Personal information about Ada Margaret Wynter

Below is all the information we have about Ada Margaret Wynter. As far as we know, the information is correct. However, if you find any errors or have additional information, certificates or pictures, please contact us so that we can update this page. Thank you.


Burial Information

Name on burial register:
   Ada Margaret Wynter
Burial register image
Click image to enlarge
Age at death:
   73
Date of burial:
   25 August 1937
Abode at death:
(according to burial register)
   Bartholomew Manor, Newbury
Burial register information:
  
Book number: 1917
Page number: 205
Record number: 11239
Official at burial:
   E H Stenning
     
Source of information:
  Burial Register

Memorial Details

  Ada Margaret WYNTER
  17 August 1937
  73
  Female
   
  Headstone, 4 Kerbstones, vase.
  Granite. Letters.
   
  Headstone: Ada Margaret Wynter / 1864-1937 / "She hath done what she could." / W. Essex Wynter / M.D., F.R.C.P., F.R.C.S. / 1860-1945 //
   
  Good
  ZZ8
    They lived in Mayfair prior to retiring to Bartholomew Manor, Argyle Rd. Newbury, which they refurbished. Ada: d. of Samuel Wills, sugar refiner & magistrate of Bristol. Walter, from a medical family, was a physician of repute at London hospitals, an early advocate of lumbar puncture & splenectomy. Author of a series of books on Minor Medicine. Founder of the home for retired Middlesex Nurses in Argyle Rd. Full notes on FRNC website. Source of death dates: Probate records on ancestry.co.uk
   
  13 April 2000
  EAC
 
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Other people list on this memorial

Walter Essex WYNTER

 

 

Obituaries and Newspaper announcements

Ada Wynter
Article source:    Brian Withers
Date of source:    22 January 2012
Copyright:    © FNRC

Transcription:

 

Walter and Ada Wynter

Grave Ref ZZ8

 

Doctor Walter Essex Wynter was the son of a GP Andrew Wynter of Chiswick. Andrew edited the British Medical Journal from 1855 – 1861. Walter was born in 1860, was educated at Epsom college and the Middlesex hospital and became a physician to that hospital in 1901. He was a FRCP and FRCS.

Whilst a registrar at that hospital in1890, he was a pioneer of the lumber puncture procedure for removing or reducing infected spinal fluid. He developed the process but although the German physician Heinrich Quincke was the first to use needle lumbar puncture, he credited Dr Wynter with the earlier discovery.

When he retired from medical life, he set up home in Newbury with his wife Ada, in the early Tudor house  known as Bartholomew Manor in Argyle Road. The house which was originally in the estate of John Winchcombe (1489 – 1547) was originally a medieval farm house with an upper storey added in the 15th century. Dr Wynter restored both that house and modernised the neighbouring almshouses in the 1920s.

The Essex Wynter charity was set up by him and still exists today, providing accommodation and support for retired nurses and today, in addition, other NHS staff. The gardens of the house were very extensive and took up a large area within the city including the area where the care home currently stands and continuing right across to the junction of Argyle Road and Rectory Close by the Northern gate of the City Playground (Hampton Road). When he died in January 1945, his lands and properties were willed to the Essex Wynter Trust, a charitable organisation.

Both he and his wife Ada Margaret Wynter who died in August 1937 aged 73 are in the Newtown Road cemetery although Dr Wynter was cremated and his ashes buried in the same plot as his wife.

 

Contributed by Brian Withers

This obituary entry is awaiting verification.
 
 


Biographies & History

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