1 research outputs found
The Case of John Joseph Griffin. From Artisan-Chemist and Author-Instructor to Business-Leader
- Author
- According to Ernest Child
- Advertisement in
- At the time that Heinrich Rose
- Berzelius
- Birkbeck George
- Birkbeck’s additional lectures for young people may have reflected the concerns expressed for practical education by the Edgeworths who in 1802
- Brian Gee
- Brock
- Crosland M. P.
- Daubeny C.
- Exhibition of Works and Industry of All Nations
- For an assessement of Graham’s and Warington’s influence in founding the Chemical Society see
- For an expanded account of the chemical contents of Henry’s textbooks see Farrar
- For Andrew Ure (1778–1857) see
- For Ward’s retirement see
- From
- Garnett Thomas
- Gee B.
- Graham Thomas
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin Charles
- Griffin left his nephew
- Griffin Richard
- Griffin’s
- Ibid. p. 111. Florence flasks were also popular with
- Ibid. Some feeling for the lack of demand for translations is encapsulated in a contemporary remark concerning Berzelius’s wish to see his
- Ibid. but also see
- Ibid. p. 243. For similar, and even more effective, criticism by August Laurent, see
- In the endpapers of
- International Exhibition of
- It is occasionally reported (e.g.
- It was the two-volume third ed. of the
- Keddie VV.
- Kelly
- Mitscherlich For Eilhardt
- Moseley Henry
- Most of the original collection of Anderson’s instruments has been dispersed but see
- Muir
- No registers of Thomas Thomson’s classes have survived. It is conceivable that Griffin may have gained some laboratory training under Thomson though Michael Moss, archivist at the University of Glasgow, is of the opinion that he would have received a “sufficient grounding in practical chemistry” at the Andersonian Institution, citing James “Paraffin” Young as evidence of the calibre of student then emerging. (Personal communications 13.9.84 and 3.10.84.) In this case, it remains of some considerable interest to know whether Ure ran extramural practical classes like Thomson. See
- Note 7. above. The Ure-Griffin connection came to fruition in 1846 when Griffin developed the concept of a “normal” solution in titrimetry. See
- Other works in the Polytechnic Library Series included:
- Preface to
- Report of the Committee on Chemical Notation
- Rose
- Rose
- Scots Magazine (1825) P- 2- The full text of Anderson’s will is printed in Muir
- See
- The announcement of Ward’s retirement and transfer of business to Griffin’s appears in explanatory letters to customers form both Ward and Griffin dated 1 March 1850. Griffin’s
- The Glasgow Mechanics’ Institution survived until 1886 then changed its name to the College of Arts and Science. Muir, op
- The Griffin and Tatlock history
- The remainder of the Scientific Miscellany series included:
- This is reinforced by a knowledge of the books in his library which were donated to the (Royal) Chemical Society. See
- This supplementary catalogue of August 1844 is not paginated continuously with Parts I and II but forms the endpapers of Griffin’s re-issue of Humphry Davy’s
- This travel diary has lain unrecognized at the Royal Chemical Society because it was catalogued with the papers of Henry Roscoe. It does not bear any name though the handwritten symbol RG (signifying Richard Griffin &
- This was a position of some considerable importance because over the intervening years, negotiations had led to the compounding of the Society with the Andersonian Institution Library, and Museum at their George Street building. Thus, the Directors of the Society became supervisors of the administration and finance of the Anderson Library. See
- This work is quite unique for its seventeen double copper plates of instruments and apparatus engraved by Adlard. It is not obvious from the text that Accum was the author although
- Thomson
- Thomson
- Whewell W.
- William H. Brock
- Williams C. G.
- Publication venue
- 'Maney Publishing'
- Publication date
- Field of study