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Examination marks notebook and related papers of Arthur Smithells

Archive File: MS 360

Details

Type of record: Archive

Title: Examination marks notebook and related papers of Arthur Smithells

Level: File

Classmark: MS 360

Creator(s): Smithells, Arthur (1860-1939)

Date(s): 1889-1893

Language: English

Size and medium: 1 vol. (40 ff.) plus 2 ff. in 1 envelope and 11 ff. (MS 360a, loose papers removed from the main volume) in a separate envelope

Persistent link: https://explore.library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections-explore/5195

Description

Notebook and papers relating to students' examinations and their marks. Duplicated copy of lists of candidates and their marks for Akroyd and Brown Entrance Scholarships in 1891 is attached between ff. 20 and 21.

Biography or history

Arthur Smithells (1860-1939) was born at Bury in Lancashire. He graduated in chemistry at Owen's College, Manchester, in 1881 (B.Sc., London), and continued his training in Heidelberg, under R.B. von Bunsen, and in Munich. He returned to Manchester as an assistant lecturer in 1883 but in 1885 was appointed professor of chemistry at the Yorkshire College in Leeds. Here he not only pursued his research into the structure of flames, which was his main contribution to pure science, but also played a full part in the broader development of the College and of the University of Leeds which it became in 1904. He was elected FRS in 1901 and was vice-president of the Royal Society in 1916. In 1913-14 he was a special visiting lecturer in chemistry at the Punjab University, Lahore. In the First World War he offered his services as an instructor in scientific matters to the Northern Command and soon became (1916-19) chief chemical adviser on anti-gas training for the Home Forces, with an office in
the Horse Guards in London. He was granted the honorary rank of lieutenant-colonel, and was appointed C.M.G. in 1918 in recognition of his services. He resigned his chair at Leeds in 1923 to become the director of the Salters' Institute of Industrial Chemistry in London, and subsequently he was president of the Institute of Chemistry from 1927 to 1930. He devoted much time in his later years to encouraging the training of chemists and to arousing public concern at the dangers of chemical warfare and the need to make preparations against it.

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