D. S. L. Cardwell | |
Birth Date: | 1919 8, df=y |
Birth Place: | Gibraltar |
Death Place: | Macclesfield, Cheshire |
Nationality: | British |
Alma Mater: | Plymouth College, King’s College, London |
Children: | 3 |
Donald Stephen Lowell Cardwell (4 August 1919 – 8 May 1998) was a historian of science and technology, Professor of the History of Science at UMIST from 1974 to 1984 and President of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society.[1] [2]
Cardwell was born in Gibraltar in 1919, the son of a civil servant from Croydon, Surrey. He was educated at Plymouth College and gained a First-Class degree in Physics at King's College London in 1939. During the Second World War, he joined the Admiralty Signals Establishment, serving in Scotland, West Africa and the Middle East. Post-war he returned to King's College London to study for a PhD in Physics working with Bill Seeds, John Randall and Maurice Wilkins.[3]
Cardwell worked at Keele University for two years c.1955 with the economist Bruce Williams, then at the University of Leeds before joining UMIST as Reader in the History of Science and Technology in 1963. He was promoted to Professor in 1974 and retired in 1984.
He was involved in laying the groundwork for the creation of Manchester’s Museum of Science and Industry (opened in 1969), and was also President of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society (1991–93). The Society held a Memorial Lecture in his honour in 1999.
Cardwell's papers are held at the University of Manchester Library.
Cardwell married Olive Pumphrey in 1953. They had two sons, one of whom predeceased him, and one daughter.