SIR WILLIAM ROXBURGH


ROXBURGH, WILLIAM, a physician and eminent botanist, was born at Underwood
in the parish of Craigie, on the 29th June, 1759. His family was not in
affluent circumstances, but they nevertheless contrived to give him a
liberal education. On acquiring all the learning which the place of his
nativity afforded, he was sent to Edinburgh to complete his studies, which
were exclusively directed to the medical profession. After attending for
some time the various classes at the university necessary to qualify him for
this pursuit, he received, while yet but seventeen years of age, the
appointment of surgeon’s mate on board of an East Indiaman, and completed
two voyages to the East in that capacity before he had attained his
twenty-first year. An offer having been now made to him of an advantageous
settlement at Madras, he accepted of it, and accordingly established himself
there. Shortly after taking up his residence at Madras, Mr Roxburgh turned
his attention to botany, and particularly to the study of the indigenous
plants, and other vegetable productions of the East, and in this he made
such progress, and acquired so much reputation that he was in a short time
invited by the government of Bengal, to take charge of the Botanical
gardensestablished there. In this situation he rapidly extended his
fame as a
botanist, and introduced to notice, and directed to useful purposes many
previously unknown and neglected vegetable productions of the country. Mr
Roxburgh now also became a member of the Asiatic Society, to whose
Transactions he contributed, from time to time, many valuable papers, and
amongst these one of singular interest on the lacca insect, from which a
colour called Lac Lake is made, which is largely used as a substitute for
cochineal. This paper, which was written in 1789, excited much attention at
the time, at once from the ability it displayed, and from the circumstance
of its containing some hints which led to a great improvement on the colour
yielded by the lacca insect.

In 1797, Mr Roxburgh paid a visit to his native country, and returned
(having been in the mean time married,) to Bengal, in 1799, when he resumed
his botanical studies with increased ardour and increasing success. In 1805,
he received the gold medal of the Society for the Promotion of Arts, for a
series of highly interesting and valuable communications on the subject of
the productions of the East. He had again, in this year, returned to
England, and was now residing at Chelsea, but in a very indifferent health;
he, however, once more proceeded to Bengal, and continued in his curatorship
of the Botanical Gardens there till 1803, when, broken down in constitution,
he finally returned to his native country. In this year he received a second
gold medal for a communication on the growth of trees in India, and on the
31st of May, 1814, was presented with a third, in the presence of a large
assembly which he personally attended, by the duke of Norfolk, who was then
president of the Society of Arts.

Soon after receiving this last honourable testimony of the high respect in
which his talents were held, Mr Roxburgh repaired to Edinburgh, where he
died, on the 10th of April in the following year, in the 57th year of his
age, leaving behind him a reputation of no ordinary character for ability,
and for a laudable ambition to confer benefits on mankind, by adding to
their comforts and conveniences; which objects he effected to no
inconsiderable extent by many original and ingenious suggestions.

REFERENCE :
http://www.electricscotland.com/history/other/roxburgh_william.htm


MORE READING: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Roxburgh




Tanay

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