This photograph shows a portrait of George Birkbeck by Samuel Lane. George Birkbeck M.D (1776–1841) was British physician, academic, philanthropist and pioneer in adult education. Born in Settle, Yorkshire, he qualified as a doctor in Edinburgh in 1799, aged 23. Before practising as a doctor, he initially embarked on an academic career. In 1799 he was appointed as Professor of Natural Philosophy at Anderson's College in Glasgow, where he began providing free classes for working-class men in mechanics and chemistry. In 1804 Birkbeck became a doctor in London. He continued his interest in working class education and with others he established the London Mechanics Institute, of which he was the first President from 1823-1841. After his death, the London Mechanics’ Institute was renamed in his honour - first as he Birkbeck Literary and Scientific Institution, in 1866 and then, in 1907, as Birkbeck College. George Birkbeck was also a patron of the Glasgow Mechanics Institute, President of the British Meteorological Society, and helped to create the first chemistry laboratory for undergraduates at University College London.
You are all set!
Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.