John Stenhouse

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John Stenhouse
Justus Liebig

John Stenhouse

FCS (21 October 1809 – 31 December 1880) was a Scottish chemist. In 1854, he invented one of the first practical respirators
.

He was a co-founder of the Chemical Society in 1841.[1]

Life

John Stenhouse's respirator

John Stenhouse was born in Barrhead in Glasgow on 21 October 1809. He was the eldest son of William Stenhouse, a calico-printer in the family firm of John Stenhouse & Co of 302 High Street,[2] Glasgow, and Elizabeth Currie;[3] he was the only one of their children to survive beyond infancy.[4][5]

After education at the Glasgow Grammar School, he studied at the

Justus Liebig at the University of Giessen in Germany. He then returned to Glasgow. In 1841 he was a co-founder of the Chemical Society of London. In 1848 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London. He received an honorary doctorate (LLD) from the University of Aberdeen in 1850.[6]

In his early years Stenhouse had been living on a fortune that had been left to him in his father's will. However, in 1850 the Glasgow Commercial Exchange Company failed

August Kekulé (1829-1896), who would become an eminent organic chemist, was one of his laboratory assistants during this time.[8]) In 1857 Stenhouse suffered a stroke,[9] which left him partially paralyzed and forced him to resign his position. He left England to convalesce with his mother in Nice (then still part of Italy) until her death in February 1860. In June of that year he returned to England and opened a laboratory in an outbuilding of an abandoned factory on Rodney Street, King's Cross, London; there he supported himself by assaying, consulting, and performing other contract work.[10] He also recommenced his researches in chemistry, even though he could not perform experiments with his own hands. He hired assistants (mainly graduates from the Royal College of Chemistry) to do the work for him.[11] These assistants included Raphael Meldola (1849-1915), who would become an eminent organic chemist, and Charles E. Groves (1841-1920), who co-authored of many of Stenhouse's papers, which ultimately numbered in excess of 100.[6]

From 1865 to 1870 he was an assayer to the Royal Mint (where his former professor Thomas Graham was Master of the Mint). In 1871 he received the Royal Medal of the Royal Society for his chemical researches. In 1877 he became a Fellow of the Institute of Chemistry. He died a natural death on 31 December 1880, age 72, at his home in Pentonville, Islington, London[12] and was buried in the "New Cemetery" of Glasgow Cathedral now partly absorbed by a car park (north of the cathedral).

Discoveries

Stenhouse focused on organic chemistry, particularly the chemical products of plants—and the derivatives that could be made from those products—which were of medical or commercial value; e.g., Stenhouse discovered betorcinol,[13] a homologue of orcinol, and erythritol,[14] both of which are found in lichens.

He was the author of many ingenious and useful inventions in dyeing (patents 13 Oct 1855 and 12 June 1856), waterproofing (patents 8 Jan 1861 and 21 Jan 1862), sugar manufacture, and tanning; but he will always be known for his application of the absorbent properties of wood charcoal to disinfecting and deodorising purposes in the form of charcoal air-filters and charcoal respirators, which have proved of great value (patents 19 July 1860 and 21 May 1867).[15] Among other patents which he took out was one for the manufacture of glue (7 May 1857) and another for the manufacture or preparation of materials for sizing or dressing yarns and textile fabrics (29 April 1868).[16]

References

  1. ISBN 978-0-902198-84-5. Archived from the original
    (PDF) on 4 October 2006. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  2. ^ Glasgow Post Office Directory 1809
  3. ^ In 1809 William Stenhouse, a merchant of Glasgow, married Elizabeth, second daughter of George Currie, Esq., at Nesbit. Marriage notice: The Athenaeum ... (London, England), vol. 5, page 185 (1809).
  4. ^ George Stronach, "Stenhouse, John", Dictionary of National biography, 1885-1900, vol. 54, page 149.
  5. ^ "survive beyond infancy" -- page 185 of Journal of the Chemical Society, Transactions, vol. 39, pages 185-188 (1881). Note: Much of the information in this source is reprinted in:
    • Obituary: "John Stenhouse, LL.D., F.R.S.", Nature, vol. 23, pages 244-245 (13 January 1881).
    • "Obituary notices of fellows deceased," Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, vol. 31, pages xix-xxi (1880-1881).
  6. ^ a b Page 186 of Journal of the Chemical Society, Transactions (1881).
  7. ^ See:
    • The Bankers' Magazine; Journal of the Money Market and Railway Digest (London, England), vol. 10, pages 446, 515, 574 and 575 (1850).
    • John Francis and I. Smith Homans, History of the Bank of England, Its Times and Traditions, from 1694 to 1844 (New York, New York: Offices of the Bankers' Magazine, 1862), pages 399-400.
    • Richard Saville, Bank of Scotland: A History, 1695-1995 (Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh University Press Ltd., 1996), page 353.
  8. ^ Joseph S. Fruton, Methods and Styles in the Development of Chemistry (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: American Philosophical Society, 2002), page 107.
  9. ^ Hannah Gay (20 March 2008) “Technical assistance in the world of London science, 1850–1900,” Notes & Records of the Royal Society, vol. 62, no. 1, pages 51-75.
  10. ^ Gay (2008)
  11. ^ Gay (2008).
  12. ^ English Mechanic and World of Science ... , vol. 32, no. 824, page 419 (7 January 1881).
  13. . Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  14. ^ In the process of studying the chemistry of erythritol (which he called "erythroglucin"), Stenhouse discovered the explosive erythritol tetranitrate. See: John Stenhouse (1 January 1849) "Examination of the proximate principles of some of the lichens. Part II," Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (London), vol. 139, pages 393-401.
  15. ^ Wyndham D. Miles (1958) “The velvet-lined gas mask of John Stenhouse,” Archived 17 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Armed Forces Chemical Journal, vol. 12, no. 3, pages 24-25. See also: John Stenhouse (1855) “On the Economical Applications of Charcoal to Sanitary Purposes,” Notices of the Proceedings at the Meetings of the Members of the Royal Institution of Great Britain ..., vol. 2, pages 53-55.
  16. ^  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Stenhouse, John". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.