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On this day in 1824

Inventor and physicist Lord Kelvin is born

William Thomson was the University of Glasgow’s sixth Professor of Natural Philosophy, but today we remember him more for one of his innovations than for the role he occupied at the time. After all, natural philosophy is, in effect, just another way of saying physics or nature.

Among other things, Thomson was interested in the study of thermodynamics, for which it was important to establish an immutable scale against which various aspects, including temperature, could be measured. This scale turned out to be the Kelvin scale, which defines absolute zero to be -273.15 degrees Celsius. Absolute zero is the point at which more or less everything – down to the level of molecules – becomes frozen and stops moving.

Although Thomson didn’t invent the concept of absolute himself, he was the one who established its equivalence to Celsius and Fahrenheit, thereby making it useable. The units that make up the scale are thus known as kelvins (just as the units that make up Celsius and Fahrenheit are known as degrees), since Thomson himself was later ennobled as Baron Kelvin of Largs in the County of Ayr in 1892.

Lord Kelvin’s innovations

Beyond his work into thermodynamics, Thomson was president of the Royal Society of Edinburgh three times over, and helped improve early designs for a transatlantic cable so that it could carry more data. He worked on a device to predict tides, advised on the construction of Niagara Falls power station, and attempted to calculate the age of planet Earth, making a significant underestimate when compared to current calculations.

Thomson spent more than 50 years at the University of Glasgow and became the university’s chancellor in his retirement. He died in 1907 at his home in Largs after catching a cold. By then he was so respected that shops closed as a mark of respect, and he was taken to London by train for burial at Westminster Abbey.

 

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...and on this day in 1796

Jilted Dorothea Christina Thomas is born

Dorothea Christina Thomas was born in Grenada and was living in Demerara, British Guiana, when she met Scotsman Captain John Gordon. Although Britain administered Demerara at the time of their meeting, Dutch law still applied, and thus it was under the Dutch legal system that the couple effectively ‘married’, with an exchange of rings and Dorothea taking John’s surname, Gordon.

Return to Scotland

John’s work took the family back to Scotland when he was promoted to major, and they moved around between Glasgow, Ireland and England before finally settling in Edinburgh.

By this time, the family was already having financial problems, which weren’t helped much when Dorothea’s mother, a woman of colour who had purchased her own release and since had success running a hotel, offered a somewhat postponed dowry of £5,000. John had wanted double that amount.

Eventually, John found a regular source of income in the form of a wealthy widow, and he told Dorothea that he was leaving her which, he believed, he was free to do on the basis that their marriage had been conducted under Dutch law, and was thus invalid.

Case comes to court

Dorothea disagreed, and she pursued him through the courts, which heard evidence from both sides over many years. Eventually it ruled in John’s favour on the basis that, whatever the couple might have claimed early in their relationship, and regardless of the fact they had travelled so far together and had children, his friends and family didn’t recognise the union because they had never made a big thing out of it. They apparently believed John to be single.

Dorothea was ordered to return to Demerara, and leave her children behind.


 

Yesterday…

Mysterious miniature coffins discovered on Arthur’s Seat

Who hid 17 miniature coffins behind slate on Edinburgh’s Arthur’s Seat, and what the coffins were for, remains a mystery to this day.

Suffragists interrupt Churchill in Dundee

When Winston Churchill came to Dundee to address his constituency, he was interrupted by women demanding the right to vote.

Tomorrow…

The Queen officially opens Glasgow Airport

Queen Elizabeth II was greeted by large crowds when she opened the new Glasgow Airport at the end of June 1966.