Henry John Chaytor

Henry John Chaytor (1871–1954), British academic, classicist and hispanist, was Master of St Catharine's College, Cambridge from 1933 to 1946.

Biography

After teaching at Merchant Taylors', Crosby, Chaytor was appointed second master at King Edward VII School, Sheffield in 1905; in 1908 he left Sheffield to become headmaster of Plymouth College.[1] In 1919 he took up a Fellowship at St Catharine's College, Cambridge and became Master in 1933.[2]

gollark: The RPi4 has a better CPU and GPU than the 3, no idea if it can run that.
gollark: <@140164484827185152> On the smart TV thing, I've heard that they're sold for less than "dumb" ones because the manufacturers make money off selling data from them.
gollark: London gets stupidly fast (10Gbit in some places, even) fibre, but most of the UK isn't London.
gollark: In the UK the internet connectivity situation seems pretty bad too - I think the only option here is BT, which has a "fibre" offering (VDSL to a box nearby which is connected to something else by actual fibre-optic) delivering amazing 34/8 (that's Mbps) speeds.
gollark: I would actually prefer that over thinness, to be honest, personally.

References

  1. John Cornwell (2005). "King Ted's" (PDF). p. 66. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  2. "Henry John Chaytor 1871–1954". http://resources.metapress.com/. Archived from the original on 28 November 2014. Retrieved 13 November 2014. External link in |publisher= (help)



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