William Gregor

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William Gregor (25 December 1761 - 11 June 1817) was the English clergyman and mineralogist who discovered the elemental metal titanium.

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[edit] Early life

He was born in Trewarthenick, Cornwall, England, the son of Francis Gregor and Mary Copley. He was educated at Bristol Grammar School, where he became interested in chemistry, then after two years with a private tutor entered St John's College, Cambridge from where he graduated in 1784. After gaining an MA he moved to Diptford in Devon. He married Charlotte Anne Gwatkin in 1790 and they had one daughter.

[edit] Discovery of titanium

After a brief interval at Bratton Clovelly, William and his family moved permanently to the rectory of Creed in Cornwall. Here, he began a remarkably accurate chemical analysis of Cornish minerals. In 1791, while studying ilmenite from the Manaccan valley, he isolated the calx of an unknown metal which he named manaccanite. Later in 1791 Martin Heinrich Klaproth discovered what we now known as titanium in the mineral rutile. Believing this to be a new discovery, he named it Titanium after the Titans of Greek Mythology, eventually it was clarified that Gregor made the discovery first. Gregor was credited with the discovery, but the element kept the name chosen by Klaproth. Gregor later found titanium in corundum from Tibet, and in a tourmaline from a local tin mine.

[edit] Later life

Never letting his scientific work interfere with his pastoral duties, he was also a distinguished landscape painter, etcher and musician. He died of tuberculosis on 11 June 1817 and was buried in a nearby churchyard.

[edit] Sources

Source: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

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