| 
 The Early Years and the Founding of the Chair of Zoology 
         (1876-1919)
 As the twentieth century approached, the Professors of
         Natural History were faced with a problem additional to that
         of having to re-establish a collection, that of lack of
         space. This part of the history traces the moves that led to
         the building of the Ashworth Laboratories to house the
         Department of Zoology at the King's Buildings on West Mains
         Road, as well as giving a brief insight into the acquisition
         of the current collection and its contributors.
 
   
 So that the reader can understand subsequent events more
         clearly, the major differences between University life in
         Victorian times and today will be briefly described here. In
         Victorian times, professors were responsible for all the
         lectures in their subject. If they employed an assistant,
         they had to pay them from out of their own salaries.
         Students were required to attend lectures, record them
         diligently and submit their notes for checking by the
         Professors. It was only towards the end of the nineteenth
         century that the increasing growth of knowledge caused the
         University itself to employ additional staff as lecturers
         and the different departments began to emerge as seen today
         with a number of specialist lecturers as well as a
         Professor.
           
 In 1876, Wyville Thomson returned from the 'Challenger'
         expedition to find that the museum had appointed its own
         Keeper - Ramsey Heatley Traquair - to the original
         University collection to which the University was now denied
         access. Again, the University had to rely upon the space
         within Old College buildings for storing the few specimens
         still in its possession, mostly duplicates of those in the
         Museum of Science and Art and some from the voyages of
         Challenger. Although the specimens from 'Challenger' were
         destined for the British Museum, Wyville Thomson kept a few
         specimens for the University which are still present in the
         collection. These include several sponges, a sea-squirt and
         a few samples of Globigerine, Pteropod and Radiolarian ooze
         dredged from the sea floor.
         
           
 This situation in no way satisfied the needs of the
         department and when James Cossar Ewart succeeded Wyville Thomson as
         Professor of Natural History in 1882, he assumed the task of
         acquiring a new collection.
         
          It was while Cossar Ewart held the Chair of Natural
         History that one of the most dynamic characters entered the
         history of the Department of Zoology and the University's
         Natural History collection: James Hartley Ashworth,
         appointed Lecturer in Invertebrate Zoology in 1901.
         
          In 1919, the University Court instituted the Chair of
         Zoology. Whilst Ewart continued to preside over the
         vertebrates, this new Chair was filled by Ashworth and he
         covered aspects of invertebrate life, including Entomology,
         Marine Biology and Parasitology. It was largely due to
         Ashworth's qualities as a speaker and organiser that the
         funds for the new Department of Zoology at The King's
         Buildings were raised.
         
          During the time that a collection was re-established in
         Old College, stories arose that would seem to suggest
         University life at this time was not as coldly disciplined
         as might first be imagined. John Sloan, a student of
         Professor Ashworth's in the late 1920's, recalls his father
         telling him of a time when he was employed as Professor
         Cossar Ewart's assistant in the Old College buildings;
         
          "... my father was in the habit of putting
            numbers of specimens on the roof to macerate. On one
            festive occasion which was, I think, a national election,
            some students managed to get up onto the roof and were
            delighted to find large numbers of smelly objects which
            were found to be most suitable missiles to hurl at rivals
            in the quad. below. This they did to the great loss of
            the Zoology museum".  Because of the dynamic nature of Ashworth and his crucial
         role in getting a new building for the Zoology Department
         and its collections, Cossar Ewart has tended to be
         overlooked.
 With Ashworth now lecturing on the invertebrates, Cossar
         Ewart continued to cover the vertebrate groups. He was not a
         good lecturer and clearly had grave problems with discipline
         in his classes. Cossar Ewart wore a heavy moustache of the
         walrus type. Sir Maurice Yonge, who attended his lectures in
         the Old College, recalled some in which the uproar was so
         intense that it was possible to tell that the poor man was
         still trying to lecture only because his moustache continued
         to move up and down.
         
          Nevertheless, Cossar Ewart was a considerable scientist.
         A Fellow of the Royal Society he carried out beautiful work
         on the embryonic development of the horse and conducted
         numerous experiments on his estate - the so called Penicuick
         Experiments - on the hybridization of zebras and horses. He
         was a pioneer in domestic animal improvement by selective
         breeding and in the study of animal reproduction. It was
         largely due to his presence in Edinburgh that the University
         was chosen as the site for an institute of Animal Genetics,
         one of the first such in the world. This decision was later
         to have a profound effect on the development of Edinburgh as
         a major centre of biological research and teaching.
 |