Harold Roper Robinson

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Harold Roper Robinson
Born26 November 1889
Died28 November 1955 (1955-11-29) (aged 66)
Awards
  • FRS[1]
  • Rutherford Medal and Prize
    (1942)
Scientific career
Institutions

Harold Roper Robinson FRS[1] (26 November 1889 – 28 November 1955) was a physicist and, in later life, an outstanding figure in university administration.[1][2]

Early life

Robinson was born at 36 Ainslie Street in Ulverston, Lancashire on 26 November 1889, the eldest of four brothers and one sister to James Robinson, a managing clerk in a solicitor's office. Harold was educated at the Wesleyan School then the Victoria Secondary School in Ulverston.[3]

In 1908 he went to the

First World War during which he served as a 2nd Lt in the Royal Garrison Artillery in France from 1915. He later transferred to the Field Survey Battalion of the Royal Engineers (mapping) first as a Captain then as an Adjutant.[3] During the war, he worked with Lawrence Bragg on soundranging.[4]

After the war (1920) he gained a place as Assistant Director of the Physical Laboratory at Manchester.[1] In 1923/24 he gained a place at the University of Cambridge as a postgraduate and gained a doctorate (PhD) in 1924. He then moved to the University of Edinburgh as a Reader in physics.[3]

In 1925 he was elected a Fellow of the

Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker.[3]

Career

In 1926 he was given his first professorship, at

.

The citation on his election to Fellowship of the Royal Society[1] in 1929 reads: "Before 1914 he carried out a series of researches into the nature of Beta-rays and other problems of radio activity. Distinguished also by his recent work on the energies of X-ray levels, as deduced from the velocities of secondary corpuscular rays, on which important branch of atomic physics he has obtained world-wide recognition as one of the pioneers."[5]

"Professor Robinson came to Queen Mary College, University of London, from University College, Cardiff, as Head of the Physics Department. He is acknowledged as one of the greatest of Rutherford's collaborators. He devised and developed the techniques of X-ray photoelectric spectroscopy and X-ray emission spectroscopy which became valuable tools in chemical analysis. Arising from this work he also deduced the then most accurate values of ratios of atomic constants."[citation needed]

In 1942, he delivered the first

Rutherford Memorial Lecture.[6]

Robinson was appointed Vice-Principal of

]

Robinson decided to retire in 1953,[citation needed] but took the position of Vice-Chancellor of the University of London (1954–1955).[1]

Family

In 1920 he married the economics graduate Marjorie Eve Powell (1893–1939).[7] Following her death in 1939[3] he married Madeleine Symons, a prominent trade union organiser, in 1940.[8]

Publications

  • H. R. Robinson, "Rutherford: life and work to the year 1919, with personal reminiscences of the Manchester period", in Rutherford at Manchester (ed. J. B. Birks), pp. 53–86 (Heywood & Co., London, 1962)
  • H. R. Robinson and L. Wright, "Evan Jenkin Evans", Proc. Phys. Soc. 56, PP. 404–406 (1944).

References

  1. ^
    JSTOR 769358
    .
  2. .
  3. ^ (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  4. .
  5. .
  6. ^ Recipients of the Rutherford Medal and Prize, Institute of Physics. Retrieved 12 November 2009.
    From 1942 to 1964, the award was named the "Rutherford Memorial Lecture".
  7. , retrieved 3 July 2023
  8. ^ "Mrs Madeline Jane Robinson", The Times, 22 March 1957