Online Encyclopedia

BART SIR JOHN BENNET LAWES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 300 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BART
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SIR JOHN BENNET LAWES
  . (1814-1900),
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English agriculturist, was born at Rothamsted on the 28th of December 1814 . Even before leaving Oxford, where he matriculated in 1832, he had begun to
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interest himself in growing various medicinal
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plants on the Rothamsted estates, which he inherited on his
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father's
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death in 1822 . About 1837 he began to experiment on the effects of various
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manures on plants growing in pots, and a
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year or two later the experiments were extended to crops in the field . One immediate consequence was that in 1842 he patented a manure formed by treating
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phosphates with sulphuric acid, and thus initiated the artificial manure industry . In the succeeding year he enlisted the services of
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Sir J . H . Gilbert, with whom he carried on for more than
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half a century those experiments in raising crops and feeding animals which have rendered Rothamsted famous in the eyes of scientific agriculturists all over the
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world (see AGRICULTURE) . In 1854 he was elected a
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Fellow of the Royal Society, which in 1867 bestowed a Royal medal on Lawes and Gilbert jointly, and in 1882 he was created a
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baronet . In the year before his death,which happened on the 31St of August Igoo, he took
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measures to ensure the continued existence of the Rothamsted experimental
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farm by setting aside £Ioo,000 for that purpose and constituting the Lawes Agricultural
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Trust, composed of four members from the Royal Society, two from the Royal Agri-cultural Society, one each from the Chemical and Linnaean Societies, and the owner of Rothamsted mansion-house for the time being .

End of Article: BART SIR JOHN BENNET LAWES
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