Evening Despatch: Tuesday 26th August 1913

To Give up Public Work: Mr. and Mrs. Hume Pinsent Going Away: Municipal By-Election: Birmingham People have good reason to regret the decision of Mr. Hume Pinsent to retire from business because it means that both he and Mrs. Hume Pinsent will be leaving Birmingham very shortly to reside in the country. Mrs. Pinsent has been especially active in local affairs and her valuable work in many directions can never be forgotten by the present generation. Her impending departure means a complete severance form the educational and other work in which she had figured so prominently, and one direct outcome will be to cause a by-election in the Edgbaston Ward, which Mrs. Pinsent has represented on the city Council since 1911, when the Greater Birmingham scheme came into operation. In order that the by-election shall not clash with the November elections, Mrs. Pinsent will retire some-time in October and her successor will be chosen in the same month. ***** Photograph: Mrs. Pinsent ***** Regret to Leave Work: In an interview she said she was very sorry to have to give up her public work in Birmingham. “I should like it to be known,” she added, “that the only reason I am retiring is because we are going away, and that nothing else would have induced me to discontinue my public work in the city.” Mr. and Ms. Pinsent will leave Birmingham in the autumn, but their future place of abode has not yet been definitely selected.


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949
GRO0435 Devonport: Hume Chancellor Pinsent: 1857 – 1920