Online Encyclopedia

LYON PLAYFAIR PLAYFAIR

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 831 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LYON PLAYFAIR PLAYFAIR  , 1st BARON (1818-1898), was born at Chunar, Bengal province, on the 21st of May 1818 . He was sent to
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Europe by his
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father at an early age, and received his first
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education at St Andrews . Subsequently he studied
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medicine at
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Glasgow and
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Edinburgh . A short visit to India (in 1837-1838) was followed by his return to Europe to studychemistry, which had always attracted him . This he did at University College,
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London, and afterwards under Liebig at
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Giessen, where he took his doctor's degree . At Liebig's request, Playfair translated into
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English the former's
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work on the Chemistry of Agriculture, and represented Liebig at a meeting of the
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British Association at Glasgow . The outcome of his studies was his engagement in 1841 as chemical manager of the
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Primrose
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print-
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works at
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Clitheroe, a
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post which he held for rather more than a
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year . In 1843 he was elected honorary professor of chemistry to the Royal Institution of Manchester, and soon afterwards was appointed a member of the Royal Commission on the
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Health of Towns, a
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body whose investigations may be said to have laid the
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foundations of
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modern sanitation . In 1846 he was appointed chemist to the
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geological survey, and thenceforward was constantly employed by the public departments in matters of sanitary and chemical inspection . The opportunity of his
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life came with the 1851
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Exhibition, of which he was one of the
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special commissioners . For his services in this connexion he was made C.B., and his work had the additional
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advantage of bringing him into close
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personal relations with the Prince Consort, who appointed him gentleman usher in his household . From 1856 to 1869 he was professor of chemistry at Edinburgh University .

In 1868 he was elected to represent the

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universities of Edinburgh and St Andrews in parliament, and retained his seat till 1885, from which date until 1892 he sat as member for Leeds . In 1873 he was made postmaster-general, and in the following year, after the dissolution of parliament, was applied to by the incoming Tory government to preside over a commission to inquire into the working of the
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civil service . Its report established a completely new
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system, which has ever since been officially known as the "Playfair scheme." The return of Mr Gladstone to power in 188o afforded opportunity for Playfair to resume his interrupted
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parliamentary career, and from that time until 1883 he acted as chairman of committees during a period when the obstructive tactics of the Irish party were at their height . On his retirement from the post he was made K.C.B . In 1892 he was created Baron Playfair of St Andrews, and a little later was appointed lord-in-waiting to the queen . In 1895 he was given the G.C.B . In spite of failing health the last years of his life were full of activity, one of his latest public acts being his
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suggestion that Queen Victoria's
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Diamond Jubilee of 1897 should be commemorated by the completion of the South
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Kensington Museum . He died in London, after a short illness, on the 29th of May 1898, and was buried at St Andrews . He was three times married . He was the author of a number of papers on scientific and social topics, a selection from which he published in 1889 under the title of Subjects of Social Welfare . A memoir by
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Sir Wemyss Reid was published in 1899 .

End of Article: LYON PLAYFAIR PLAYFAIR
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