Example sentences of "he [be] appoint [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 After his return to England in 1827 he worked with his brother Henry Rome Stutchbury ( 1796–1853 ) , a dealer in natural history specimens , until in 1831 he was appointed curator of the museum of the Bristol Institution .
2 In 1823 he was appointed curator of the museum of the Bristol Institution , a post he was to hold until his death .
3 He was appointed lector at the Oxford Franciscan convent , but in 1253 a dispute arose at his presentation to incept as a doctor of theology , the opponents of the friars challenging his eligibility , as he had not been a master of arts .
4 Joint editor of the Journal of Mental Science from 1863 to 1878 , he was appointed physician to the West London Hospital in 1864 , lecturer on insanity at St Mary 's Hospital ( 1868–81 ) , professor of medical jurisprudence at University College London ( 1869–79 ) , and was elected FRCP in 1869 .
5 When he returned to Aberdeen towards the end of 1785 , he was appointed physician to the Aberdeen Dispensary .
6 Woods worked directly under Michael Balcon when he was appointed head of production in 1947 and was responsible for employing Ardizzone , Bawden , Barnett Freedman , Peake , Minton , Piper , Searle and others , to produce posters and other advertising material .
7 A period in the engineering department saw him promoted from senior mechanical engineer to head of mechanical engineering before he was appointed head of facilities for BP 's northern district which included the Buchan , Beatrice , SWOPS , Clyde , Thistle and Magnus upstream activities .
8 And I remember one , a Yorkshireman he was appointed yardmaster of Portobello Yard , and where I worked .
9 In 1863 he was appointed hydrographer to the Royal Navy in succession to Rear-Admiral John Washington [ q.v . ] .
10 In 1929 he was appointed lecturer at New College , Oxford .
11 He was appointed lecturer at St Bartholomew 's Hospital in 1863 , succeeded Michael Faraday [ q.v. ] as Fullerian professor of chemistry at the Royal Institution five years later , and in 1872 became Waynflete professor of chemistry at Oxford ( where he became a fellow of Worcester College ) , retiring in 1912 .
12 In 1890 the first edition of his Manual of Hygiene and Public Health appeared , and in 1891 he was appointed lecturer on hygiene and public health at Charing Cross Hospital medical school .
13 In May 1841 he was appointed lecturer in physiology at Charing Cross Hospital Medical School .
14 After a short time as assistant pathologist at Glasgow Royal , he was appointed lecturer in clinical pathology in the University of St Andrews in 1931 .
15 He was appointed optician in ordinary to King George IV , this post being renewed on the accessions of William IV and Queen Victoria .
16 In 1586 he was appointed chaplain to the Earl of Huntingdon , President of the Council of the North , where ‘ God so blessed his painful preaching and moderate private conference that he converted some of the Roman Catholic priests and many of the laity to the Protestant faith ’ .
17 In November of the same year he was appointed chaplain to Newgate prison , where he wrote a large number of Ordinary 's Account s of funeral sermons , confessions , and last dying words of criminals executed at Tyburn .
18 He became a vice-president of the Newcomen Society for the study of the history of engineering and technology ; he became a member of the Science Museum advisory council , and took an active part in the discussions which resulted in the establishment of the Railway Museum in York ; the National Trust made him a member of its properties committee , to advise on industrial archaeology ; and he was appointed chairman of the Council for British Archaeology research committee on industrial archaeology .
19 He was appointed Chairman of the Group on 19 June 1991 .
20 He was appointed chairman of Waterford Wedgwood U.K. plc on 19 June 1991 .
21 He was appointed chairman in a deal negotiated between Bond Corp , 19.9 per cent shareholder Adelaide Steamship and Australia 's corporate watchdog , the National Companies and Securities Commission .
22 In 1863 he had given £1,500 to the endowment fund of the Hull Seamen 's Orphanage and he was appointed chairman in 1866 .
23 He was appointed gentleman of the bedchamber to the Prince of Wales in 1791 , represented Scarborough ( 1796–1802 ) and Monmouth ( 1802–13 ) in the House of Commons , was made a privy councillor in 1797 and comptroller ( until 1804 ) of the household , then joint paymaster-general of the forces under the premiership of William Pitt and the third Duke of Portland in 1804–13 , before accepting the governorship of the Cape Colony , South Africa , where he arrived on 6 April 1814 .
24 And it should be remembered that despite a tremendous volume of criticism that heralded the Bennett appointment as the Commandant of Pathfinder Force , it was but a murmur compared with that when he was appointed AOC of No 8 ( PFF ) Group at the tender age of 31 .
25 He was appointed Keeper of Bécherel in 1368 and of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte in 1370 .
26 By 1529 he was a knight of the Body to Henry VIII ; he was appointed marshal of Berwick on Tweed in the same year and was made constable or keeper of the border castle of Bewcastle in 1531 .
27 The high point of Sir John Markham 's career came in 1549 when he was appointed lieutenant of the Tower .
28 In April 1372 he was appointed Lieutenant in Aquitaine and assembled a fleet to take money and reinforcements to the garrisons there , which were hard pressed by the French .
29 In 1870 he was appointed secretary to the royal commission on Friendly and Benefit Building Societies , and from 1874 until 1891 he was chief registrar of Friendly Societies — years he described as ‘ the happiest of my life ’ .
30 Two years later , in the aftermath of the Amsterdam Congress , he was appointed secretary with Aragon of Commune , the monthly publication of the AEAR , the Association of Revolutionary Writers and Artists .
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