Joseph Hubert Priestley

Joseph Hubert Priestley DSO FLS ( Priestlay; 5 October 1883  31 October 1944) was a British lecturer in botany at University College, Bristol, and professor of botany and pro-vice-chancellor at the University of Leeds. He has been described as a gifted teacher who attracted many graduate research students to Leeds. He was the eldest child of a Tewkesbury head teacher and the elder brother of Raymond Priestley, the British geologist and Antarctic explorer. He was educated at his father's school and University College, Bristol. In 1904, he was appointed a lecturer in botany at the University College and published research on photosynthesis and the effect of electricity on plants. He was elected a fellow of the Linnean Society, and in 1910, he was appointed consulting botanist to the Bath and West and Southern Counties Society.

Joseph Hubert Priestley

Group photograph of physics staff and senior students, University College, Bristol, 1902.jpg
Priestley at University College, Bristol, in 1902
Born
Joseph Hubert Priestlay

(1883-10-05)5 October 1883
Died31 October 1944(1944-10-31) (aged 61)
Resting placeLawnswood crematorium (ashes scattered)
Alma materUniversity College, Bristol (1903 (1903): BSc)
Occupations
Relatives
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Notable students
Pro-vice-chancellor, University of Leeds
In office
1935–1939
Preceded byPaul Barbier
Succeeded byMatthew John Stewart
In office
1941–1941
Preceded byMatthew John Stewart
Succeeded byJohn David Ivor Hughes
Military service
Allegiance United Kingdom
Branch British Army
Service years1914–1919
RankCaptain
Corps
ConflictWorld War I
Awards

In 1911, he married Marion Ethel Young at Bristol, and in the same year, he was appointed professor of botany at the University of Leeds. He served in the British Army during World War I, receiving a commission as a captain. In August 1914, he was sent to France with the British Expeditionary Force, and for the remainder of the war, he was seconded to the Intelligence Corps. He was twice mentioned in dispatches, and awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) in 1917 and the Chevalier de L'Ordre de la Couronne de Belgique in 1919. On his return to Leeds, he embarked on a programme of research that encompassed the structure and development of the growing points of plants, the effect of light on growth, cork formation, and plant propagation.

In 1922, he was appointed dean of the faculty of science, and in 1925, he was elected president of the Yorkshire Naturalists' Union. In the following year, he taught a postgraduate course at the University of California, Berkeley. He was an active member of the British Association, the British Bryological Society, and the Forestry Commission. In 1935, he was elected pro-vice-chancellor, serving in that role until 1939. He was the first warden to the male students at Leeds and organised many social activities, including a staff dancing class and "botanical parties". He was a passionate cricket player and captained the staff team at Leeds. He died after a long illness at his home in Weetwood, Leeds.

Early life

Monochrome photograph of Joseph Hubert Priestley's mother, Henrietta, and four sisters, Edith, Doris, Joyce, and Olive. His mother is seated and his sisters are shown standing
Priestley's mother and four sisters (from left to right), Edith, Doris, Joyce, and Olive, circa 1910[1]

Priestley was born on (1883-10-05)5 October 1883 at Abbey House school, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire,[2][3] and baptised at the Methodist chapel in Tewkesbury on 6 November 1883.[4][lower-alpha 1] He was the eldest child of eight children of Joseph Edward Priestlay, then head teacher of the school, and Henrietta, née Rice.[6]:7 His mother was the second surviving daughter of Richard Rice of Tewkesbury. They had met at the Methodist chapel, and had married on 22 December 1881 at Tettenhall parish church, now in the city of Wolverhampton.[7] The Priestley family name was spelt originally as "Priestlay". However, in the early 1900s, the name changes to "Priestley" and both spellings appear on family graves in Tewkesbury Cemetery.[6]:10

In 1875, Priestley's father graduated from the University of London with a second class Bachelor of Arts degree in animal physiology.[8] He was appointed head teacher of Abbey House school following the death of his father, Joseph Priestley,[6]:7 on 13 November 1876,[9] and remained as head until his retirement in 1917. He moved to Bristol and joined the staff of Grace, Darbyshire, and Todd,[10] a local firm of accountants.[11] He died on 9 December 1921, aged 67, at a nursing home in Clifton, and was interred in Canford Cemetery, Westbury-on-Trym, near Bristol.[10] Henrietta died on 24 September 1929, aged 76, at Bishopston, Bristol.[12]

Priestley's brothers, Stanley and Donald, died on active service during World War I. Stanley left Tewkesbury in 1912 to follow Priestley to the University of Leeds where he became a member of the Officers' Training Corps.[13] Donald was a commercial traveller working for their mother's family firm, William Rice and Company, corn millers and seed merchants at Tewkesbury.[14] His brother, Raymond, was a geologist in Robert Falcon Scott's ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition to the Antarctic from 1910 to 1913.[10]

Priestley's sisters were Edith, Doris, Joyce, and Olive.[15] Edith married Charles Seymour "Silas" Wright and Doris married Thomas Griffith "Grif" Taylor, both of whom were members of Scott's expedition.[6]:10 Doris first met Taylor in July 1913, and at that time, was acting as Priestley's secretary.[16] Joyce married Herbert William Merrell, who served with the Gloucester Regiment in World War I,[17] and in later life, was an accountant on the staff of the University of Leeds.[18]

The family were Methodists, and on Sundays, Priestley was required to attend two religious services and Sunday school.[6]:8 They were also passionate cricket players. Stanley was regarded as a good bowler and Donald played for Gloucestershire from 1909 to 1910.[6]:9–10 Priestley himself would later play for the University College, Bristol,[19] and captain the staff team at the University of Leeds.[6]:10

Education

Priestley, along with his brothers, was educated at his father's school in Tewkesbury.[6]:8[lower-alpha 2] He passed his Cambridge Local Examination in December 1897 with unremarkable third class honours.[21] In July 1898, he passed an elementary examination in Pitman shorthand,[22] before taking a physical geography course at the Science Hall on Oldbury Road, Tewkesbury.[23] He passed this course with first class honours in June 1899.[24] In February 1900, he gained a first class pass in the University of London matriculation examination.[25] In July 1901, the University College, Bristol, awarded him a Capper Pass metallurgical scholarship of twenty-five pounds (equivalent to two thousand two hundred and five pounds in 2019).[26]

Though primarily a botany student, Priestley took courses in chemistry and physics at Bristol,[27] and in August 1901, he gained a first class pass in the University of London intermediate science examination.[28][lower-alpha 3] In November 1902, the college awarded him a John Stewart Scholarship,[29][lower-alpha 4] and in the following month, he was elected to the committee of the college's chemical society.[31] In November 1903, Priestley passed his final BSc examination with first class honours in botany.[32] In the same month, he was awarded a probationary bursary worth seventy pounds, by the Commissioners for the Exhibition of 1851,[33] to study the cell biology of rust fungi.[34]

Career

Monochrome photograph of the physics staff and senior students of University College, Bristol, photographed outside the main building of the university.
Physics staff and senior students at University College, Bristol, in 1902. Priestley is seated in the front row on the left.

In November 1904, Priestley was made an associate of the college.[35] In January 1905, he was appointed temporary lecturer in botany, in succession to George Brebner,[36] who had died on 23 December 1904.[37] This appointment was made permanent by the college council on 19 July 1905 at an annual salary of £120 (equivalent to £13,700 in 2021).[5]:521[38] He and Raymond, who was then studying geography at the college, lodged together for two years on the top floor of a Bristol boarding house. They lived on fifty shillings a week and lunch would often consist of a bun and a glass of milk.[5]:522

Priestley's early research examined the process and products of photosynthesis.[39] In 1906, he published a paper with Francis Usher, later a reader in colloid chemistry at the University of Leeds,[40] that postulated that chlorophyll in vitro is reduced to formaldehyde in the presence of carbon dioxide and light.[41]:53 Vernon Herbert Blackman, professor of botany at the University of Leeds whom Priestley would succeed in 1911,[41]:51 considered the evidence unsatisfactory.[41]:53 Charles Horne Warner, working in Blackman's laboratory, found that the formation of formaldehyde was independent of the presence of carbon dioxide, and in fact, formaldehyde was formed as a by-product of the oxidation of chlorophyll.[41]:54

In 1908, the college received a grant of fifty pounds from the Board of Agriculture to enable the biology department to conduct research on the effect of electricity on plants.[42] In an initial experiment, Priestley ran electrical wires above plants in greenhouses at Bitton, South Gloucestershire, to demonstrate that electricity could stimulate the growth of the plants.[43] At the time, it was thought that an electric current could increase plant respiration, transpiration, and starch formation.[44] He noted that young wheat leaves from electrified plots were, "in the opinion of many observers, darker green than the control plants."[45]:180 He suggested that the darker green could result from a continuous amount of nitrates being added to the soil, in a similar manner to the oxidation of atmospheric nitrogen by lightning. In one soil test, he found three times the amount of nitrogen in the soil than in the control plots.[45]:181 However, it is now generally accepted that there are no beneficial effects from exposing plants to electric fields.[45]:178

Colour photograph of Botany House consisting of a terrace of three houses. The houses are constructed of red brick with stone details and a slate roof. The whole house has three storeys and nine first-floor windows, with doorways below windows three and nine.
Botany House at the University of Leeds where Priestley was professor of botany

In 1906, Priestley was elected as honorary secretary to the Bristol Naturalists' Society.[46] He was also president of the college's botanical club and was a local secretary for the Cotteswold Naturalists' field club.[47][48]:4 He joined the Bristol Fabian Society and was president of the Montpelier adult school.[47] In January 1908, he was elected a fellow of the Linnean Society.[49] In 1910, he was appointed consulting botanist to the Bath and West and Southern Counties Society,[50] after William Carruthers had resigned in the previous year.[51] In 1911, Priestley was appointed professor of botany at the University of Leeds,[52] succeeding Blackman, who had left to join the Institute of Vegetable Physiology at Imperial College London.[41]:51 Otto Vernon Darbishire was appointed to replace Priestley as lecturer in botany at the University of Bristol.[53] In 1914, Priestley was appointed an examiner in the Natural Sciences Tripos at Cambridge.[54]

Priestley's university work was interrupted by World War I. He had been in command of the University Officers' Training Corps at both Bristol and Leeds, and on 9 August 1914, he was sent to France with the British Expeditionary Force.[55] In his absence, Walter Garstang, then professor of zoology at the University of Leeds, assumed responsibility for the botany department.[56] For the remainder of the war, he served in the Intelligence Brigade of the general staff until January 1919.[55] He was twice mentioned in dispatches, and awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) in the King's 1917 Birthday Honours, and in 1919, the Chevalier de L'Ordre de la Couronne de Belgique (transl.Knight of the Order of the Crown of Belgium).[52][lower-alpha 5]

On his return to Leeds, Priestley embarked on a programme of research that encompassed the structure and development of the growing points of plants, the effect of light on growth, cork formation, and plant propagation.[52] He had been influenced by the work of Albert Frey-Wyssling on cell walls and William Henry Lang's research on plant morphology and anatomy.[58][52] In 1924, he was elected president of the Yorkshire Naturalists' Union and was a member of the British Bryological Society.[59][60] In December 1926, he travelled to California to teach a postgraduate course at the University of California, Berkeley. Otis Freeman Curtis came to Leeds from Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, to cover his four-month absence.[61]

Colour photograph of the two-storey building, clad in painted white metal panels, with a projecting entrance portico consisting of blue double doors. The Dominion of Canada coat of arms is seen above the door.
Dominion Astrophysical Observatory at Saanich, British Columbia, that Priestley visited in 1924 as a member of the British Association

Priestley was a member of the British Association and was president of the botany section in 1932.[52] He attended many of the association's annual meetings, including the 1924 meeting in Toronto, Ontario, where he took the opportunity to visit the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory at Saanich, British Columbia.[62] In 1929, he and Lorna Scott, co-author of Priestley's textbook An Introduction to Botany,[63] attended the association's meeting in South Africa,[64] based at the universities of Cape Town and Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.[65] Along with five hundred other scientists, they boarded the Union‑Castle steamship Llandovery Castle, on 27 June 1929 at the Port of Tilbury. They stopped at Saint Helena, in the South Atlantic Ocean, to the west of south-western Africa,[66] where they collected a number of bryophyte specimens.[67]:5

In 1922, Priestley was appointed dean of the faculty of science,[68] and later, became the first warden to the male students at Leeds.[69] On 1 July 1935, he succeeded Paul Barbier, professor of French,[70] as pro-vice-chancellor of the university.[71] Matthew John Stewart, professor of paleontology, succeeded him in June 1939.[72] In 1941, the senate appointed Priestley as pro-vice-chancellor for a second term, after Bernard Mouat Jones, then vice-chancellor, had left the University in February to complete National Service. Mouat Jones returned to the University in October and Priestley was succeeded as pro-vice-chancellor by John David Ivor Hughes, professor of law at the university.[73]:111

Personal life

Façade of church seen from the northwest. The façade, west tower, and spire are all that remain of the church built in 1878.
Former Congregational church in Bishopston, Bristol, where Priestley was married

Priestley married Marion Ethel Young before leaving Bristol to take up his appointment as professor of botany at the University of Leeds. Marion was the younger daughter of Anthony and Sarah Young of Eastfield Road, Cotham, Bristol. The wedding took place on 12 August 1911 at the Congregational church in Bishopston, Bristol.[47][lower-alpha 6] It was a quiet ceremony, limited to close family,[47] as his paternal grandmother, Annie, had died only a few weeks before on 26 July 1911.[75] The honeymoon was spent in West Wales.[47] Marion Ethel was a keen amateur botanist,[47] and along with Priestley, was a member of the British Mycological Society.[76] She organised many social activities at the University of Leeds, including a staff dancing class and "botanical parties" to which all botany staff and students were invited.[69] She died at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, on 25 July 1965, aged 79, and the funeral service was held on 2 August 1965 at St Mary's church, Great Shelford, followed by cremation at Cambridge Crematorium.[77]

Their elder daughter, Phyllis Mary, was born at Leeds on 25 January 1920. She was educated at Lawnswood High School, Leeds, and Cheltenham Ladies' College. In 1939, she was an exhibitioner at Girton College, Cambridge, graduating with a BA degree in 1942,[78] and a MA in 1947.[79]:220 She married John Carlisle Cullen, of Belfast, on 3 January 1946 at St Chad's Church, Far Headingley, Leeds.[80] Cullen was a graduate of Queen's University Belfast and a former researcher at the National Institute of Agricultural Botany at Cambridge.[81] She died after a long illness at Clifton, Bristol, on 22 May 1999. A Requiem Mass was held at Clifton Cathedral on 2 June 1999 followed by cremation at South Bristol crematorium.[82] Michael Cullen, Phyllis Mary's son and Priestley's grandson,[83] is a former senior research fellow at the Met Office and visiting professor in mathematics at the University of Reading.[84]

Their younger daughter, Ann Elizabeth, was born at Leeds on 14 May 1923. She was educated at the same schools as her sister, and in 1942, entered Girton College as an exhibitioner to study geography.[85] From 1944 to 1945, she was president of the Cambridge University Women's Boat Club.[86] In 1945, she graduated with a BA and won the Thèrèse Montefiore Memorial Prize.[85] From 1945, she was a Tucker-Price research fellow working on water erosion and was awarded a MA by the University of Cambridge in 1949.[85]:745[79] From 1946 to 1951, she was a lecturer in geography at the University of Leeds,[85][87] and from 1956, was head of geography and divinity at Perse School for Girls, Panton Street, Cambridge.[88] By 1954, she was a member of the Institute of British Geographers,[89] and in 1966, she was secretary to the Cambridge branch of the Christian Education Movement.[90] She later joined the Cambridgeshire and Isle of Ely Naturalists' Trust and was clerk of Great Shelford parish council.[91][92] She died at York on 27 January 1986 and was cremated at York crematorium.[93] Her ashes were interred at Lawnswood cemetery in Leeds.[94]

Death and legacy

[Priestley was] sometimes didactic, often provocative, always interesting and, as a whole, one of the most colourful persons in biology.

William Pearsall, Priestley's obituary in Nature.

At the end of December 1935, Priestley was seriously ill and underwent a major operation on 16 January 1936.[95] He died after a long illness at his home in Weetwood, Leeds, on 31 October 1944, and the funeral was held at Lawnswood crematorium in the morning on 3 November 1944.[39][96] A large number of university staff attended including Mouat Jones, Bonamy Dobrée, and Arthur Stanley Turberville. There were also representatives from the Joint Matriculation Board, the Forestry Commission, and James Digby Firth represented the Yorkshire Naturalists' Union and the Leeds Naturalists' Club.[97] Priestley's ashes were later scattered on the gardens of rest at the crematorium.[98] Lorna Scott managed the botany department for eighteen months until Irene Manton was appointed on 15 January 1946.[63]

After Priestley's death, a memorial trust fund was established to provide grants to botany students at the University of Leeds.[99] In December 1946, his brother Raymond, then vice-chancellor of the University of Birmingham, gifted money to Tewkesbury Grammar School to provide for an annual science prize, named the "Joseph Hubert Priestley Prize" in memory of his brother.[100] Priestley's collection of fossils now forms part of the herbarium at the Leeds Discovery Centre.[67]:8 A major part of the collection was formed from a bequest made to the University of Leeds by Ida Mary Roper, Priestley's friend and colleague from University College, Bristol.[101]:53

Edward Cocking, a British plant scientist, has described Priestley as "a highly unorthodox physiological botanist",[102] and Priestley was often the first to admit that some of his early work had been published prematurely.[52] Nevertheless, he was a gifted teacher who attracted many graduate research students to Leeds.[63] Lorna Scott wrote in his obituary:[69]

[Priestley] inspired many generations of students ... a remarkably gifted teacher, as one with a mind alive to inspire research ...[and] never too busy or too inaccessible to help even the most junior of his assistants or students.

Selected publications

Books and reports

  • Priestley, Joseph Hubert (1 July 1929). Tansley, Arthur George (ed.). "The Biology of the Living Chloroplast. A Critical Abstract of Professor Lubimenko's Review of Recent Russian Work". New Phytologist. London: Wheldon & Wesley. 28 (3): 197–217. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.1929.tb06755.x. ISSN 0028-646X. JSTOR 2427950. Retrieved 6 December 2021. See also Vladimir Nikolaevich Lyubimenko.
  • Priestley, Joseph Hubert; et al. (September 1933). "William Bateson 1861 to 1926". The Post Victorians. William Ralph Inge (1st ed.). London: Ivor Nicholson and Watson. pp. 39–55. OCLC 882765721. Retrieved 6 December 2021. See William Bateson.
  • Priestley, Joseph Hubert; Scott, Lorna Iris; Harrison, Edith (1964) [First published in 1938]. An Introduction to Botany, with special reference to the structure of the flowering plant. Illustrated by Marjorie Edith Malins and Lorna Iris Scott. London: Longmans, Green & Co. pp. 1–705. OCLC 1150024139. Retrieved 6 December 2021.

Effect of electricity

Photosynthesis

Disease

Salt tolerance

Anatomy of plants

Composition of the cell wall

Light and growth

Forestry

Vegetative propagation

Cambial tissue activity

See also

Footnotes

  1. Priestley was known as "Bert" by family and friends.[5]:200
  2. In later life, Priestley was a member of the Old Theocsbrian Society, the Abbey House school alumni association, and a regular attendee at the association's annual dinner.[20]
  3. University College, Bristol, originated as a college teaching external degrees of the University of London. See the history of the external examination system at the University of London Worldwide.
  4. The scholarship was bequeathed by John Stewart of Montpelier, Bristol, and was worth twenty pounds.[30]
  5. The announcement of the award of the Chevalier de L'Ordre de la Couronne de Belgique was not made in The London Gazette until 23 August 1921.[57]
  6. The church was founded in 1878 in memory of David Thomas, the then minister at Highbury Congregational Chapel. The church was demolished in 1984.[74]

References

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