Holland, Sir Thomas Henry, (22 Nov. 1868–15 May 1947), Principal and Vice-Chancellor, University of Edinburgh, 1929–44; Member of Governor-General’s Council, India, 1920–21; President, IME, 1915–16; Indian Industrial Commission, 1916; Board of Munitions, India, 1917; InstMM 1925–27; Institution of Petroleum Technologists, 1925–27; Chairman of Council, RS Arts, 1925–27; President, British Association 1929; Geological Society, 1933–34; Chairman of Empire Council Mining and Metallurgical Institutions, 1927–30; of Departmental Committee on Qualifications of Colliery Officials, 1930; Vice-President, Royal Society, 1924–45; President, Mineralogical Society of London, 1933–36; Geographical Association, 1938; Albert Medal, RS Arts, 1939

1871 ◽  
Vol 8 (82) ◽  
pp. 145-149

There are but few men who, having passed many of the best years of their lives in almost constant retirement, have achieved so vast an amount of solid and lasting work, have attained to so high a position amongst their fellow-workers, and the award of whose numerous and well-merited honours has caused greater satisfaction among his scientific brethren than Thomas Davidson, Esq., of Muirhouse, F.R.S., F.G.S., Vice-President, of the Patæontographical Society; Member of the Geological Societies.of France, Edinburgh, and Glasgow; Member étranger de I'lnstitut des Provinces, France, and Linnean Society of Normandy; Imperial Mineralogical Society of St. Petersburg and of the Imperial Society of Naturalists of Moscow; Royal Academies of Belgium and of Bavaria; Société Royale Hollandaise des Sciences, Haarlem; Royal Society of Liège; Academy of St. Louis; American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia; Zoological Society of Vienna; Palæontological Society of Belgium; Hon. Member of the Geologists' Association, the Dudley and Midland Geological and Scientific Society, etc.


2009 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 199-201
Author(s):  
Alan E H Emery ◽  
Marcia L H Emery

London in the first half of the 19th century was a centre of scientific and medical interest. For example, the Royal Society, the Linnean Society, the Geological Society, the Chemical Society and the Royal Astronomical Society were all centred on Burlington House and, not far away, in Berner's Street was the Medical and Chirurgical Society, which in 1834 became the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society and later the Royal Society of Medicine. It was also in this period that Edward Meryon became a member of the latter society and subsequently a Council Member, Librarian and Vice-President. His research led to the clear identification for the first time of the disease Duchenne muscular dystrophy and he published his results in the Transactions of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society in 1852.


1994 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 1-29

Richard Evelyn Donohue Bishop, Vice-Chancellor and Principal of Brunei University, Uxbridge, died after a short illness at Queen Alexandra’s Hospital, Portsmouth, on Tuesday 12 September 1989. Although he suffered a mild heart attack some 14 months earlier, his death was caused by the combined effects of a hepatic abscess and septicaemia. Ironically, for this very active individual, his heart had fully recovered from the earlier damage. Dick had a fine, clear mind which brought him significant achievements and honours in the scientific world. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society (1980), a Vice-President and Member of the Council of the Royal Society (1986-1988), a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (1977), a Fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineering, a Fellow of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects, a Member of the Royal Aeronautical Society, and a Chartered Engineer. Other awards bestowed upon him were Commonwealth Fund Fellow (1949-1951), Fellow of University College London (1964), President of the British Acoustical Society (now the Institute of Acoustics, 1966-1968), Hon. Member, Royal Corps of Naval Constructors (1968), CBE (1979), and Hon. Fellow, Portsmouth Polytechnic (now University, 1982). A distinguished engineer with an international reputation both in mechanical engineering and naval architecture, Dick was recognized as a communicator par excellence in matters of science and engineering. In technical matters he was a man of vision, able to discuss the principles of mathematics and engineering. He sought academic excellence and scholarship in the tasks he set himself and had the ability to take a complex dynamics problem and reduce it to a discussion or analysis of the fundamental principles involved. Although trained as a mechanical engineer, when asked about his professional background the usual response was ‘a dynamicist and a sort of engineer’. There is no doubting his love for dynamics. He enjoyed change - even change for change’s sake - and quickly became bored by statics and steady state, both professionally and in administration.


Memorial Notices of the Fellows and Foreign Members who have been taken from us by death during the past year will appear in due course in the Obituary Notices. Of some of them only, on this occasion, will time permit me to give expression on your behalf, to a few words of appreciation of their work, and of deep sorrow at their loss. Not among the Fellows only, or alone in this country, but throughout the scientific world, the news of the unexpected death of our Fellow, and recent Vice-President, Dr. William Thomas Blanford, was received with deep regret and sorrow. Not only had a distinguished worker in science fallen out, there was lost to us a gentle, kindly friend, who had gained the affectionate regard of all those who had the privilege of having been personally acquainted with him. Only a few weeks before his death, he had been asked by the Council to write an Obituary Notice of our late Fellow, Mr. Medlicott, his old friend and colleague, and collaborator with him in the classic work, ‘The Manual of the Geology of India,' published in 1879. Before the printer’s proofs reached him, Dr. Blanford himself had passed from the ranks of the living. Dr. Blanford was distinguished as a zoologist as well as a geologist. From the time of his appointment to the Geological Survey of India in 1855, on the completion of a very successful course of study at the Royal School of Mines, and at the Mining Academy at Freiberg, to his retirement in 1882, by the publication of a series of works, and by untiring original observations, he greatly enriched our knowledge of the geology and zoology of that country. Besides his published works on the geology and fauna of India, he has contributed important papers and addresses, which are distinguished by great scientific insight and a, masterly grasp of the subjects to which he had devoted his life. His high and kindly qualities were fully recognised. He received the distinction of the Com­panionship of the Order of the Indian Empire, and was awarded medals by the Royal Society and the Geological Society. He was elected into our Society in 1874, and was for many years Treasurer of the Geological Society.


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