Robert T. Skinner

Robert Taylor Skinner FRSE FSA(Scot) (18671946) was a 20th-century Scottish mathematician, historical author and antiquarian.

Life

Donaldson's School

He was born at Bethelnie Farm near Aberdeen on 22 May 1867, one of 17 children of James Skinner (b.1824), a farmer, and his wife, Jane Anderson (b.1831).[1] He was educated at Aberdeen Grammar School.[2]

In 1893, he began teaching Mathematics at George Watson's College. He moved to Donaldson's School for the Deaf in 1899.

In 1903, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Robert McNair Ferguson, John Sturgeon Mackay, David Fowler Lowe, and John Brown Clark.[3]

He was House Governor of Donaldson's Hospital and lived in his rooms there.[4] He retired in 1932.[5]

On retiral he lived at 35 Campbell Road in the Murrayfield district.[6]

He died on 31 August 1946 and was buried in Dean Cemetery.[7]

Publications

  • Men of the North-East (1920)
  • In the Cevennes Without a Donkey (1926)
  • A Notable Family of Scots Printers (1927) the story of the Donaldson family
  • The Schoolmaster Looks Back
  • The Royal Mile: Edinburgh Castle to Holyroodhouse (1928)
  • Yesterday and Today (1929)
  • Figures and Figureheads (1931)

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.