The Beaumont Project
Beaumont and Toller Family Tree


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Frederick Gibbon Toller
(1848-1920)
Tabitha Ann Williams
(1855-1915)
Henry Poole
(Abt 1854-)
Emily Sayle
(Abt 1854-)
Frederick Thomas Frank Toller
(1881-1944)
Grace Poole
(1883-1961)
Dr. Paul Arnold Toller L. D. S. , R. C. S. (Eng)
(1921-1977)

 

Dr. Paul Arnold Toller L. D. S. , R. C. S. (Eng)

  • Born: 22 Sep 1921, Watford, Hertfordshire, England
  • Marriage (1): Dorothy Maud Mansfield Clark on 6 Jul 1946 in St. John's, Northwood, Middesex, England
  • Died: 13 Jul 1977 aged 55
Family Links

Spouses/Children:

1. Dorothy Maud Mansfield Clark

  • Marilyn N. Toller+
  • Susan N. Toller+

(+ Shows person has known children.)



Family Tree Divider

bullet  Birth Notes:

http://www.gellibrand.com/nti01701.htmll

And

http://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/information.pl?cite=mIOPXWthODaYXee8y371og&scan=1

bullet  Death Notes:

http://www.gellibrand.com/nti01701.htmll

Family Tree Divider

bullet  Sources of information or noted events in his life were:

• Education. Merchant Taylors'

• Obituary. http://www.archerfamily.org.uk/obituary/toller_p.htmll

MR. PAUL TOLLER
The Times 21st July 1977
Mr Paul Toller, Consultant Dental Surgeon to the Department of Dental and Oral Surgery at Mount Vernon Hospital, to the Canadian Red Cross Memorial Hospital at Taplow and to the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, died on July 13 at the age of 55. An intensely inquiring mind led him to make advances in every subject in which he became interested and his interests were diverse. On qualification he joined the Maxillo-Facial Unit at Hill End Hospital treating war casualties, making great improvements in the mechanical devices now widely used in the treatment of the severely injured face. At the end of hostilities he spent a period with the maxillo-facial team which established that speciality in Jugoslavia. Tenaciously pursuing a line of thought on the development of cysts of the jaws he was becoming a world authority on the importance of immunoglobulins in these lesions.
Last summer the knowledge he had acquired on dental cysts enabled him to make an important contribution at a World Congress in Philadelphia on cholesteatoma, an ill-understood lesion of the ear. At Taplow he had special facilities for research into rheumatic conditions and he made important contributions to knowledge of the joint involved in movement of the jaw.
At the Royal College of Surgeons he was a Hunterian Professor, Charles Tomes Lecturer, was awarded the John Tomes Prize, and he was a member of the Board of Faculty of Dental Surgery. He was currently the President of the Section of Odontology of the Royal Society of Medicine, carrying through these duties with great courage despite increasing disability due to his illness which recently forced him to withdraw from the presidency of the British Association of Oral Surgeons which he would have assumed in October.
He contributed an important paper to the Oriental Ceramic Society of which he was a Council Member and with colleagues introduced X-Ray fluorescence as a method of study of ancient porcelains. He was a director the Oriental Art Magazine, which has a world wide circulation, and was a trustee of the Victor Sassoon Ivories Trust. He also had a considerable knowledge of early English glass. He was currently engaged in writing a book on ceramics as well as articles for books on dental subjects. He carried his research to fishing and prepared a scientific analysis of such interest that he was asked to present it at the annual meeting of the Piscatorial Society, reviving a custom which had fallen into abeyance for many years.
His combination of clinical ability with a real flair for intuitional research will continue to be an inspiration to the dental profession but he will be badly missed by both patients and trainees in the profession to which he has made such important contributions.

• Web Based Info. http://www.archerfamily.org.uk/family/toller.html

And

http://www.gellibrand.com/nti01701.htmll

• Occupation. Maxillo Facial Surgeon.


Family Tree Divider

Paul married Dorothy Maud Mansfield Clark, daughter of Charles H. Clark and Unknown, on 6 Jul 1946 in St. John's, Northwood, Middesex, England.

bullet  Sources of information or noted events in their marriage were:

• Web Based Info. http://www.gellibrand.com/nti01701.htmll



Family Tree Divider

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info There will inevitably be errors and omissions and the whole purpose of creating this online record, is to invite feedback and corrections.
The data is specifically for non-commercial use and my clear intention is to build family records. The data may, therefore, not be used in any way for the purposes of financial gain.

Caveat:- Throughout the project UK GRO birth, marriage and death index data appears. The GRO data appears in Quarters. Q1 = January, February and March, Q2 = April, May, June , Q3 = July, August and September and Q4 = October, November and December. Similarly, Mar Q = January, February and March, Jun Q = April, May, June , Sep Q = July, August and September and Dec Q = October, November and December. Where these dates occur, they represent the date of Registration of the event rather than the date of the actual event. Logically, registration occurs AFTER the event. In some cases this may be days or months or even years after the event. The important thing is that the event was recorded and a copy of the document of registration could be obtained if necessary. This also applies to South African NAAIRS records.

Similarly, the UK system is confusing to the uninitiated because registration districts can span several counties. Accordingly GRO locations may not record the true location of the event. They do record where the record is actually kept or recorded.

Caveat #2:- I have used URL's throughout the website as sources. The URLs are often from paid subscription sites so you may not be able to access them without an account. Inevitably there are broken URL's. I have been to every URL recorded here and at the time they were operational. In this regard, the Ancestry24 records are a problem. There are numerous references in the South African data citing Ancestry24 records. Unfortunately Ancestry24 has closed down and these records are no longer available on line.

The early South African records on this site would not have been as good as they are without the work done by Delia Robertson. Where there are website addresses containing http://www.e-family.co.za... I record the citation should read Robertson, Delia. The First Fifty Years Project. This website can be found at First Fifty Years

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