Winifred M. Crompton

Winifred M. Crompton (1870 – 8 October 1932) was a British Egyptologist and curator at the Manchester Museum.

Career
Crompton began her career at the Manchester Museum as its printer. In 1912, she became the first assistant-in-charge of Egyptology, curating a collection founded on part of Flinders Petrie's, donated to Manchester by one of his financial backers, Jesse Haworth. During her tenure she corresponded with other Egyptologists to acquire more objects and expand the collection. She was appointed the Assistant Keeper of Egyptology in 1922 and remained in that position until her death in 1932.

Crompton was an informal student of Margaret Murray, whom she first met in 1906. Murray visited the Manchester Museum to assist Crompton in cataloguing Petrie's collection and the two began a correspondence that would last the rest of Crompton's life. Murray encouraged Crompton to pursue her own research in Egyptology, leading to the publication of several scholarly papers.

Crompton died on 8 October 1932.

Family
Crompton's sister, Alice Crompton, was the first woman to graduate with a degree in classics from the University of Manchester. In 1891, Alice became the head of the Manchester Settlements Women's House.