Alexander Crum BrownFRSEFRS (26 March 1838 – 28 October 1922) was a Scottish organic chemist. Alexander Crum Brown Road in Edinburgh's King's Buildings complex is named after him.
Early life and education
Alexander Crum Brown was born at 4 Bellevue Terrace[1] in Edinburgh. His mother, Margaret Fisher Crum (d. 1841), was the sister of the chemist Walter Crum, and his father, Rev Dr John Brown (1784-1858), was minister of Broughton Place Church[2] in the east end of Edinburgh's New Town. Crum Brown was baptised on 6 May 1838.[3][4] His half brother was the physician and essayist John Brown.
For five years, he studied at the Royal High School, then for one year at Mill Hill School in London. In 1854, he entered the University of Edinburgh where he first studied Arts and then Medicine. He was gold medallist in Chemistry and Natural Philosophy and graduated with an MA in 1858. Continuing his medical studies, he received his MD in 1861.[5]
In 1863, he returned to the University of Edinburgh as an extra-academical lecturer in chemistry. In 1869, he was appointed the Professor of Chemistry[7] holding the chair until his retirement in 1908. In his application for this position he was supported by famous chemists such as Baeyer, Beilstein, Bunsen, Butlerov, Erlenmeyer, Hofmann, Kolbe, Volhard and Wöhler.[7] One of his students was Arthur Conan Doyle.[8]
The Crum Brown Chair of Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh was established in 1967 in his honour.[9]
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1863, was awarded its Keith Medal for 1873–75. He served as the Society's vice president from 1905 to 1911.[2] His address at the time of joining the Society was given as 8 Belgrave Crescent in the west end of Edinburgh.[10]
In 1867, he was elected a member of the Harveian Society of Edinburgh and served as one of its secretaries from 1881 to 1903. He was president of the Society in 1899.[11] In 1883 he was elected a member of the Aesculapian Club.[12]
Each year, the Hope Scholarship was awarded to the four students at the University of Edinburgh who achieved the highest marks (at first sitting) in the first-term examinations in Chemistry. The Hope Scholars were entitled to free use of the laboratory facilities during the following term.
In 1870, Edith Pechey, one of the Edinburgh Seven, came third in the class, beaten by two male students sitting the exam for the second time, so under the terms of the Hope Scholarship, she had first claim on a scholarship. Fearing that awarding the prize to a woman would be both an affront to many of his esteemed colleagues in the Medical Faculty and a provocation to the male students, Crum Brown chose to award the Hope Scholarship to men whose names appeared lower on the list.
This had important consequences. It made national headlines in The Times and drew attention to the difficulties being encountered by a small group of women studying medicine at the University of Edinburgh.
"[Miss Pechey] has done her sex a service, not only by vindicating their intellectual ability in an open competition with men, but still more by the temper and courtesy with which she meets her disappointment"[13]
Research
Crum Brown's pioneering work concerned the development of a system of representing chemical compounds in diagrammatic form. In 1864 he began to draw pictures of molecules, in which he enclosed the symbols for atoms in circles, and used dashed lines to connect the atomic symbols together in a way that satisfied each atom's valence. The results of his influential work were published in 1864[6][14] and reprinted in 1865.[15]
Although Crum Brown apparently never contemplated the practice of medicine, his training as a medical student gave him an interest in physiology and pharmacology. This led him to collaborate during 1867–8 with T. R. Fraser, a distinguished medical graduate, in a pioneering investigation of fundamental importance into the connection between chemical constitution and physiological action. Their method "consists in performing upon a substance a chemical operation which shall introduce a known change into its constitution, and then examining and comparing the physiological action of the substance before and after the change." The change considered was the addition of ethyl iodide to various alkaloids and comparison of the iodides (and the corresponding sulfates) thus obtained with the hydrochlorides of the original alkaloids. Striking regularities were observed, amongst others "that when a nitrile [tertiary] base possesses a strychnialike action, the salts of the corresponding ammonium [quaternary] bases have an action identical with curare [poison]."[6]
During the 1880s, Crum Brown studied combinations of colours, inks, and designs which helped the Bank of Scotland manufacture bank notes that would be impossible to fabricate using photography. The forgery-proof bank notes were completed in 1885. In November 1888 however, forgeries of these bank notes were discovered in Glasgow and Edinburgh, in which the culprit was found in 1889 to be John Hamilton Gray Mitchell, who had made the fake noted using traditional artistic mediums. The Bank of Scotland amended the bank notes' design.[16]
^Scotland's PeopleArchived 19 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Baptism 6 May 1838 BROWN ALEXANDER CRUM JOHN BROWN/MARGARET FISHER CRUM FR4534 (FR4534) M EDINBURGH EDINBURGH CITY CITY/MIDLOTHIAN 685/01 0610 0266.
^Crum Brown, Alexander (1 January 1861). On the theory of Chemical Combination. hdl:1842/2436.
^ abcdeEdgar F. Smith; W. R. Dunstan; B. A. Keen; Frank Wigglesworth Clarke (1923). "Obituary notices: Charles Baskerville, 1870–1922; Alexander Crum Brown, 1838–1922; Charles Mann Luxmoore, 1857–1922; Edward Williams Morley, 1838–1923; William Thomson, 1851–1923". J. Chem. Soc., Trans. 123: 3421–3441. doi:10.1039/CT9232303421.
^In Memories and Adventures, Doyle writes 'There was kindly Crum Brown, the chemist, who sheltered himself carefully before exploding some mixture, which usually failed to ignite, so that the loud "Boom!" uttered by the class was the only resulting sound. Brown would emerge from his retreat with a "Really, gentlemen!" of remonstrance, and go on without allusion to the abortive experiment.'
^"List of the Ordinary Fellows of the Society". Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. 26 (1): xi–xiii. 1870. doi:10.1017/S008045680002648X. S2CID251579034.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: J.W. (possibly J. Walker) (1923). "Obituary notices". J. Chem. Soc., Trans. 123: 3421–3441. doi:10.1039/CT9232303421.
Further reading
Testimonials in favour of Alexander Crum Brown (Muir and Paterson, Edinburgh,1869).
Brown, A.C., Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 23,707–720 (1864).
Brown, A.C., Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 24, 331–9 (1867).
Brown, A.C., Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 17, 181–5 (1891).
Brown, A.C. and Walker, J., Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 36,211–224 (1892); Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 37, 361–379 (1895).
Brown, A.C. and Gibson, J., Chemical Society Transactions, 61, 367–9 (1892).
Horn, D.B., A Short History of the University of Edinburgh (University Press, Edinburgh, 1967), p. 194.
National Library of Scotland MS 2636, f. 182.
Rorie, D., University of Edinburgh Journal, 6,8–15 (1933–34).
Flett, J.S., University of Edinburgh Journal, 15,160–182 (1949–1951 ).
Bell, F.G., University of Edinburgh Journal, 20,215–230 (1961–1962).
Edinburgh University Library MS Gen. 47D.
Kendall, J., Journal of Chemical Education, 4,565–9 (1927).
Report of the Royal Commissioners on the Universities of Scotland, vol. II (Evidence-Part I) (H.M.S.O., Edinburgh, 1878), pp. 184–5.
Quasi Cursores (Constable, Edinburgh, 1884), pp. 229–232.
Kendall, J., Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society, 1,537–549 (1932–35):