Record

StorageSiteUCL Special Collections
LevelItem
Reference Number GASTER/1/A/1/1697
TitleMagnus, Philip and Katie: Visiting card
Datepost 1885, pre 1894
DescriptionVisiting card of 'Sir Philip and Lady Magnus', 48 Gloucester Place, Portman Square, London W; with handwritten message of thanks for sympathy.
Extent1 item
AdminHistoryPhilip Magnus, born in London, second of the five children of Jacob Magnus, a tailor and later a wine merchant, and his wife, Caroline Barnett, 1842; educated at Poland Street Academy, 1850-1854, and University College School, 1854-1858; degree in arts and science, University College London, 1858-1864; attended Berlin University, 1864-1866; assistant minister of the West London Synagogue of British Jews, 1866-1880; tutored private students in mathematics, mechanics, and physics; lectured in applied mathematics at University College London and at University College School and University College Hospital; visiting lecturer in the theory and practice of education at Stockwell Training College; married his second cousin Katie Emanuel, 1870; organizing secretary and director of the City and Guilds of London Institute, 1880-1915; member of the Royal Commission on Technical Instruction, 1881-1884; knighted 1886; responsible for inclusion of a faculty of engineering at the reconstructed London University in 1889; served on the London school board, 1890-1891; moved to Chilworth, Surrey, 1893; Fellow of London University and Member of the Senate, 1898-1931; MP for London University, 1906-1922; created baronet, 1917; Vice-President of Council and Chairman, Royal Society of Arts, 1927-1928; examiner and President of Council, College of Preceptors; member of the executive committee of the National Association for the Promotion of Technical and Secondary Education; served on the committee which reported in favour of the creation of the Imperial College of Science and Technology; Trustee, City Parochial Charities and Mitchell Charity; Member of Education Committee, Surrey CC; President of University of London Unionist Association; Governor of Royal Grammar School, Guildford, Northampton Polytechnic, and other institutions; Chairman of the Council of the West London Synagogue; Vice-President, Board of Deputies of British Jews; Vice-President, Anglo-Jewish Association; Vice-President, Jews' College; Chairman, Jewish War Memorial Council; one of the founders of the anti-Zionist League of British Jews; died 1933. Publications include: 'Lessons in Elementary Mechanics' (1875); 'Educational Aims and Efforts, 1880-1910' (1910); entry on technical education in the eleventh edition of the 'Encyclopaedia Britannica'. Katie Magnus, born in Portsmouth, daughter of Emanuel Emanuel, a goldsmith and the first Jewish mayor of Portsmouth, and his wife, Julia Moss, 1844; taught at the Portsmouth sabbath school and synagogue and at West London Synagogue and the Bayswater Jewish schools; founded the Jewish Girls' Club in the East End, 1886; assisted Lily Montagu at the West Central Girls' Club, 1893; involved with several philanthropic causes within the Jewish community, including the ladies' committee of the Jews' Deaf and Dumb Home and the Jewish Home for Incurables; active in the Jewish Association for the Protection of Girls and Women; died 1924. Publications include: 'About the Jews in Bible Times (1881); 'Outlines of Jewish History' (1886); 'Jewish Portraits' (1888); traditional and historical tales for young readers (some under the nom de plume H N); and articles for journals such as the 'National Review', the 'Westminster Gazette', and the 'Jewish Chronicle'.
AccessStatusOpen
AccessConditionsAvailable subject to the usual conditions of access to Archives and Manuscripts material, after the completion of a Reader's Registration Form. This item is also available online through our Digital Collections website: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/library/collections/ucl-digital-collections/browse-collections/jewish-collections
Related MaterialUniversity College London Special Collections holds other ephemera of Philip and Katie Magnus (available on the UCL Digital Collections website) and correspondence between Philip Magnus and Moses Gaster (Ref: GASTER/9).
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