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Walter John Kilner MRCP (1847–1920) was a British medical electrician at St. Thomas Hospital, London. There, from 1879 to 1893, he was in charge of electrotherapy. He was also in private medical practice, in Ladbroke Grove, London. He wrote papers on a range of subjects but is today best remembered for his late study The Human Atmosphere
Kilner is a surname, and may refer to: Andy Kilner (born 1966), ... Walter John Kilner (1847–1920), British doctor who investigated the "aura" See also.
The Kilner Jar was originally invented by John Kilner (1792–1857) and associates, [4] and made by a firm of glass bottlemakers from Yorkshire called Kilner which he set up. [5] The original Kilner bottlemakers operated from 1842, when the company was first founded, until 1937, when the company went into liquidation.
Around 1938, General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, the head of the United States Army Air Corps, was growing alarmed at the possibility of war in Europe and in the Pacific.. Hoping to be prepared for the long-term requirements of the Air Corps, Arnold created a special committee chaired by Brigadier General Walter G. Kilner; one of its members was Charles Lin
In 1977, he was again portrayed on film by actor Walter O. Miles in the two-part opus The Amazing Howard Hughes, starring Tommy Lee Jones as Hughes. Arnold appeared in a speaking role as himself in Men of the Sky , a Technicolor propaganda short made by Warner Brothers and released on 25 July 1942.
Representation of a human aura, after a diagram by Walter John Kilner (1847–1920) New Age beliefs List of New Age topics; Concepts; ... Gregory John (1 January 1986).
John F. Kilner (born August 12, 1952) is a bioethicist who held the Franklin and Dorothy Forman endowed chair in ethics and theology at Trinity International University, where he was also Professor of Bioethics and Contemporary Culture and Director of Bioethics Degree Programs.
Walter John Kilner was born in 1847, while the company opened in 1842. This means he can't have been the original John Kilner Sr. His four sons split the company after his death in 1857 (WJK would only have been 10 years old), their names were John Jr., Caleb, George, and William.