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Memoirs of the Distinguished Men of Science of Great Britain Living in the Years 1807-8 cover

Memoirs of the Distinguished Men of Science of Great Britain Living in the Years 1807-8

Chapter 40: DANIEL RUTHERFORD, M.D.
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About This Book

A compendium of concise memoirs and biographical sketches of British scientists, engineers, and inventors active around 1807–1808, reporting births, deaths, notable achievements, and practical outcomes of their work. An introductory essay frames these lives in terms of major advances—steam power, chemical and physical discovery, astronomy, and mechanized manufacture—and an appendix adds further memoirs. Entries are compiled from earlier authorities and arranged for general readers, emphasizing each subject's contributions to science, technology, and infrastructure.

Born November 3, 1749.   Died November 15, 1819.

Daniel Rutherford was born at Edinburgh and educated at the University of his native city. He took his degree of M.D. in 1772, and in the Thesis which he published upon this occasion, entitled 'De Aëre Fixo,' he pointed out for the first time a new gaseous substance, since distinguished by the name of Azote or Nitrogen. On the 6th of May, 1777, he was admitted a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, and in a paper on Nitre, read before the Philosophical Society in 1778, he described, under the name of Vital Air, what is now called Oxygen gas.

On the death of Dr. John Hope in 1786, Rutherford was elected Professor of Botany and Keeper of the Botanical Gardens at Edinburgh, a duty which he discharged until the time of his death, in 1819, at the age of seventy.—Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, vol. 3. May 1820.