James Hartley Ashworth

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Ashworth in 1931.

James Hartley Ashworth FRS FRSE DSc SZS (2 May 1874 – 4 February 1936) was a British marine zoologist.

Life

See[1]

He was born on 2, May 1874, in Accrington in Lancashire, the only son of James Ashworth.[2]

He spent most of his early life in

Owen's College
. Here he quickly found a new interest and changed to study zoology. He then moved to London University where he received a BSc with Honours in Zoology and Botany in 1895. In 1899 he received a Doctorate in the same subject.

He obtained a post in Naples in Italy where his interests began to focus upon marine biology. In 1901 he became a lecturer in invertebrate zoology at the University of Edinburgh. In 1905, under his own guidance, the university began a course training for a Diploma in Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. Ashworth created the elements focussing upon entomology and parasitology. The course was extended to provide Diplomas in both Public Health and Tropical Veterinary Medicine.

In 1909, he was awarded a new chair of Professor of Invertebrate Zoology while Professor James Cossar Ewart continued as the Professor of Vertebrate Zoology. When Ewart retired in 1927 Ashworth succeeded him taking over the overarching chair of Professor of Natural History.

With financial help from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1929 he established a major new building on the university's Kings Buildings campus, thereafter known as the Ashworth Laboratories.

He died at home on Grange Loan in Edinburgh on 4 February 1936, aged 61.

Recognition

The Ashworth Building, King's Buildings

In 1911, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and in 1917 a Fellow of the Royal Society. The RSE awarded him its Keith Prize 1913–15. From 1923 to 1926, and again 1930 to 1933, he served as vice president to the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and from 1933 until his death in 1936 he served as their General Secretary.

The National Portrait Gallery in London hold a print (1931) of Ashworth taken by Walter Stoneman.

The Ashworth Building in Edinburgh University's King's Buildings complex is named in his honour.

Family

He married Clara Hough in 1901 shortly before coming to Edinburgh.

Publications

  • The Giant Nerve Cells and Fibres of "Halla Parthenopeia" (1909)

References

  1. ^ "gb237-coll-285 - Papers of Professor James Hartley Ashworth (1874-1936) - Archives Hub".
  2. JSTOR 769140
    .

External links