John William Dawson

Faith, Hope, and Science

By Susan Sheets-Pyenson
Categories: The Natural World
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773513686, 304 pages, December 1995
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773565760, 304 pages, December 1995

Description

Dawson was born and raised in Pictou, Nova Scotia, where the many sandstone and coal formations provided fertile ground for his first scientific explorations, which culminated in the publication of Acadian Geology. He became principal of McGill University in 1855 and over the next forty years worked unceasingly to transform McGill from a "tiny, poverty-stricken provincial school" into a scientific institution of the highest rank. He was the only person to hold the presidency of both the American Association for the Advancement of Science and its British equivalent. Dawson's energetic promotion of scientific institutions in Canada remains one of his most enduring legacies, particularly his role in creating the Royal Society of Canada. Drawing on Dawson's correspondence and personal papers, Sheets-Pyenson paints an intimate portrait of a pivotal figure in Canada's scientific heritage and a proper Victorian gentleman whose pious Presbyterianism, missionary zeal, and unwavering belief in the light of knowledge drove him on a quest to conquer ignorance, eradicate prejudice, and vanquish bigotry.

Reviews

"Sheets-Pyenson has substantially redressed a gap in Canadian historical scholarship with a sympathetic and well-rounded portrait of John William Dawson. She certainly makes the case that Dawson was the most important figure in the organizational advancement of Canadian science in the nineteenth century." A.B. McKillop, Department of History, Carleton University.