British Museum as Assistant keeper in 1937.
Henry LonsdaleIn 1846 he was appointed physician to the Cumberland Infirmary, an office which he held for twenty-two years.
Sue CarterIn 2008 Carter returned to her home town of the Gold Coast, after nearly 30 years in the NT, where she now works as a registered nurse.
Harald NorengHe worked as a teacher, mainly at Oslo Cathedral School, until 1958, except for several years as a researcher.
George Furner LangleyIn 1924 he became headmaster of Warrnanbool High School, a position he held for sixteen years.
William MunkHe was elected physician to the Smallpox Hospital in February 1853, and held office there for forty years.
Shlomo ZemachHe was employed as a teacher at the Mikveh Israel agricultural school and, in 1933, he was the principal founder of the Kadoorie Agricultural High School and served as its first headmaster.
Ena No?lIn 1958 Ena was appointed librarian at South Sydney Boys High.
Giacomo BresadolaIn 1878, he became the vicar at Magràs, a position he held for five years.
Fredis RefunjolHe taught for eight years before being promoted to Principal in 1981.