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  1. Newson Garrett (31 July 1812 – 4 May 1893) was an English maltster, instrumental in the revival of the town of Aldeburgh, Suffolk, of which he became mayor at the end of his life. His daughter Elizabeth became the first woman in Britain to qualify as a medical doctor.

  2. In 1889, Newson Garrett became the first mayor of Aldeburgh, serving again in 1886 and 1890 and as alderman, 1888–93. He was also Aldeburgh's first county councillor and alderman, 1889–92. His involvement in politics often led to conflict.

  3. 25. Dez. 2021 · Elizabeth Garrett-Anderson, born in London, England, in 1836 and raised in the coastal village of Aldeburgh, succeeded in becoming the UK’s first woman doctor against popular opinion when no official route existed for women to become registered physicians in the UK.

  4. Having bought the already busy shipping port at Snape Bridge in 1841, Victorian industrial entrepreneur Newson Garrett built Snape Maltings over the following decades in order to malt barley and ship it by Thames barge to breweries in London and elsewhere. The business expanded quickly and thrived throughout for decades as demand from breweries ...

  5. 14. Jan. 2015 · Read this article. Dr. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836–1917), co-founder of the London School of Medicine for Women, and Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1847–1929), leader of the constitutional suffrage movement, were centrally involved in the Victorian and Edwardian campaign for women's equality. Both women attempted to ...

  6. 19. Juni 2008 · June 19, 2008. Some families are hotbeds of iconoclasm, and one such was the family of Newson Garrett (1812-93). He is remembered in Aldeburgh, Suffolk, as the prosperous local businessman who built the Maltings at Snape, adopted by Benjamin Britten as the home for his festival. Newson and his wife Louisa had ten children.

  7. 9. Feb. 2021 · The close relationship between Rhoda and the Suffolk family of her second cousin, Newson Garrett, initially took her down this path. Her cousin Louisa (1835–1867) had an independent income from her father and was already married to James William Smith, owner of a large fashion and drapery business in Mayfair; Louisa financed Rhoda ...