David Prain, 1857 - 1944

1944 ◽  
Vol 4 (13) ◽  
pp. 746-770

Sir David Prain’s parents were David Prain, a native of Inchture in eastern Perthshire, and Mary Thomson, of Alford, in the Don valley, Aberdeenshire. He was the elder of two children by this marriage, born 11 July 1857; the second son, William, was born 23 December 1861. The family preserved a tradition that their surname had been brought into Scotland by three brothers, Huguenot weavers; but papers in Sir David’s handwriting, which Mr William Prain has kindly allowed the writer to see, show that this tradition is not quite accurate: importation of the surname by weavers is accepted, either by one with three children who followed their father’s calling, or by these three when already grown up; but, as the surname was already in Scotland nearly thirty years before the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, the immigrants would not be Huguenots; and, moreover, Huguenot weavers did not settle at any time in the part of Perthshire whence the surname Prain radiated. The weavers could have been, and probably were, fugitives via Holland from religious persecution at the time of the Thirty Years War (1618-1648). Dundee had its weavers from more than a century earlier; and the newcomers were welcome among them because they brought as a new technique the weaving of a coarse linen in demand on the plantations in America; but circumstances scattered them through the villages; and it is from the slopes of the Sidlaw Hills that the first records of the name Prain come. The family papers from which the above data are taken, show another circumstance of greater interest than the origin of the name, hidden in the maiden names of the wives of these Prains, names which demonstrate how completely the Prains became absorbed in the Lowland Scotch population of the Carse of Gowrie and the hills rising over it. One line of the family appears in parish records from Fife, but died out. The line that interests us was always in eastern Perthshire up to a migration by Sir David’s father northwards to Fettercairn in Kincardineshire.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 680-681
Author(s):  
S. Robert Lewis

I offer my recent observation on a new technique for following the passage of a coin through the digestive tract. Several months ago I was called by a distraught mother who informed me that her 7-year-old daughter had just swallowed a quarter. X-ray did reveal the coin located in the stomach. I reassured the family informing them that it would pass through in the next few days. After about two weeks of stool gazing and nonpassage the child was x-rayed again, and to my dismay I noted that the coin had not budged and less reassuringly sent them home to await passage of the pesky coin.


2002 ◽  
Vol 67 (7) ◽  
pp. 991-1006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Burke ◽  
Ruaraidh McIntosh ◽  
David Ellis ◽  
Georgina M. Rosair ◽  
Alan J. Welch

Attempted crystallographic studies of the known compounds 4-Cp-4,1,8-closo-CoC2B10H12 and 4-Cp-4,1,12-closo-CoC2B10H12 were frustrated because of disorder which was impossible satisfactorily to model. Thus the family of Cp* compounds 4-Cp*-4,1,6-closo-CoC2B10H12, 4-Cp*-4,1,8-closo-CoC2B10H12 and 4-Cp*-4,1,12-closo-CoC2B10H12 were prepared. The 11B NMR spectroscopic properties of these compounds are closely similar to those of their Cp analogues. All three compounds were studied crystallographically. The 4,1,8- and 4,1,12-species are isomorphous and partially disordered, however the disorder was successfully modelled and structural analyses of 4,1,8- and 4,1,12-MC2B10 compounds are reported for the first time. A new technique for distinguishing between cage C and B atoms in crystallographic study of (hetero)carboranes is reported. The 12-vertex compound 3-Cp*-3,1,2-closo-CoC2B9H11 is formed as a minor co-product along with 4-Cp*-4,1,6-closo-CoC2B10H12 and is believed to result from partial degradation of the latter. The 12-vertex species has also been subjected to crystallographic analysis.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. S543-S543
Author(s):  
Satoshi Kimura ◽  
Keigo Matsumoto ◽  
Yoshio Imahori ◽  
Katsuyoshi Mineura ◽  
Toshiyuki Itoh

2009 ◽  
Vol 56 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
J Bickenbach ◽  
R Rossaint ◽  
R Autschbach ◽  
R Dembinski

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