Trevor Illtyd Williams

MA BSc DPhil CChem FRSC FRHistS
Born16 July 1921
Bristol
Died12 October 1996
Oxford
NationalityBritish
Alma materThe Queen's College Oxford
Occupation(s)Chemist, historian, author and editor
Years active1942-1996
Notable workA Biographical Dictionary of Scientists (1968); The Chemical Industry Past and Present (1953); A Short History of Technology (with Thomas K Derry) (1960)
Board member ofSee text
SpouseSylvia Irène Armstead 1952
Children5 (4 sons, 1 daughter)
Parent(s)Illtyd Williams and Alma Mathilde Sohlberg

Trevor Illtyd Williams (16 July 1921 – 12 October 1996) was a British chemist; a historian of science; a science author; and a journal editor. He sat on a number of science advisory committees, steering groups and related bodies.

Education

Clifton College, Bristol. Queen's College, Oxford: BSc, MA, and DPhil on the isolation of helvolic acid and other antibiotics.[1]

Career

Williams was an author and the editor of a number of science journals and a member of several science advisory committees, steering groups and councils.[1][2]

Author

Trevor Williams was an author on a range of scientific topics, particularly chemistry.[3] His most significant contribution is considered[4] to be his A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists (1968).[4] His book The Chemical Industry Past and Present (1953) was republished as an Open University set book for science and technology courses. In his foreword to A History of the British Gas Industry he states that ‘I have been interested in the history of science and technology, both as a discipline in its own right and as a complement to political, economic and social history’. He goes on to say that the British gas industry ‘has a particular appeal’ for there are few industries which so clearly ‘illustrate the consequences of the interplay of all these factors’.[5]

Editor

Williams was editor of the following journals:[1]

  • Endeavour, (deputy editor then editor), 1945–94
  • Annals of Science, (editor), 1966–74
  • Outlook on Agriculture, (editor), 1982–89

He was appointed by ICI Ltd as an Academic Relations Advisor, 1962–74, where he was involved in the distribution of postdoctoral fellowships and research grants, and took part in negotiations between universities, industry and government.[4]

Williams was a member of the following organisations:[1]

  • Society for the Study of Alchemy and Early Chemistry, chair, 1967–86
  • English Language Book Society, Steering Committee member, 1984–90
  • Science Museum, advisory Council member, 1972–84
  • World List of Scientific Periodicals, chair, 1966–88
  • Council of University College Swansea, member, 1965–83

Awards and achievements

Williams received the Dexter Award of the American Chemical Society in 1976, for his contribution to the history of chemistry.[4]

He was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC) and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (FRHistS).[3]

Publications

Williams was the author of the following books:[3][6]

An Introduction to Chromatography, Blackie, London, 1946

Drugs from Plants, Sigma, London, 1947

The Soil and the Sea (ed), Saturn Press, 1949

The Chemical Industry Past and Present, Penguin, 1953

The Elements of Chromatography, Blackie and Son, 1954

A History of Technology: volumes I to V (ed), Oxford University Press, 1954–58

Alchemy, 1957

A Short History of Technology (with Thomas K Derry), Oxford University Press, 1960

Science and Technology: chapter III in New Cambridge Modern History, volume XI, Cambridge University Press, 1967

Alexander Findlay’s A Hundred Years of Chemistry (ed), 1965

A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists (ed), A and C Black Ltd, 1968 & 1994

Alfred Bernhard Nobel, 1973

James Cook, Priory Press, 1974, ISBN 9780850781915

Man the Chemist, Priory Press, 1976, ISBN 9780850781595

A History of Technology, volumes VI and VII: The Twentieth Century (ed), Oxford University Press, 1978

A History of the British Gas Industry, Oxford University Press, 1981, ISBN 9780198581574

A Short History of Twentieth Century Technology, Oxford University Press, 1982, ISBN 9780198581598

European Research Centres (ed), 1982

This is Industrial Research in the United Kingdom: a Guide to Organisations and Programmes (ed), FT Pharmaceuticals, 1983, ISBN 9780582900165

Howard Florey: penicillin and after, Oxford University Press, 1984, ISBN 9780198581734

The Triumph of Invention, Little Brown Book Group, 1987, ISBN 9780356140636

Robert Robinson, Chemist Extraordinary, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1990, ISBN 9780198581802

Science: invention and discovery in the twentieth century, Chambers, 1990, ISBN 9780245600241

Our Scientific Heritage: an A-Z of Great Britain and Ireland, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 1996, ISBN 9780750908207

Personal life

Williams was born on 16 July 1921 in Bristol, the son of Illtyd Williams (a Physics lecturer at Bristol University) and Alma Mathilde Sohlberg.[3] He married in 1945, in London, Minnie L Margolis; divorced 1952. He married secondly in 1952, in Westminster London, Sylvia Irène Armstead. They had five children: four sons and one daughter.[3] He gave his recreations as gardening and hill walking.[2]

Trevor Illtyd Williams died on 12 October 1996 at the John Radcliffe Hospital Oxford, following an operation.[4] His estate was valued at £1,097,876 in January 1997.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Who was who, Trevor Illtyd Williams". Retrieved 6 January 2024.
  2. 1 2 "Obituary Williams, Trevor Illtyd 1921-1996". Science Museum.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Williams, Trevor Illtyd". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 6 January 2024.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Trevor Illtyd Williams (1923-1996)" (PDF). American Chemical Society. Retrieved 6 January 2024.
  5. Williams, Trevor I (1981). A History of the British Gas Industry. Oxford University Press. pp. ix. ISBN 9780198581574.
  6. Morris, Peter. "Obituary Trevor Illtyd Williams". Endeavour. 21 (1): 1–2.
  7. Probate granted 6 January 1997
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