James Clerk Maxwell Garnett

James Clerk Maxwell Garnett CBE (1880–1958), commonly known as Maxwell Garnett, was an English educationist, barrister, peace campaigner and physicist. He was Secretary of the League of Nations Union.[1]

Maxwell Garnett was born on 13 October 1880 at Cherry Hinton, Cambridge, England.[2] He was awarded scholarships at St Paul's School, London and Trinity College, Cambridge.[1] He was called to the bar at Inner Temple in 1908. He was an examiner at the UK Board of Trade (1904–12), Principal at the Manchester College of Technology (1912–20), and Secretary of the League of Nations Union (1920–38). Garnett was appointed a CBE in 1919.

In Trinity College, Maxwell Garnett worked in optics, publishing papers on optical properties of metals and metal glasses in early 1900s.[3][4][5] Maxwell Garnet approximation is named after him.[6]

Personal life

Maxwell Garnett was the son of physicist William Garnett, and was named after Garnett's friend, James Clerk Maxwell.[2]

In 1910, Maxwell Garnett married Margaret Lucy Poulton, daughter of the evolutionary biologist Sir Edward Poulton FRS, in Headington, Oxford.[7] They had six children. The Garnetts lived at 37 Park Town, North Oxford, from 1939 until 1955, when they moved to the Isle of Wight.[8]

Selected publications

Journal papers
  • Maxwell Garnett, J. C. (1904). "Colours in metal glasses and in metallic films". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 203 (359–371): 385–420. doi:10.1098/rsta.1904.0024.
  • Maxwell Garnett, J. C. (1906). "Colours in metal glasses, in metallic films, and in metallic solutions". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 205 (387–401): 237–288. doi:10.1098/rsta.1906.0007.

References

  1. "Garnett, (James Clerk) Maxwell". The Concise Dictionary of National Biography. II: G–M. Oxford University Press. 1992. p. 1106.
  2. "Garnett, (James Clerk) Maxwell". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. 2004–14.
  3. Simovski, Constantin (2018). Composite Media with Weak Spatial Dispersion. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1351166225.
  4. Maxwell Garnett, J. C. (1904). "Colours in metal glasses and in metallic films". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 203 (359–371): 385–420. doi:10.1098/rsta.1904.0024.
  5. Maxwell Garnett, J. C. (1906). "Colours in metal glasses, in metallic films, and in metallic solutions". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 205 (387–401): 237–288. doi:10.1098/rsta.1906.0007.
  6. Markel, Vadim A. (2016). "Introduction to the Maxwell Garnett approximation: tutorial". Journal of the Optical Society of America. 33 (7): 1244–1256. doi:10.1364/JOSAA.33.001244. PMID 27409680.
  7. "James Clerk Maxwell (Maxwell) Garnett 1880–1958". Links Genealogy. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  8. Symonds, Ann Spokes (1998). "Families". The Changing Faces of North Oxford. Book One. Witney: Robert Boyd Publications. pp. 81–83, 95–96. ISBN 1-899536-25-6.


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