Beryl Hutchinson

Beryl Hutchinson MBE (August 22, 1892 – November 6, 1981) was a British volunteer ambulance driver and officer of the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry. After the war she became Life President of the Society for Study of Physiological Patterns (Palmistry).

Beryl Hutchinson
BornAugust 22, 1892
DiedNovember 6, 1981
NationalityUnited Kingdom
Known forMember of the FANY and palmist

Life

Hutchinson was born in Spotland near Rochdale to Florence Mark and Robert Arthur Lord Hutchinson. Her father was a woollen manufacturer. She was driving at the age of 13 and she attended Highfield Ladies’ School in Hendon.[1]

In 1914 she joined the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry known as the FANYs. She went to France on the first day of 1915. The FANYs were all volunteers who paid to be in the organisation. Hutchinson said she went to France because she supplied a mobile kitchen although it was compared to a hen shed on a Ford chassis.[2]

Southall's Sanitary Towels for Ladies

In May 1915 she was involved in looking after the casualties during the first gas attack. The suffering were trying to gain relief by having their faces washed with scraps of cotton wool soaked in vinegar. It was the FANYs idea to use sanitary towels as a more substantial replacement. The actual brand was "Mr Southall's conveniences for ladies" which they cut in half before soaking the pads in Rimmell's Toilet Vinegar. She rose to be second in command of the FANY–VAD St Omer convoy helping to evacuate the wounded under fire. In 1919 she was awarded an MBE for her war service.[2]

During the Second World War she returned to the FANY and was put in command of the 8th (London) motor transport company. She and her unit were moved to the ATS.[2] In 1945 she and Noel Jaquin founded an organisation for those interested in palmistry, astrology and similar studies.[3] In 1971 she became Life President of the Society for Study of Physiological Patterns.[2] She was quoted as an expert in books on the subject.[4]

Hutchinson died in Kensington[2] on 30 July 1981.

gollark: I doubt anyone would care if it was just https://bee-neuron-data.discord.net/e5688175485fa95b6b5e5f3f76e481eaa6542f988e24b2fd4de0c472b55b4bdb/thing.whatever.
gollark: Isn't there some other random data?
gollark: You can't dedupe images just because they look similar to other ones.
gollark: 256-bit strings.
gollark: GTech™ would obviously do the checking by automatically building a deterministic finite automaton to match any key which is already in the data and not any others.

References

  1. "Life story: Beryl Butterworth Hutchinson | Lives of the First World War". livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
  2. "Hutchinson, Beryl Butterworth (1892–1981), volunteer ambulance driver and member of the FANY". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/70518. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
  3. Campbell, Edward D. (1996). The Encyclopedia of Palmistry. Berkley Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-399-51977-2.
  4. Altman, Nathaniel (2009). Palmistry: The Universal Guide. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. ISBN 978-1-4027-4885-1.
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