Difference between revisions of "William Ballantyne Hodgson (1815-1880)"

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(Created page with "(1815-1880), Professor of Political Economy Hodgson was a leading educational reformer. Educated at the University of Edinburgh, he was later Principal of the Liverpool Mecha...")
 
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His collection of ca 1,000 books on the history of political economy were gifted to the University Library by his widow in 1880. They include 32 items from the library of [[Adam Smith]], which were later joined in the [[Main Library]] by others gifted to [[New College]] by the Rev Dr [[David Douglas Bannerman]], and others from the library of the mathematician and inventor of the calculating machine which presaged the computer, Charles Babbage.
 
His collection of ca 1,000 books on the history of political economy were gifted to the University Library by his widow in 1880. They include 32 items from the library of [[Adam Smith]], which were later joined in the [[Main Library]] by others gifted to [[New College]] by the Rev Dr [[David Douglas Bannerman]], and others from the library of the mathematician and inventor of the calculating machine which presaged the computer, Charles Babbage.
  
[[Category:Alumni|Hodgson, William Ballantyne]] [[Category:Benefactors|Hodgson, William Ballantyne]]
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[[Category:Academics|Hodgson, William Ballantyne]]  [[Category:Alumni|Hodgson, William Ballantyne]] [[Category:Benefactors|Hodgson, William Ballantyne]]

Revision as of 20:35, 18 May 2014

(1815-1880), Professor of Political Economy

Hodgson was a leading educational reformer. Educated at the University of Edinburgh, he was later Principal of the Liverpool Mechanics' Institute, and of Chorlton High School, Manchester.

In 1871 he was appointed as the first Professor of Commercial and Political Economy and Mercantile Law at the University of Edinburgh; unlike all the other Chairs of the day this was a fixed-term appointment of seven years. His classes were popular, even though his subject was not part of any degree curriculum, and he accepted re-appointment in 1878. He died suddenly two years later while attending a conference in Brussels.

His collection of ca 1,000 books on the history of political economy were gifted to the University Library by his widow in 1880. They include 32 items from the library of Adam Smith, which were later joined in the Main Library by others gifted to New College by the Rev Dr David Douglas Bannerman, and others from the library of the mathematician and inventor of the calculating machine which presaged the computer, Charles Babbage.