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RENNIE, EDWARD HENRY (1852-1927), scientist,
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son of A. E. Rennie, afterwards auditor-general of New South Wales, was born
at Sydney on 19 August 1852. Educated at the Fort-street public school, Sydney
Grammar School, and the university of Sydney, he graduated B.A. in 1870 and M.A.
in 1876. He was a master at Sydney Grammar School for five years and at Brisbane
Grammar School for about 18 months, and then went to London to study chemistry.
He was for two years assistant to Dr C. R. Alder Wright in the chemical
department of St Mary's hospital medical school, did some teaching at the Royal
College of Science, South Kensington, and graduated D.Sc. Lond. in 1881.
Returning to Australia in 1882 he was two years in the government analyst's
department at Sydney, and was then appointed first Angas professor of chemistry
in the university of Adelaide. He began his duties in February 1885, and for
many years had to work in makeshift conditions. Rennie however, made the best of
the position, and also gave much time to the conduct of the university. He was a
member of the council from 1889 to 1898, when he resigned because he was leaving
Australia for 12 months to study the development of chemical manufacture, and
was again a member of the council from 1909 to the time of his death. During
1924-5 and 1925-6 he was acting vice-chancellor. He was also an active member of
the council of the school of mines. He was for 36 years a member of the council
of the Royal Society of South Australia, was its president from 1886 to 1889 and
1900 to 1903, and vice-president from 1903 to 1919. He was for a time president
of the Australian Chemical Institute, and chairman of the state committee of the
Commonwealth advisory council of science and industry. In August 1926 he was
elected to one of the highest offices open to a scientific man in
Australia--that of president of the Australasian Association for the Advancement
of Science. Rennie was also a fellow of the Chemical Societies of London and
Berlin, and a fellow of the Institute of Chemists of Great Britain and Ireland.
Though in his seventy-fifth year he was still carrying on the duties of his
chair, when he died suddenly at Adelaide on 8 January 1927. He married a
daughter of Dr Cadell of Sydney, who survived him with a son, E. J. C. Rennie,
afterwards a senior lecturer in engineering at the university of Melbourne, and
two daughters.
Of simple and somewhat austere tastes, and a sincerely religious man, Rennie
was much liked by his students and associates. As a scientist he kept abreast of
his subject, but had little time for writing and few facilities for research.
Some early papers by him will be found in the Transactions of the Chemical
Society for the years 1879-82 and a list of his papers in the
Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of South Australia is
given on page 426 of volume LI. A few of his papers were reprinted separately as
pamphlets.
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