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Thomas
Thomson (1773-1852)
Scottish
chemist, was born at Crieff, Perthshire, on the i2th of April
1773. He was educated at the universities of St Andrews and
Edinburgh, and after taking the degree of M.D. at the latter
place in 1799 established himself there as a teacher of chemistry.
From 1796 to 1800 he was sub-editor of the Encyclopaedia , in
succession to his elder brother, James Thomson (1768-1855),
who filled that position in 1795-1796, and who in 1805 was ordained
to the parish of Eccles, Berwickshire; and the chemical and
mineralogical articles which he contributed to the supplement
to the third edition formed the basis of his System of Chemistry,
the first edition of which was published in 1802 and the seventh
in 1831.
At
first this work was merely a compilation, but in the later editions
many of his original results were incorporated; the third edition
(1807) is noteworthy as containing the first detailed account
of the atomic theory, communicated to him by John Dalton himself.
In 1811 he left Edinburgh, and after a visit to Sweden went
to London, where in 1813 he began to edit the Annals of Philosophy,
a monthly scientific journal which in 1827 was merged in the
Philosophical Magazine. In 1817 he became lecturer in chemistry
at Glasgow University, and in the following year was appointed
to the regius professorship. This chair he retained until his
death, which happened on the 2nd of July 1852 at Kilmun, Argyleshire;
but from 1841 he was assisted by his nephew and son-in-law Robert
Dundas Thomson (1810-1864), who subsequently became medical
officer of health for St Marylebone, London, and after 1846
he ceased active work altogether. He was a most energetic professor,
and, according to his colleague, but no relation, Lord Kelvin
(Sir William Thomson), founded the first chemical laboratory
for students at a time when practical work was scarcely recognized
as a necessary part of chemical education. He did much to spread
a knowledge of Dalton's atomic theory, and carried out many
experiments in its support, but his strong predilections in
favor of Prout's hypothesis tended to vitiate his results, many
of which were sharply criticized by J. J. Berzelius and other
chemists. In addition to various textbooks he. published a History
of Chemistry (1830-1831) which has provided material for many
chemical biographers, but which, although it reads very plausibly,
cannot be regarded as an authority of unimpeachable accuracy.
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