Robert Jameson succeeded Walker in 1804 only to be faced
with the latter's family and trustees who claimed the
collection as their own. They left Jameson with a fraction
of the original collection of which he wrote,
"The remainder comprises of birds, serpents,
minerals and the dresses and weapons of other nations,
all in so decayed a state that I was forced to throw them
out".
It has been said that Jameson was "happy only when fingering
minerals" and indeed, accounts of his lectures would suggest
he was a dour man, whom Charles Darwin spoke of as being "incredibly
dull". The sole effect that Jameson's lectures produced on
him was the desire,
"never as long as I lived to read a book on
Geology or in any way to study the science".
However, it only takes a quick glance at Darwin's memoirs
to understand that as a student in Edinburgh he had very
little interest in lectures as a whole, preferring instead
to read. Jameson was not the only lecturer to disappoint the
young Darwin: "Dr. Duncan's lectures on Materia Medica at 8
o'clock on a winter's morning are something fearful to
remember. Dr. Monro made his lectures on human anatomy as
dull as he was himself".
Robert Christison and Edward Forbes seemed to be a little
more understanding of Jameson's nature. Christison stated,
"lectures were numerously attended in spite of a
dry manner, and although attendance on Natural History
was not enforced for any University honour or profession.
The popularity of his subject, his earnestness as a
lecturer, his enthusiasm as an investigator, and the
great museum he had collected for illustrating his
teaching, were together the causes for his success".
(Attendance at lectures in this subject was not compulsory
for medical students until 1833).
Edward Forbes, who was to be Jameson's successor, attended
Jameson's course in the summer of 1832 and later in his
memoirs he noted,

"The value of professorial worth should chiefly
be estimated by the number and excellence of disciples. A
large share of the best naturalists of the day received
their first instruction in the science ... from Professor
Jameson".
In the fifty years (1804-1854) that Jameson held the chair
of Natural History, some 74,000 specimens were amassed for
the collection. Jameson also did much to further the
collection's reputation and its accessibility since he saw
the museum as
"not a private department of the university but
as a public department connected in some degree with the
country of Scotland".
In 1812, what may be viewed as the second Natural History
collection was given the title of 'Royal Museum of the
University'.
Several methods were employed to acquire this enormous
number of specimens. An occasional collection would be
bought as a whole for the University, as was the collection
of Louis Dufresne which was purchased at an auction in Paris
for £2,500 in 1819. Individual specimens were bought
from existing collections which could not be afforded as a
whole. For example, Dr. Walter Adam made many purchases on
behalf of Jameson and the University at the London sale of
the William Bullock collection. Jameson, however, was most
upset upon the arrival of the Bullock collection in
Edinburgh. Dr. Adam knew little about the Professor's
requirements and had had to rely on his instincts and the
advice of other bidders. There were of course no telephones
at this time which meant that each day's bidding was related
by letter and in a moment of doubt over one day's buying Dr.
Adam confesses,
"... Today I have perhaps too many monkeys".
A sentiment that Jameson wholeheartedly agreed with when
he first saw these specimens. He referred to them always as
his
"...vile baboons".
As well as making purchases, Jameson compiled what he
called a 'Set
of Instructions for Collectors', which was distributed
among the different ministers and public servants abroad in
the hope that they would collect specimens and send them to
the University. He issued his instructions to those he knew
were about to travel, one of whom was William Scoresby
(junior) who collected among other things a live polar bear
for Jameson whilst voyaging in the search for the North West
Passage to the Pacific Ocean. Jameson suggested many methods
of preservation and preparation in his instructions which
must have seemed highly dubious to the uninformed layman. He
suggested that the skin of birds and quadrupeds could be
preserved by rubbing on to them a composition of tanners'
bark, burnt alum, sulphur and tobacco. Also, fish and
reptiles were to be preserved in spirit such as whiskey, a
little of which should be injected into the stomach by the
mouth and into the other intestines through the anus.
As well as Jameson's great achievements in amassing such an
impressive collection he gained enough support from the
University Authorities, the Edinburgh Town Council and the
Commissioners for the College Buildings to get their
permission to re-house the collection twice in better,
larger premises. The first time was in 1826 when the Royal
Museum of the University moved into the then newly built
University Quadrangle rooms in what is now known as 'Old
College' on South Bridge. These rooms are currently occupied
by the Talbot Rice Arts Centre but the structure of the
rooms remains more or less that of Jameson's day with a
large central room framed with an upper gallery for holding
smaller specimens.
In 1852, Jameson submitted his second appeal to the Treasury
for more extensive housing. But this time he suggested that
the collection should be placed in the hands of the nation
and should be housed in a new national museum to be built in
Chambers Street, next to the University buildings. In 1854,
the year of Jameson's death, Parliament sanctioned the
proposal and work began. This 'new museum' was initially
called the Museum of Science and Art, subsequently the Royal
Scottish Museum and is now the Royal Museum.
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