John Macadam

The Honorable Dr John Macadam (29 May 1827 – 2 September 1865), was a Scottish-Australian chemist, medical teacher, Australian politician and cabinet minister, and honorary secretary of the Burke and Wills expedition. The genus Macadamia (macadamia nut) was named after him in 1857. He died in Australia aged 38.

John Macadam
Born29 May 1827
Died2 September 1865(1865-09-02) (aged 38)
NationalityScottish
OccupationScientist, Analytical Chemist, Chemistry Lecturer, Health Officer, Member of the Victoria Legislature and Postmaster General
Known forAn organiser of Burke and Wills expedition Genus Macadamia - macadamia nut - named after him

Early life

John Macadam was born at Northbank, Glasgow, Scotland, on 29 May 1827,[1] the son of William Macadam (1783-1853) and Helen, née Stevenson (1803-1857).[2] His father was a Glasgow businessman, who owned a spinning and textile printing works in Kilmarnock, and was a burgess and a bailie (magistrate) of Glasgow.[3] His fellow industrialists and he in the craft had developed, using chemistry, the processes for the large-scale industrial printing of fabrics for which these plants in the area became known.[4]

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The Australian News commented, "At the time of his death, Dr Macadam was but 38 years of age; there can be little doubt that the various and onerous duties he discharged for the public must be attributed in great measure the shortening of his days."[63] The Australian Medical Journal stated, "For some time it had been evident to his friends that his general health was giving way: that a frame naturally robust and vigorous was gradually becoming undermined by the incessant and harassing duties of the multifarious offices he filled." The inquest verdict (he died at sea) stated, "His death was caused by excessive debility and general exhaustion."[64]

Funeral

The funeral was large. The newspapers carried tributes and subsequently lengthier obituaries from learned societies were published, such as that in the Australian Medical Journal[65] and elsewhere. The Melbourne Leader described the funeral: "The coffin was drawn by four horses. Four mourning coaches contained the chief mourners and the more intimate friends of the deceased gentleman. A large procession followed, in which were several members of Parliament, the members of the Royal Society, the Chief Justice; the Mayor and corporation of the city of Melbourne. A number of private carriages and the public wound up the procession....At the University, the chancellor, the vice-chancellor, and a number of the students, all in their academic robes, met the funeral cortege, and proceeded the remainder of the distance".[66] The chief mourner was his youngest brother, George Robert Macadam (1837-1918).[67] John Macadam's grave, surmounted by a marble obelisk, is in Melbourne General Cemetery.[68]

Widow re-married

After John Macadam and her children's deaths his widow, Elizabeth Clark, later remarried. She married the Reverend John Dalziel Dickie, who was pastor at Colac for 32 years. They married on 26 February 1868[69] They had four daughters.[70] Elizabeth Dickie died aged 82 in 1915, in Brighton, Victoria, near Melbourne as the widow of the Rev. Dickie.[71] He had died 25 December 1909.[72]

References

  1. John Macadam: www.earthwords.co.uk/macadam.htm
  2. Sir Ivison Macadam Archives, Runton Old Hall, East Runton, Norfolk, UK
  3. Edwin Macadam : http://www.shelwin.com/e/ancestry/macadam/macadam_history.htm#John%20Macadam,%20MD
  4. http://www.valeofleven.org.uk/famousfolk/industrials.html.
  5. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/macadam-john-4054/text6453, published first in hardcopy 1974, accessed online 5 June 2016.
  6. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  7. Charles Thomas Macadam (1832-1906) later held the royal warrant as "Purveyor of Chemical Manures" to Queen Victoria.
  8. The brothers' original interest in chemistry likely was derived from the advances and new inventions involved in the chemical printing processes of their father's commercial operations.
  9. Edwin Macadam : http://www.shelwin.com/e/ancestry/macadam/macadam_history.htm#John%20Macadam,%20MD
  10. His great-nephew Ivison Macadam was subsequently somewhat involved in Australia when he assisted in getting financial support for the Australian Institute of International Affairs and organised some international conferences there.
  11. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/macadam-john-4054
  12. The ship sailed from London on 6 June 1855 with him acting as ship's surgeon and arrived at Hobson's Bay (Melbourne's port) on 8 September 1855. The Argos, Melbourne, Victoria, Shipping Intelligence, Monday, 10 September 1855
  13. Having acted as the ship's surgeon on the voyage: The Encyclopaedia of the Industrial Revolution in World History, Volume 3 edited by Kenneth E. Hendrickson III, Rowman and Littlefield, 2015
  14. The Late Dr. Macadam, The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865. pp 327-332.: https://digitised-collections.unimelb.edu.au/bitstream/handle/11343/23129/267472_UDS2010779-118.pdf?sequence=10
  15. Edwin Macadam : http://www.shelwin.com/e/ancestry/macadam/macadam_history.htm#John%20Macadam,%20MD.
  16. The Encyclopaedia of the Industrial Revolution in World History, Volume 3 edited by Kenneth E. Hendrickson III, Rowman and Littlefield, 2015
  17. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  18. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  19. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  20. Edwin Macadam : http://www.shelwin.com/e/ancestry/macadam/macadam_history.htm#John%20Macadam,%20MD.
  21. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  22. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  23. From 1851 until it 1901 - 50 years - it was the Colony of Victoria with its own government within the British Empire. In 1901, it became the State of Victoria in the Commonwealth of Australia
  24. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  25. Hartog 1893.
  26. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  27. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865) Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  28. `"He was most enthusiastic in his endeavours to promote the success of any object he had in view. Through his exertions the number of members of the Institute was more than doubled in his first year he held office as Secretary." The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865
  29. The Encyclopaedia of the Industrial Revolution in World History, Volume 3 edited by Kenneth E. Hendrickson III, Rowman and Littlefield, 2015
  30. The present two-storey brick structure was erected in several stages beginning with the original, red brick Meeting Hall, which was completed in 1859. Designed by renowned Melbourne architect Joseph Reed (who also designed such buildings as the State Library, the Exhibition Buildings, Melbourne Town Hall, Trades Hall, Scots Church, etc.), the building was officially opened by the Victoria governor, Sir Henry Barkly, who was also president of the society, on 10 December 1859. The building, still home of the society, is now a heritage building: Royal Society of Victoria http://royalsocietyvictoria.org.au/about-us/history/our-heritage-building/
  31. The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865
  32. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  33. Burke & Wills: The Scientific Legacy of the Victorian Exploring Expedition by E B Joyce & D A McCann, Royal Society of Victoria 2011 (celebrating the expedition's 150th anniversary).
  34. The Lewis and Clark Expedition departed St. Louis in 1804 and arrived on the Pacific Coast in November 1815 in what is now Oregon.
  35. The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865
  36. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  37. Previously the indigenous people had eaten them and had their own names for them.
  38. Mueller in 1871 was made a hereditary baron by the King of Württemberg [then a German state], having been granted his `von' in 1867. He was invested with CMG in 1869 and KCMG in 1879. He was awarded a royal medal of the Royal Society, London, in 1888 and won many European honours: Deirdre Morris, Mueller, Sir Ferdinand Jakob Heinrich von (1825–1896), Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/mueller-sir-ferdinand-jakob-heinrich-von-4266/text6893, published first in hardcopy 1974, accessed online 10 June 2016.
  39. Edwin Macadam: http://www.shelwin.com/e/ancestry/macadam/macadam_history.htm#John%20Macadam,%20MD
  40. The proceedings of Philosophical Institute of Victoria, now the Royal Society of Victoria Rev: Mueller F (1857) Account of some new Australian plants. Transactions of the Philosophical Institute of Victoria 2: 62-77; Burke & Wills: The Scientific Legacy of the Victorian Exploring Expedition by E B Joyce & D A McCann, Royal Society of Victoria 2011
  41. Scotch College Website. "The Cordner-Eggaleston Cup". Retrieved 22 November 2009.
  42. AFL Website. "A Time Honoured Rivalry". Retrieved 22 November 2009.
  43. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  44. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  45. The Australian Medical Journal, October, 1865
  46. He edited their Transactions from 1855-60.:K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  47. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  48. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  49. The Age,16 September 1856
  50. The Argus, 19 Sept 1856,
  51. "Post-Office annual Glasgow directory, 1853-1854". National Library of Scotland. p. 89. Retrieved 25 February 2018.
  52. John Clark and a partner James Barnet had purchased a company, John Orr Ewing & Co, from John Orr Ewing and Robert Alexander, who having built the business up over some 10 years, retired on the proceeds, the former to a country estate outside Edinburgh. The name of the company was changed to Robert Alexander and Co. when they acquired it. These industrialists developed the chemical processes for the large-scale industrial printing of fabrics. The general area became world famous for its methods of fabric printing, especially Turkey Red: http://www.valeofleven.org.uk/famousfolk/industrials.html.
  53. Documents in possession of John Macadam: www.earthwords.co.uk/macadam.htm.
  54. Edwin Macadam: http://www.shelwin.com/e/ancestry/macadam/macadam_history.htm#John%20Macadam,%20MD
  55. "The coffin of a little child of the doctor's, which died some time since, was exhumed and buried with him" The Leader, Melbourne, Sat 30 September 1865.
  56. " the only surviving child of the late Dr. John Macadam died 17 Dec 1865 at the residence of Captain Picken in Williamstown, Victoria." The Argus, 23.12.1865
  57. "He left a widow and son to mourn his untimely death. The Late Dr. Macadam, The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865. pp 327-332.: https://digitised-collections.unimelb.edu.au/bitstream/handle/11343/23129/267472_UDS2010779-118.pdf?sequence=10
  58. Inscribed "and William Castlemaine Macadam Born July 2, 1860" but no date of his death was recorded there. It was 17 December 1865.
  59. The Trial of Captain Jarvey, The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865. pp321-326
  60. Kirkland was subsequently appointed lecturer in chemistry to succeed him and later became the first professor of chemistry at the University of Melbourne.Hartog 1893
  61. Melbourne Leader, Sat 30 September 1865
  62. K. F. Russell, Macadam, John (1827–1865), Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/macadam-john-4054
  63. The Australian News, September 1866
  64. The Late Dr. Macadam,The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865. pp 327
  65. The Late Dr. Macadam,The Australian Medical Journal, October 1865. pp 327-332.: https://digitised-collections.unimelb.edu.au/bitstream/handle/11343/23129/267472_UDS2010779-118.pdf?sequence=10
  66. Melbourne Leader, Sat 30 September 1865
  67. a teacher who was buried in Avoca in 1918, a hundred or so miles from Melbourne. John Macadam: www.earthwords.co.uk/macadam.htm
  68. John Macadam: www.earthwords.co.uk/macadam.htm
  69. at The Esplanade, Williamstown, Victoria :The Greenock Advertiser , 30 April 1868.
  70. John Macadam, letter in possession of <www.earthwords.co.uk/macadam.htm>. Letter written from The Manse, Colac – in Victoria west of Melbourne – 24 July 1888, to Mary Macadam, daughter of William Macadam.
  71. John Macadam <www.earthwords.co.uk/macadam.htm> (obit in Colac Reformer, 28.08.15 http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/154242236?searchTerm=%22elizabeth+dickie%22# ). In The Argus is a notice of the will of Elizabeth Dickie, of Brighton, who died 19 August 1915 and one of whose executors was a clergyman: John Macadam (of www.earthwords.co.uk/macadam.htm).
  72. The Chronicle, Adelaide,. 4 December 1909

Hartog, Philip Joseph (1893). "Macadam, John" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 34. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

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