JACKSON P C: Difference between revisions

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===His father===
===His father===


Dr Arthur Randall Jackson (his father 1877-1944) is sometimes known as the “Father of British Arachnology”. He studied Medicine and Zoology at Liverpool before setting up a practise originally in Hexham but moving to Chester in 1905, where he lived at "Westcote" (now the Bawn Lodge}. Described by compatriots as of rugged build both strong and tough he could be cynical but kind and sensitive. As a GP he was noted for his accuracy in diagnosis. He described himself as a “….cyclist, spider hunter and bird watcher.” He was a distinguished amateur scientist and became an acknowledged expert on British spiders discovering 47 new species. He wrote a number of papers and books on the subject and won the Charles Kingsley Medal for his work. On the outbreak of the Great War he enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps and was appointed a Captain and the Medical Officer of the [https://www.wartimememoriesproject.com/greatwar/allied/battalion.php?pid=7008 9<sup>th</sup> Seaforth Highlanders] with whom he served in France and Flanders from March 1916 until the end of the War. He was noted by his men for his jokes and stories as well as what some of them considered his eccentric habit of collecting natural history samples in the front line, including spiders which he sent back to [https://www.britishspiders.org.uk/system/files/library/190002.pdf Octavius Pickard-Cambridge] (1828–1917) at Oxford. In late 1917 he was awarded the Military Cross for “… conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty….in his efforts to get in casualties, repeatedly going forward through enemy barrages…” (Edinburgh Gazette March 11<sup>th</sup> 1918). On his death in 1944 he donated his personal collection of art to the Atkinson Museum, Southport in memory of his son who was killed with the RAF in WW2. Prior to "Westcote" being built it was the site of an earlier public house.
Dr Arthur Randall Jackson (his father 1877-1944) is sometimes known as the “Father of British Arachnology”. He studied Medicine and Zoology at Liverpool before setting up a practise originally in Hexham but moving to Chester in 1905, where he lived at "Westcote" (now the Bawn Lodge}. Described by compatriots as of rugged build both strong and tough he could be cynical but kind and sensitive. As a GP he was noted for his accuracy in diagnosis. He described himself as a “….cyclist, spider hunter and bird watcher.” He was a distinguished amateur scientist and became an acknowledged expert on British spiders discovering 47 new species. He wrote a number of papers and books on the subject and won the Charles Kingsley Medal for his work. On the outbreak of the Great War he enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps and was appointed a Captain and the Medical Officer of the [https://www.wartimememoriesproject.com/greatwar/allied/battalion.php?pid=7008 9<sup>th</sup> Seaforth Highlanders] with whom he served in France and Flanders from March 1916 until the end of the War. He was noted by his men for his jokes and stories as well as what some of them considered his eccentric habit of collecting natural history samples in the front line, including spiders which he sent back to [https://www.britishspiders.org.uk/system/files/library/190002.pdf Octavius Pickard-Cambridge] (1828–1917) at Oxford. In late 1917 he was awarded the Military Cross for “… conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty….in his efforts to get in casualties, repeatedly going forward through enemy barrages…” (Edinburgh Gazette March 11<sup>th</sup> 1918). On his death in 1944 he donated his personal collection of art to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atkinson_Art_Gallery_and_Library Atkinson Museum, Southport] in memory of his son who was killed with the RAF in WW2. Prior to "Westcote" being built it was the site of an earlier public house.


'''Observer 25 March 1944''' carries the Obituary of Dr A R Jackson, which among other details tells us “''Dr Jackson began his practice in Hoole before the last War, in which he served with distinction as a Captain in the RAMC, attached to the Seaforth Highlanders, and was awarded the Military Cross.''”
'''Observer 25 March 1944''' carries the Obituary of Dr A R Jackson, which among other details tells us “''Dr Jackson began his practice in Hoole before the last War, in which he served with distinction as a Captain in the RAMC, attached to the Seaforth Highlanders, and was awarded the Military Cross.''”

Revision as of 23:54, 24 February 2023

JACKSON, Philip Corfield

Regiment: 180 Sqn. Royal Air Force

Rank: Flying Officer / navigator

Died: 13 June 1943

Aged: 31

Buried/ Memorial: Runnymede Memorial

Address: 8 Hoole Road, Hoole


Cheshire Observer 15 January 1944

JACKSON- missing since 13th June 1943, now presumed killed in action, Flying Officer Philip Corfield Jackson, RAFVR, husband of Margaret (nee Huxley) and son of Doctor A R Jackson and the late Mrs Jackson of Hoole, Chester.

Jackson was navigator on a Type B-25 Mitchell II (serial FL677) out of RAF Foulsham, Norfolk, which was taking part in a raid on the Schelde shipyard and the Dornier aircraft wing factory at Flushing. His aircraft came under intense fire from Marine Flak Abteilung 810 and crashed into the Westernschelde at 09:17 hrs. The only body recovered was that of the pilot.

His father

Dr Arthur Randall Jackson (his father 1877-1944) is sometimes known as the “Father of British Arachnology”. He studied Medicine and Zoology at Liverpool before setting up a practise originally in Hexham but moving to Chester in 1905, where he lived at "Westcote" (now the Bawn Lodge}. Described by compatriots as of rugged build both strong and tough he could be cynical but kind and sensitive. As a GP he was noted for his accuracy in diagnosis. He described himself as a “….cyclist, spider hunter and bird watcher.” He was a distinguished amateur scientist and became an acknowledged expert on British spiders discovering 47 new species. He wrote a number of papers and books on the subject and won the Charles Kingsley Medal for his work. On the outbreak of the Great War he enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps and was appointed a Captain and the Medical Officer of the 9th Seaforth Highlanders with whom he served in France and Flanders from March 1916 until the end of the War. He was noted by his men for his jokes and stories as well as what some of them considered his eccentric habit of collecting natural history samples in the front line, including spiders which he sent back to Octavius Pickard-Cambridge (1828–1917) at Oxford. In late 1917 he was awarded the Military Cross for “… conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty….in his efforts to get in casualties, repeatedly going forward through enemy barrages…” (Edinburgh Gazette March 11th 1918). On his death in 1944 he donated his personal collection of art to the Atkinson Museum, Southport in memory of his son who was killed with the RAF in WW2. Prior to "Westcote" being built it was the site of an earlier public house.

Observer 25 March 1944 carries the Obituary of Dr A R Jackson, which among other details tells us “Dr Jackson began his practice in Hoole before the last War, in which he served with distinction as a Captain in the RAMC, attached to the Seaforth Highlanders, and was awarded the Military Cross.

Sources