Leslie H. Martin Explained

Sir Leslie Martin
Birth Date:1900 12, df=yes
Birth Place:Footscray, Victoria
Death Place:Camberwell, Victoria
Citizenship:Australian
Fields:Physics
Workplaces:University of Melbourne
Australian Universities Commission
University of New South Wales
Alma Mater:University of Melbourne
University of Cambridge
Doctoral Advisor:Ernest Rutherford
Academic Advisors:T. H. Laby
Awards:Commander of the Order of the British Empire (1954)
Fellow of the Royal Society (1957)
Knight Bachelor (1957)

Sir Leslie Harold Martin, (21 December 1900 – 1 February 1983) was an Australian physicist. He was one of the 24 Founding Fellows of the Australian Academy of Science and had a significant influence on the structure of higher education in Australia as chairman of the Australian Universities Commission from 1959 until 1966. He was Professor of Physics at the University of Melbourne from 1945 to 1959, and Dean of the Faculty of Military Studies and Professor of Physics at the University of New South Wales at the Royal Military College, Duntroon, in Canberra from 1967 to 1970. He was the Defence Scientific Adviser and chairman of the Defence Research and Development Policy Committee from 1948 to 1968, and a member of the Australian Atomic Energy Commission from 1958 to 1968. In this role he was an official observer at several British nuclear weapons tests in Australia.

Early life

Leslie Harold Martin was born in the Melbourne suburb of Footscray on 21 December 1900, to Henry Richard Martin, a railway worker, and his wife Esther (Ettie) Emily, née Tutty. He attended Flemington State School and won a Junior State Scholarship to Melbourne High School for his final years of secondary schooling in 1917 and 1918.[1] His mathematics teacher, Miss Julia Flynn, encouraged him, and he won a Victorian Education Department Senior Government Scholarship in 1918.

He entered the University of Melbourne on the scholarship in 1919, to study for a Bachelor of Science for Education, with the intention of becoming a maths teacher. In 1921, in his final year, he came top of his year with first class honours in Natural Philosophy (physics) and was awarded the Dixson Scholarship in Natural Philosophy. In 1922, he completed his Master of Science degree, writing his master's thesis on "The emission of X Rays" under the supervision of Professor T. H. Laby. He was awarded first class honours and both the Dixson and Kernot Scholarships.[2] [3]

Martin was awarded the Fred Knight Research Scholarship in 1923, which allowed him to continue his research with Laby. He earned extra money as a demonstrator in the Department of Natural Philosophy, and he lectured in the evenings at the Working Men's College. Laby nominated him for an 1851 Research Fellowship and a free trip to England to study physics under Ernest Rutherford at the University of Cambridge's Cavendish laboratory.[2]

Before departing, he married Gladys Maude Elaine Bull, a Bachelor of Music student at the University of Melbourne, at St James's Church of England in Ivanhoe on 13 February 1923. She did not complete her studies, but instead accompanied him to England,[1] sailing on the SS Berrima. They had two sons; the first, Leon Henry Martin, born in Cambridge on 25 April 1924. When Gladys became pregnant again, she decided to return to Australia to be with her parents. Their second son, Raymond Leslie Martin, was born on 3 February 1926. Leon died on the return voyage to England on the SS Benalla in July 1926.[2]

Academic career

Martin enrolled at Trinity College, Cambridge, and continued his research into X-rays under Rutherford's supervision. He completed his PhD in 1926.[2] The results of this work were published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London,[4]

Notes and References

  1. R. W. . Home . Roderick Weir Home . Martin, Sir Leslie Harold (1900–1983) . martin-sir-leslie-harold-14939 . 18 . 2012 . 14 May 2017 .
  2. Caro . D. E. . Martin . R. L. . Raymond Martin (academic) . Oliphant . M. . Mark Oliphant. Leslie Harold Martin. 21 December 1900-1 February 1983 . 10.1098/rsbm.1987.0015 . . 33 . 389–409 . 1987 . 769958 . 71934835 .
  3. Web site: The emission of X Rays . Martin . Leslie . 1923 . University of Melbourne . 14 May 2017 .
  4. Martin . L. H. . The Efficiency of K Series Emission by K Ionised Atoms . 115 . 771 . 420–442 . 1927 . 10.1098/rspa.1927.0101 . The Royal Society . 0950-1207 . .