F. Sherwood Taylor
Frank Sherwood Taylor (1897 – 5 January 1956) was a British historian of science, museum curator, and chemist who was Director of the Science Museum in London, England.[1]
F. Sherwood Taylor was educated at Sherborne School in Dorset, southern England and Lincoln College, Oxford.[2] He then undertook a PhD at University College, London in the new Department of History and Method of Science.
He spent a period as a schoolmaster and then as a lecturer in chemistry at Queen Mary College, London. He was a founder member of the Philosophy of Science Group. He was also the founder editor of the Ambix journal, started in 1937. In 1940, he succeeded Robert Gunther as Curator of the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford.[3] Towards the end of his life, he was Director of the Science Museum from 1950 until his death in 1956. During this time, he delivered the 1952 Royal Institution Christmas Lectures in London on How Science has Grown.
Books
F. Sherwood Taylor wrote many books on the history of alchemy and chemistry in particular, and also of science in general:[4][5]
- The Young Chemist (1934, new edition 1961). Practical Books, Thomas Nelson and Sons, Edinburgh.
- Galileo and the Freedom of Thought (1938)
- Alchemists, Founders of Modern Chemistry (1949)
- The Alchemists (1952)
- The Ideas of the Alchemists
- The First Alchemists
- The Earliest Alchemical Signs and Symbols
- An Introduction To Alchemy
- The Origin Of Alchemical Practice (Pamphlet)
- A Short History of Science and Scientific Thought, with readings from the great scientists from the Babylonians to Einstein
- An Illustrated History of Science
- Science, Past and Present
- The Century of Science
- The Fourfold Vision: a study of the relations of science and religion
- A History of Industrial Chemistry (Technology and Society)
- The World of Science
- General Science for Schools (Part 1)
- The Conquest of Bacteria, from Salvarsan to Sulphapyridine
- The March of Mind: A short history of science
- A Short Organic Chemistry
- A Century of British Chemistry (Science in Britain)
- Organic Chemistry
- Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry (1931)
- Man and Matter, Essays Scientific & Christian
References
- ↑ Ralph E. Oesper, "Frank Sherwood Taylor", Journal of Chemical Education, 27(5), p 253, May 1950. ACS Publications. doi:10.1021/ed027p253
- ↑ A. C. C., Obituary: Frank Sherwood Taylor, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Volume 7, Number 26, page 183–184, August 1956). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for the Philosophy of Science.
- ↑ A. V. Simock (editor), Robert T. Gunther and the Old Ashmolean. Oxford: Museum of the History of Science, 1985. ISBN 0-903364-04-2. Page 93.
- ↑ F. Sherwood Taylor (1897–1956), LibraryThing.
- ↑ Books › "F. Sherwood Taylor", Amazon.com.
Cultural offices | ||
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Preceded by Robert Gunther |
Curator of the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford 1940–1950 |
Succeeded by C. H. Josten |
Preceded by Herman Shaw |
Director of the Science Museum 1950–1956 |
Succeeded by Sir Terence Morrison-Scott |
|