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Heslop
Heslop is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Aidan Heslop (born 2002), British diver *Barbara Heslop (1925–2013), New Zealand immunologist *Desiree Heslop (born 1961), British singer *Gavin Heslop (born 1997), American football player *George Heslop (1940–2006), English footballer *Gerald Heslop (1879–1913), English cricketer *Harold Heslop (1898–1983), English writer *Ian Heslop (1904–1970)), British naturalist and marksman *J Malan Heslop (1923–2011), American photographer who documented evidence of Nazi war crimes *John William Heslop–Harrison FRSE (1881–1967), British biologist, father of... **Jack Heslop-Harrison FRSE (1920–1998), British botanist **Dr George Heslop-Harrison FRSE (1911–1964) entomologist *Richard Heslop (director), Richard Heslop (born 1961), British television and film director *Richard Henry Heslop (1907–1973), British Special Operations Executive agent *Richard Oliver Heslop (1842–1916), British Historian, songwriter a ...
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Simon Heslop
Simon James Heslop (born 1 May 1987) is an English professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for club Scarborough Athletic. Heslop started his career at Barnsley, signing his first professional deal with the club in 2005. He made just one first-team appearance during his six-year association with the club. During his time at Barnsley, Heslop was loaned out to Conference National club Kidderminster Harriers during the 2005–06 season, and spent the following season on loan with Tamworth. He then spent time on loan with Northwich Victoria and Halifax Town during 2007–08, before having further loan spells at Grimsby Town, Kettering Town and Luton Town respectively. He was released by Barnsley in May 2010, and signed for League Two club Oxford United shortly after. Heslop made over 100 appearances for Oxford during his three-year stay there. He was released at the end of 2012–13, and subsequently signed for League One club Stevenage on a free transfer in May 2013 ...
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Ian Heslop
Ian Robert Penicuick Heslop (June 1904 – 2 June 1970) was a British naturalist, lepidopterologist and marksman. He is particularly known for his studies of the butterfly ''Apatura iris'' (purple emperor), and for his discovery of the Nigerian subspecies of the pygmy hippopotamus, named ''Choeropsis liberiensis heslopi'' after him. Born in India in 1904, Heslop grew up in Bristol, where he studied at Clifton College. His father, a soldier and keen butterfly collector, encouraged his early interest in butterflies. Heslop continued this pursuit at Cambridge University, where he studied classics and became a successful rifle and revolver shot. He donated two trophies for List of British and Irish varsity matches, varsity shooting matches – one of which is still named in his honour – between the universities of University of Oxford, Oxford and Cambridge. Heslop entered the Colonial Service in 1929 and became an administrator in the Owerri province of Nigeria, where ...
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Richard Henry Heslop
Richard Henry Heslop (23 January 1907 – 17 January 1973), DSO, code named Xavier, was an agent in France of the United Kingdom's clandestine Special Operations Executive (SOE) organization during World War II. The purpose of SOE was to conduct espionage, sabotage, and reconnaissance in countries occupied by Nazi Germany or other Axis powers. SOE agents allied themselves with resistance groups and supplied them with weapons and equipment parachuted in from England. Heslop undertook two missions to France, the first from July 1942 to June 1943 and the second and more important mission from September 1943 until September 1944. In his second mission, Heslop was the organiser of the Marksman network (or circuit) assisting one of the largest groups of the French Resistance which operated in the mountainous region near the border with Switzerland. Of the more than 400 SOE agents who worked in France during World War II, M.R.D. Foot, the official historian of the SOE, named Heslop as ...
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Gavin Heslop
Gavin Heslop (born November 13, 1997) is an American football cornerback who is a free agent. Heslop played college football at Stony Brook. Early life Heslop was born in Yonkers, New York. He attended Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains, New York, the same high school as his future college teammates including quarterback Tyquell Fields and cornerback TJ Morrison. Heslop was named to the NYSSWA First-team All-New York State, as well as the USA Today All-New York team. Heslop played a large role in Stepinac's 2014 CHSFL AAA championship team, the school's first since 1955, recording 60 tackles, three interceptions and three sacks a senior while rushing for 440 yards and six touchdowns. In 2014, Heslop also had a 68-yard interception returned for a touchdown to help Stepinac defeat rival St. Anthony's High School for the first time since 1983. College career Heslop redshirted during the 2015 season. During his freshman season in 2016, he played in eight games an ...
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Harold Heslop
Harold Heslop (1 October 1898 – 10 November 1983) was an English writer, left-wing political activist, and coalminer, from near Bishop Auckland, County Durham. Heslop's first novel ''Goaf'' was published in 1926, but it was in a Russian translation as ' and did not appear in England until 1934. In 1929, he also published his first novel in England, ''The Gate of a Strange Field'', about the 1926 United Kingdom general strike. His last novel, ''The Earth Beneath,'' was published in 1946. Early life and education Heslop was born on 1 October 1898 in the village of Hunwick, near Bishop Auckland, County Durham, to William Heslop, coalminer, and his wife, Isabel (née Whitfield). The Heslops had been miners for several generations. Heslop attended King James I Academy on a scholarship until he was thirteen, when the family moved to Boulby on the north Yorkshire coast. Because his new home was too far from the nearest grammar school, Heslop began working underground at Boulby ironsto ...
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Aidan Heslop
Aidan Heslop (born 18 April 2002) is a British diver and high diver who competes internationally representing Wales and Great Britain. At the 2018 Commonwealth Games he competed representing Wales, finishing 6th in the 10 metre platform and 12th in the 3 metre springboard. In 2021, he won the gold medal in the 27 metre high dive at the Abu Dhabi Aquatics Festival representing Great Britain, performing the highest difficulty dive, a 6.2 degree of difficulty, in history. He placed sixth in the inaugural men's high dive at the 2022 European Aquatics Championships. Background Heslop was born 18 April 2002 in Chelmsford, England."Aidan Heslop: Results"
''''. Retrieved 31 January 2022.

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J Malan Heslop
J Malan Heslop (18 June 1923 in Taylor, Weber County, Utah – 29 July 2011 Salt Lake City, Utah) was a World War II combat photographer with Arnold E. Samuelson's Combat Assignment Unit #123 of the 167th Signal Photographic Company who documented evidence of Nazi war crimes. He later served as editor of the ''Church News'' and managing editor of the ''Deseret News''. Heslop served as a freelance photographer in his native Utah and was employed at the Ogden Standard Examiner before setting off to California, where he studied the craft at Los Angeles City College. Early life J Malan Heslop was born on June 18, 1923, in Taylor, Utah. He was the oldest of three children of Jesse and Zella Malan Heslop. His family relocated to a farm in West Weber, Utah when he was three years old. Jesse Heslop encouraged and inspired J Malan Heslop's photography career. Using his father's camera, Heslop practiced taking photos and developing prints. He attended Weber High School where he par ...
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Barbara Heslop
Barbara Farnsworth Heslop (née Cupit, 26 January 1925 – 20 December 2013) was a New Zealand immunologist specialising in transplantation immunology and immunogenetics. Biography Born in Auckland, Heslop was educated at Epsom Girls' Grammar School from 1938 to 1941 and then attended the University of Otago, graduating MB ChB in 1949 and MD in 1954. She married surgeon John Herbert Heslop, noted for his work on skin carcinogenesis. They had two daughters: Helen, a transplant scientist; and Hilary, a food specialist. Heslop gained recognition in the medical community for both her research and her teaching, at a time when women scientists were scarce. She was made a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS) for services to surgical sciences in 1975. In 1990, in honour of her research achievements she was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand mainly based on her publications on allogeneic lymphocyte cytotoxicity (a natural killer cell medi ...
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Jack Heslop-Harrison
John Heslop-Harrison FRS FAAAS (10 February 1920 – 8 May 1998) was a British soldier and botanist. Early life and education He was born in Middlesbrough to John William Heslop-Harrison and his wife Christian Henderson, the last of three children. His older brother was George Heslop-Harrison. Soon after John's birth, his father, at the time a teacher at Middlesbrough High School, accepted a position at the University of Durham as a lecturer in zoology, and the family moved to Birtley, his fathers place of birth. For seven years the family lived in a small wooden cabin formerly used to house World War I refugees until Jack's father, upon his promotion to Professor of Botany, felt rich enough to buy his own house. When he was four he attended the Elizabethville Infant School, later moving to the Elizabethville Elementary School until he was 11, when he was accepted into the Chester-le-Street Secondary School. He completed the Higher School Certificate Examinations in 1938 ...
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Richard Heslop (director)
Richard Heslop (born 1961 in London) is a British director of music videos and films. He has produced videos for artists including Queen, The Cure, and New Order, as well as programmes on Channel 4 and the BBC. He has also been credited as a cinematographer and camera operator. Biography In 1986 he made the film ''Procar'' (16 mm, black and white, 19 mins.) in collaboration with Daniel Landin and Herbert Verhey with his Car Ensemble of the Netherlands (Nederlands Auto Ensemble) for live performances in Amsterdam during the Romantic Aesthetics Festival. For this project, a two-day drive-in cinema was built in the centre of the city. The film was shown later that year at the Berlin Film Festival and released as part of a compilation of British short films 1984-1987 called Fat of the Land which also included an early Tilda Swinton short ''The Sluggard'' by Joy Perino and work by Cerith Wyn Evens. In the 80s he started to create photo-montages that were exhibited in The L ...
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Richard Oliver Heslop
Richard Oliver Heslop (1842–1916) was a British businessman, author, historian, lexicologist, lexicographer, songwriter and poet. His most famous work is the two-volume "Northumberland Words". Details Richard Oliver Heslop was born 14 March 1842 in Newcastle upon Tyne, and was educated at The Old Grammar School. He was a businessman, and a joint owner of an Iron Merchants and Engineers, Heslop, Wilson and Budden, of 26 Sandhill and at the Stock Bridge. The company went into administration (or “Liquidation by arrangement or composition with creditors”) according to the ''London Gazette'' of 6 November 1874. He served as president of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne from 1914 until 1916. He compiled several books and wrote numerous papers on the subject of the North East England, the Northumberland and Geordie dialect and use of words. His best known and most popular was “'Northumberland Words' (published in 2 volumes in 1893-4)“, the firs ...
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Gerald Heslop
Gerald Gwydyr Heslop (17 April 1879 – 28 November 1913) was an English first-class cricketer who played in two matches for Cambridge University in 1898. He was born at Thames Ditton, Surrey and died at Cringleford, Norfolk. Heslop was educated at Norwich School and at Clare College, Cambridge. A batsman often used as an opener and an occasional bowler, he was picked for Minor Counties matches for Norfolk from the age of 17 in the Minor Counties Championship's inaugural season of 1895, and played for the county through to 1901. At Cambridge University however, he was unsuccessful in the two games for which he was chosen, and faced stiff competition for batting places from players such as Gilbert Jessop and Cuthbert Burnup who would subsequently go on to substantial cricket careers; though he made centuries in college matches, he was not picked again for the university side. Outside university terms, however, he continued to play for Norfolk and in 1900 he was singled out in ''W ...
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