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Clutterbuck and was
One night in September 1939 they took him to a large house owned by " Old Dorothy " Clutterbuck, a wealthy local woman, where he was made to strip naked and taken through an initiation ceremony.
The Association's first Director General was Vice-Admiral David Clutterbuck who assumed this position in 1969.
Dorothy Clutterbuck ( 19 January 1880 – 12 January 1951 ), was a wealthy Englishwoman who was named by Gerald Gardner as a leading member of the New Forest coven, a group of pagan Witches into which Gardner claimed to have been initiated in 1939.
Clutterbuck was born in British India, and was the daughter of Thomas St. Quentin Clutterbuck, a British army officer.
After her death in 1951, Clutterbuck was identified by Gerald Gardner as a leading member of the New Forest coven of witches into which he claimed to have been initiated in September 1939.
Gardner's statements were interpreted by his pupil Doreen Valiente as implying that Clutterbuck had personally initiated him into the coven, but later authors such as Philip Heselton and Eleanor Bone claim that his initiator was in fact Edith Woodford-Grimes.
It continues to be debated whether Gardner's claims that Clutterbuck was involved in pagan witchcraft were true, or whether Gardner used the name of a respectable local worthy as a private joke and in order to distract attention from his true magical partner, Edith Woodford-Grimes.
Conversely, Philip Heselton has concluded that Clutterbuck definitely was involved in occult activities, and that her practice of Christianity was social and conventional in nature.
At one point the standard bearers, an Ensign James Hulton Clutterbuck, was killed carrying the Queen's Colour, and Ensign Heneage Twysden was mortally wounded carrying the Regimental Colour.
Faced with challenges from sceptics, Valiente attempted, with some success, to provide evidence for Gardner's claims concerning his initiation, notably by identifying the woman Gardner called ' Old Dorothy ' as Dorothy Clutterbuck in 1980, the woman who was supposed to have performed Gardner's initiation, in an essay published in The Witches ' Way by Janet and Stewart Farrar.
The area was previously served by Houston City Councilmember District C ( Anne Clutterbuck as of 2009 ).
Andrew James Clutterbuck was born in London, the younger son of a South African mother, a nurse, and an English father, a civil engineer.
The eldest son of William George Mount of Wasing Place, Berkshire and wife Marianne Emily Clutterbuck, he was educated at Eton and New College, Oxford where he achieved honours in classics and modern history.
The name " Foreign Engine " was applied by Martin Clutterbuck and is derived from the fact that in the Railway Series, engines not from the Island of Sodor are described as " foreign ".
Aviatrix Beryl Markham ( née Clutterbuck ) was born in Westfield House and lived here until her family moved to Kenya when she was four years old.
Later research by Philip Heselton, which was published in the early twenty-first century, came to a different conclusion, indicating that there was much evidence for a coven of practitioners, whose members he identified as being Dorothy Clutterbuck, Edith Woodford-Grimes, Ernest Mason, Susie Mason, Rosamund Sabine and Katherine Oldmeadow.

Clutterbuck and identified
Doreen Valiente, one of Gardner's priestesses, later identified the woman who initiated Gardner as Dorothy Clutterbuck, referenced in A Witches ' Bible by Janet and Stewart Farrar.
Although not specifically defined by any of the Awdrys, Martin Clutterbuck has identified Terence's most likely prototype as a Caterpillar Model Seventy – the largest, and last, design of petrol ( gasoline )- powered tractors in Caterpillar's range – of about 1934-vintage.

Clutterbuck and .
* Terrorism and guerrilla warfare: forecasts and remedies by Richard L. Clutterbuck, Routledge: New York, USA.
Clutterbuck appears to have been an outwardly respectable member of the local community, a supporter of the Conservative Party and the Church of England.
Clutterbuck had reverted to her maiden name by the time of her death.
Some writers, such as Jeffrey Russell, suggested that Clutterbuck had been invented by Gardner, but Valiente obtained her birth, marriage and death certificates and published a basic outline of her life in 1982.
Ronald Hutton and Leo Ruickbie have concluded that Clutterbuck is unlikely to have been involved in Gardner's activities, in particular because of her apparent commitment to Christianity.
Clutterbuck left three volumes of diaries, which are actually more similar to commonplace books, filled with daily poems and illustrations and intended to be read by visitors to her home.
They therefore took out a suit of habeas corpus and two doctors, George Birkbeck and Henry Clutterbuck examined Matthews, declaring him sane.
Instead of taking up residence, they let the house to the Clutterbuck family, who loved the house so much that when they left in 1909 they had a near replica built in Bedfordshire at Putteridge Bury.
The director fires Bakshi immediately and calls the studio head, General Fred Clutterbuck ( J. Edward McKinley ), about the mishap.
Clutterbuck writes down Bakshi's name in order to blacklist him, but he inadvertently writes Bakshi's name on the guest list of his upcoming dinner party.

was and practising
The connection many of them had with the church was of the slenderest kind, consisting mainly in adopting the title of abbé, after a remarkably moderate course of theological study, practising celibacy and wearing a distinctive dress — a short dark-violet coat with narrow collar.
He was called to the bar at the Middle Temple in 1976 and became a practising barrister, specialising in criminal law.
Rau was known as a practising Christian ( and sometimes titled, " Brother John ", to ridicule his intense Christian position ; however, he sometimes used this term himself ).
In the 7th century, the nominally Christian aristocracy of Benevento was still practising pagan rituals, such as sacrifices in " sacred " woods.
Following his mother's example, Mao also became a practising Buddhist from an early age, venerating a bronze statue of the Buddha which was in their home, but abandoned this faith in his mid-teenage years.
In fact, her voice could reach down to f < sub > 3 </ sub > only while practising: in public her lowest note was g < sub > 3 </ sub >.
Alboni also reported that on practising she could sometimes climb up to e < sub > 6 </ sub > flat ( Pougin, 2001, p. 96 ).</ ref > was said to possess at once power, sweetness, fullness, and extraordinary flexibility.
Keating was educated at Catholic schools ; he was the first practising Catholic Labor prime minister since James Scullin left office in 1932.
Trudeau began practising the Japanese martial art Judo sometime in the mid-1950s when he was in his mid-thirties, and by the end of the decade he was ranked ik-kyū ( brown belt ).
The initial reaction to the Court was a good one, from politicians, practising lawyers and academics alike.
He was inspired by hearing his mother practising the piano in the evenings – mostly works by Chopin and Beethoven – and composed his first piano composition at the age of five, an ' Indian Gallop ', which was written down by his mother: this was in the Lydian mode ( a major scale with a raised 4th scale degree ) as the young Prokofiev felt ' reluctance to tackle the black notes '.
Menelik was said to be a practising Jew who was given a replica of the Ark of the Covenant by King Solomon ; and, moreover, that the original was switched and went to Axum with him and his mother, and is still there, guarded by a single priest charged with caring for the artifact as his life's task.
The group has disparate views of social policy: Thatcher herself was socially conservative and a practising Methodist but the free-market wing in the Conservative Party harbour a range of social opinions from the civil libertarian views of Michael Portillo, Daniel Hannan, Douglas Carswell and David Davis to the traditional conservatism of William Hague.
The Sumerian city of Eridu, on what was then the Persian Gulf, was the world's first city, where three separate cultures fused-that of peasant farmers, living in mud-brick huts and practising irrigation ; that of mobile nomadic pastoralists living in black tents and following herds of sheep and goats ; and that of fisher folk, living in reed huts in the marshlands.
However, so the story goes, John Willes became the first bowler to use a " round-arm " technique after practising with his sister Christina, who had used the technique, as she was unable to bowl underarm due to her wide dress impeding her delivery of the ball.
Also addressed in the synod was that Christians who stopped practising during Emperor Decius ’ s persecution could receive communion only after doing penance.
Also an astrologer, he was charged with practising magic: the specific accusations being that he got back, by the aid of the devil, all the money he paid away, and that he possessed the philosopher's stone.
He was called to the bar in 1876 and became prosperous in the early 1880s from practising at the chancery bar.

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