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Ingle (surname)
Ingle is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Brendan Ingle (1940–2018), Irish boxer * Christofer Drew Ingle (born 1991), American acoustic pop musician *Doug Ingle (born 1945), American rock musician *Dwight Ingle (1907–1978), American physiologist and endocrinologist * James Addison Ingle (1867–1903), American missionary to China *John Ingle (1928–2012), American actor * John Stuart Ingle (1933–2010), American painter * Phillip Ingle (1961–1995), American murderer *Reggie Ingle (1903–1992), English cricketer and lawyer *Richard Ingle (1609–1653), English colonial seaman, ship captain, tobacco trader, privateer, and pirate *Sophie Ingle (born 1991), Welsh association football player * William Ingle (1828–1870), 19th century British sculptor * William Ingle (cricketer) (1856–1899), New Zealand cricketer See also *Ingles (surname) Ingles is an Old English surname. Notable people with the surname include: *William Ingles (1729-1782), soldier and j ...
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Brendan Ingle
Brendán Îngle (19 June 1940 – 25 May 2018) was an Irish boxing trainer, manager and former professional boxer based in Sheffield, England. Ingle trained four world champions in total at his Wincobank gym, including Johnny Nelson, "Prince" Naseem Hamed, Junior Witter, and Kell Brook. Professional career He had a professional record of 19 wins and 14 losses. Boxing trainer While living in Wincobank, Sheffield, England, Ingle was asked by a local vicar to carry out some community work because youth in the area were "running wild." He knew nothing but boxing, but he organised a weekly dance at St Thomas' church hall and the boxing gym St Thomas' Boys & Girls Club was opened. Herol "Bomber" Graham, undefeated in ten years is what Ingle would call "the best person to come out of our gym," although perhaps Ingle is best known for being Naseem Hamed's mentor from the age of seven to 25. He has also trained former IBF Light Heavyweight titlist Clinton Woods and was the trainer ...
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Christofer Drew Ingle
Christofer Drew Ingle (born Christopher Drew Ingle; February 11, 1991) is an American musician best known as the frontman and guitarist of former bands indie rock Never Shout Never, and experimental metal band Eat Me Raw. In 2019, he became a father to son Lion Ezra Drew Ingle. Early life Ingle was born in Oceanside, California to Nancy Keifner and Edward Ingle. He is of English, Irish, and German descent. He was raised in Joplin, Missouri. Music career Never Shout Never (2007–present) Originally a solo project, Ingle began making music under the alias ''NeverShoutNever!'' in 2007 (age 16). His first exposure came through the internet, where he achieved success on MySpace before issuing the extended play, ''The Yippee EP'' on July 29, 2008. On July 30, 2008, he was featured on TRL, where he performed his single "Bigcitydreams." He toured with Hellogoodbye and Ace Enders in the fall of 2008. The spelling was later changed to 'Never Shout Never', and went on to form ...
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Doug Ingle
Douglas Lloyd Ingle (born September 9, 1945) is an American musician, best known as the founder and former organist, primary composer, and lead vocalist for the band Iron Butterfly. Ingle wrote the band's iconic song "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida", which was first released in 1968. He is the last surviving original band member and the last of the classic 1967–69 lineup. Ingle had a short stint with the pop group Stark Naked and the Car Thieves in the early 1970s after he left Iron Butterfly. Early life and career Ingle was born in Omaha, Nebraska. His father Lloyd, a church organist, introduced him to music at an early age. Ingle moved from his native Nebraska within three months of his birth to the Rocky Mountains and later the family moved to San Diego. Ingle founded Iron Butterfly in San Diego in 1966, remaining with the group when they relocated to Los Angeles later that year, and became part of the group's classic lineup, featuring Ingle, drummer Ron Bushy, guitarist Erik Brann a ...
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Dwight Ingle
Dwight Joyce Ingle (September 4, 1907 – July 28, 1978) was an American physiologist and endocrinologist who was the chairman of the physiology department at the University of Chicago. His obituary in the National Academy of Sciences' ''Biographical Memoirs'' described him as "a first-rank, pioneering scientist in a new and uncharted field .e. endocrinology">endocrinology.html" ;"title=".e. endocrinology">.e. endocrinology" Ingle is known for his development of a bioassay for adrenocortical hormones in rats that was used to purify cortisone. He conducted much of the research that led to the development of this assay while working at the company Upjohn. He later resigned from Upjohn after the company's owner insisted on marketing a compound that showed no activity when tested with Ingle's own assay. He also conducted pioneering research on the ergogenic effects of exposure to glucocorticoids. He was also known for his controversial views on race and intelligence, arguing in 1961 ...
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James Addison Ingle
James Addison Ingle () (11 March 1867 – 7 December 1903) was an American missionary to China and first bishop of the Missionary District of Hankow. Early life and education Born on March 11, 1867 in Frederick, Maryland, Ingle was the son of Rev. Osborne Ingle (1837-1909), who served more than four decades as rector of All Saints Church, Frederick, Maryland and his wife Mary Mills Addison. Ingle attended the local Frederick schools, then graduated from the Episcopal High School of Virginia at Alexandria, Virginia. He obtained his B.A. degree from the University of Virginia in 1885 and his M.A. from the same institution in 1888. After teaching at a private academy in Charlottesville in 1886-7, Ingle decided to study for the priesthood. He graduated from Virginia Theological Seminary (in 1891), and was ordained deacon at his home parish, All Saints Church, Frederick, on 29 January 1891 by Bishop William Paret. The same prelate raised to him the priesthood in Baltimore on June 7, ...
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John Ingle
John Houston Ingle (May 7, 1928 – September 16, 2012) was an American actor best known for his roles as scheming patriarch Edward Quartermaine in the ABC soap opera ''General Hospital'' and Mr. Threehorn, the father of the main character Cera in the '' Land Before Time''. Career A retired school teacher, Ingle began mainstream acting in 1985 doing various guest appearances; one of his first cinema appearances was a performance of the song "Puzzling Evidence" in the 1986 David Byrne musical, '' True Stories'' (his recording of the song would not be released until 2018). In 1993, he took over the role of Edward Quartermaine in ''General Hospital''. He had appeared on "General Hospital" in the late 1980s as a W.S.B. associate of Anna Devane. In December 2003, Ingle was fired and Edward was to be killed off. Without a contract to keep him at ''General Hospital'', Ingle was free to court other offers and accepted the contract role of Mickey Horton, as a recast for the retirin ...
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John Stuart Ingle
John Stuart Ingle (1933 – October 30, 2010) was an American contemporary realist artist, known for his meticulously rendered watercolor paintings, typically still lifes. Some criticism has characterized Ingle's work as a kind of magic realism. Ingle was born in Indiana and died, aged 77, in Minnesota. Significant critical recognition of Ingle's work has included the publication of a book, ''The Eye and the Heart: Watercolors of John Stuart Ingle'' (Rizzoli International, 1988), authored by Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist John Camp, and including an introduction by Frank H. Goodyear, Jr., president of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (and author of ''Contemporary Realism since 1960''). The 110-page book on Ingle was published in conjunction with major solo exhibitions jointly sponsored by the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut, and the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science in Evansville, Indiana. Style: intense, "virtuoso" realism A 1991 '' ...
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Phillip Ingle
Phillip Lee Ingle (August 7, 1961 – September 22, 1995) was an American serial killer who murdered two elderly couples in Cherryville, North Carolina in 1991. Before he was arrested, Ingle, who knew one pair of his victims, confessed to a friend, saying he enjoyed watching people die in agony. After being sentenced to death, he waived his appeals, saying that he wanted to spare the families of his victims from any more pain. He was executed in 1995. Early life Ingle was born on August 7, 1961, in Lincoln County, North Carolina. He had a very troublesome childhood. According to family friends, his mother and father split soon after he was born, and his mother was around only from time to time. In addition, family members said that Ingle's cousin sexually abused him during childhood. Ingle attempted to commit suicide when he was five or six years old, and was treated for psychiatric issues several times in the late 1980s. Ingle previously served time in jail for breaking and e ...
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Reggie Ingle
Reginald Addington Ingle (5 November 1903 – 19 December 1992) was a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Somerset from 1923 to 1939 and captained the side from 1932 to 1937. Ingle also played cricket for Cambridge University, but failed to win a blue. He was born at Bodmin, Cornwall and died at Bath, Somerset. A right-handed middle-order batsman, Ingle was a regular player for 10 years in the Somerset side from 1927 to 1937, an era in which the team's batting was dominated by amateur cricketers. A member of a legal family from Bath, Ingle himself practised as a solicitor in the city and for much of the 1930s, the Somerset side had three Bath solicitors in its ranks, with Bunty Longrigg, Ingle's successor as captain, appearing alongside Dickie Burrough. Early life and cricket career Ingle went to Oundle School, heading the school batting averages in 1921. He made his first-class debut for Somerset in a rain-ruined match against Essex at Taunton in August 1923. He made 5 ...
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Richard Ingle
Richard Ingle (1609–1653) was an English colonial seaman, ship captain, tobacco trader, privateer, and pirate in the American colony of Maryland. Ingle took over the colonial capital of the proprietary government in St. Mary's City removing Catholic Governor Lord Baltimore from power in 1645. Along with another Protestant rebel, Captain William Claiborne, he waged war with the Catholic colonial Governor Lord Baltimore and Maryland Catholics in the name of English Parliament after his ship was seized and confiscated and siding with the Maryland Puritans, in a period known as the "Plundering Time" in which unrest and lawlessness existed. Ingle and his men attacked ships and conquered the colonial capital, St. Mary's City, Province of Maryland. Most of the Richard Ingle's life and background are unknown. Early life Richard Ingle was born in England, possibly in London, into a Protestant family that schooled him. He became a trader and ship captain. He transported the goods of ...
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Sophie Ingle
Sophie Louise Ingle (born 2 September 1991) is a Welsh footballer who plays for the FA WSL club Chelsea and is the captain of the Wales national team. She has previously represented Bristol Academy, Cardiff City, and Liverpool. Ingle plays as either a defender or defensive midfielder. In 2020, her Chelsea goal against Arsenal was nominated for the FIFA Puskas Award. Club career Ingle began her football career with boys' team Vale Wanderers. Despite making an appeal to the Football Association of Wales (FAW), rules prevented Ingle from playing with the boys beyond the age of 12. She spent a year away from football and then had brief spells with Vale Wanderers' girls and Dinas Powys Ladies. This preceded the teenage Ingle's move to Cardiff City Ladies. After a period in the reserves, Ingle broke into Cardiff's FA Women's Premier League team during season 2007–08. After winning the Welsh Cup twice with Cardiff, Ingle signed for WSL outfit Chelsea Ladies ahead of the 2012 c ...
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William Ingle
William Ingle (1828 – 25 March 1870) was an architectural sculptor in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. He specialised in delicately undercut bas relief and small stand-alone stone sculptures of natural and imaginary flora and fauna on churches and on civic, commercial and domestic buildings. He was apprenticed to his uncle Robert Mawer. After Mawer's death in 1854 he worked in partnership with his aunt Catherine Mawer and his cousin Charles Mawer in the company Mawer and Ingle. Notable works by Ingle exist on Leeds Town Hall, Endcliffe Hall, Sheffield and Moorlands House, Leeds. He sometimes exhibited gentle humour in his ecclesiastical work, such as faces peering through greenery, and mischievous humour on secular buildings, such as comic rabbits and frogs among foliage. He died of tuberculosis at age 41 years, having suffered the disease for two years. Early life William Ingle (1828 – 25 March 1870) Deaths Mar 1870 Ingle William 41 Leeds vol9b p359. The certificate says ...
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