Wyndham Dunstan Explained

Wyndham Dunstan
Birth Date:24 May 1861
Fields:Chemistry
Workplaces:Royal Pharmaceutical Society
Imperial Institute
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Sir Wyndham Rowland Dunstan (1861-1949), was professor of chemistry and Director of the Imperial Institute in London.

Biography

Dunstan was born on 24 May 1861 at Chester Castle, where his father, John Dunstan (1797-1874), was Constable. He was educated at Bedford School before becoming an assistant to Theophilus Redwood, Professor of Chemistry at the Royal Pharmaceutical Society in London.

In 1884, Dunstan was appointed as Demonstrator in the University Laboratories at the University of Oxford and, in 1885, as University Lecturer in Chemistry. In 1886, he succeeded Redwood as Professor of Chemistry at the Royal Pharmaceutical Society and, in 1903, he was appointed Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Imperial Institute in London.

He acted as President of the International Association of Tropical Agriculture and was a Member of the Advisory Committee for Tropical Agriculture.[1] [2]

In 1886, he married Emilie Fordyce Maclean. After she died in 1893, he married Violet Mary Claudia Hanbury-Tracy (1876-1963), daughter of Frederick Hanbury-Tracy, in 1900. He died on 20 April 1949.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. 768780. Wyndham Rowland Dunstan. 1861-1949. T. A.. Henry. 1 January 1950. Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 7. 19. 63–81. 10.1098/rsbm.1950.0005. 202575420 .
  2. "DUNSTAN, Wyndham Rowland" (1907). Who's Who, vol. 59: p. 526