John Macadam
The Honorable Dr John Macadam, was a Scottish-Australian chemist, medical teacher, Australian politician and cabinet minister, and honorary secretary of the Burke and Wills expedition. The genus Macadamia was named after him in 1857. He died in Australia aged 38.
Early life
John Macadam was born at Northbank, Glasgow, Scotland, on 29 May 1827, the son of William Macadam and Helen, née Stevenson. His father was a Glasgow businessman, who owned a spinning and textile printing works in Kilmarnock, and was a burgess and a bailie of Glasgow. His fellow industrialists and he in the craft had developed, using chemistry, the processes for the large-scale industrial printing of fabrics for which these plants in the area became known.John Macadam was privately educated in Glasgow; he studied chemistry at the Andersonian University and went for advanced study at the University of Edinburgh under Professor William Gregory. In 1846-47, he went on to serve as assistant to Professor George Wilson at the University of Edinburgh in his laboratory in Brown Square. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Scottish Society of Arts that year, and in 1848, a member of the Glasgow Philosophical Society. He then studied medicine at the University of Glasgow.
He was a member of what became a small dynasty of Scottish scientists and lecturers in analytical chemistry, which included, other than himself, his eldest half brother William Macadam, his immediate younger brother Stevenson Macadam and nephews William Ivison Macadam and Stevenson J. C. G. Macadam, as well as the former nephew's daughter, his great niece Elison A. Macadam.
John Macadam was a tall and imposing figure, with long red hair, a flowing beard, and powerful voice. All his life he commanded attention. He was a skilled, popular, and eloquent lecturer who had obtained an outstanding knowledge of analytical chemistry, and was always ready to pass on his knowledge. Before he left Glasgow, he had published several papers on analytical chemistry.
On 8 June 1855, aged 28, Macadam sailed for Melbourne in the Colony of Victoria, Australia, on the sailing ship Admiral. He arrived on 8 September 1855.
Australian academic career
In 1855 he was lecturer on chemistry and natural science at Scotch College, having been engaged for the position before leaving Scotland.In 1857 he was awarded an MD ad eundem from the University of Melbourne in acknowledgment of his MD from the University of Glasgow.
In 1857-1858 he also taught at Geelong Church of England Grammar School. In 1858, he was appointed the Victorian government analytical chemist. In 1860 he became health officer to the City of Melbourne; aside from this position he did not practise medicine. He wrote several reports on public health.
In 1861 he was secretary to the Victorian Industrial Exhibition and began a series of lectures on chemistry for medical students at the Analytical Laboratory, with Richard Eades lecturing on material media. These classes hastened the formation of the medical school at the University of Melbourne, which opened in 1862. On 3 March 1862 he was appointed as the first lecturer in medicine at the University of Melbourne School of Medicine. For the next few years he held classes for a small number of medical students in the Analytical Laboratory behind the Public Library. He was also a member of the Board of Agriculture.
Political life
He became a member of the legislative assembly of the self-governing Colony of Victoria as a radical and supporter of the Land Convention, representing Castlemaine.He was postmaster-general of Victoria in 1861. He resigned from the legislature in 1864. He had sponsored bills on medical practitioners and adulteration of food which became law in 1862 and 1863.
Royal Society of Victoria
Between 1857 and 1862, Macadam served as honorary secretary of the Philosophical Institute of Victoria, which later became the Royal Society of Victoria in 1860, and was appointed vice-president of it in 1863. He was editor of first five volumes of the society's Transactions. He was active in erecting the Society's Meeting Hall and was involved in the institute's initiative to obtain a royal charter. He saw both happen while he held office, when in January 1860, the Philosophical Institute became the Royal Society of Victoria and met in their new building.Burke and Wills expedition
Between 1857 and 1865, Macadam served as honorary secretary to the Exploration Committee of the Royal Society of Victoria, which organised the Burke and Wills expedition.The expedition was organised by the society with the aim of crossing the continent of Australia from the south to the north coasts, map it, and collect scientific data and specimens. At that time, most of the interior of Australia had not been explored by the European settlers and was unknown to them.
In 1860–61, Robert O'Hara Burke and William John Wills led the expedition of 19 men with that intention, crossing Australia from Melbourne in the south, to the Gulf of Carpentaria in the north, a distance around 2,000 miles.
Three men ultimately travelled over 3,000 miles from Melbourne to the shores of the Gulf of Carpentaria and back to the Depot Camp at Cooper Creek. Seven men died in the attempt, including the leaders Burke and Wills. Of the four men who reached the north coast, only one, John King, survived with the help of the indigenous people to return to Melbourne.
This expedition became the first to cross the Australian continent. It was of great importance to the subsequent development of Australia and could be compared in importance to the Lewis and Clark Expedition overland to the North American Pacific Coast to the development of the United States.
After the heavy death toll of the expedition, initial criticism fell on the Royal Society, but it became clear that their foresight could not have prevented the deaths and this was then widely recognised when it became known that as Secretary of the Exploration Committee of the Burke and Wills expedition, Dr. Macadam had insisted on adequate provisions for their safety.
Macadamia
The macadamia nut was discovered by the European settlers, and subsequently the tree was named after him by his friend and colleague, Dr Ferdinand Mueller, Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne. The tree gave his name to macadamia nuts. The genus Macadamia was first described scientifically in 1857 by Dr. Mueller and he named the new genus in honour of his friend Dr John Macadam. Mueller had done a great deal of taxonomy of the flora, naming innumerable genera but chose this "...a beautiful genus dedicated to John Macadam, M.D. the talented and deserving secretary of our institute."Australian rules football
On 7 August 1858, John Macadam officiated as one of two umpires at a famous game of football played between Scotch College and Melbourne Grammar. It was co-umpired by Tom Wills and John Macadam. The two schools have competed annually ever since, lately for the Cordner–Eggleston Cup. This game was a predecessor to the modern game of Australian rules football and is commemorated by a statue depicting the game outside the Melbourne Cricket Ground.Learned societies
- 1847 fellow of the Royal Scottish Society of Arts
- 1848 a member of the Glasgow Philosophical Society
- 1855 elected Fellow of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons, the University of Glasgow
- 1855 elected member, the Philosophical Institute of Victoria, later to become the Royal Society of Victoria
- 1860 vice-president of Royal Society of Victoria
Family
John and Elizabeth had two sons:
John Melnotte Macadam was born 29 August 1858 at Fitzroy, Melbourne, Australia, and died on 30 January 1859, aged 5 months.
William Castlemaine Macadam was born on 2 July 1860 and died 17 December 1865 at Williamstown, Victoria, Australia. He died aged five and had survived his father by a few months. The inscription on his father's burial monument under His only children has him listed under his elder brother, who died in infancy, but does not for some reason give William's date of death on it.
Death
In 1865 Macadam died, aged 38, after a shipboard accident on the way to New Zealand.In March 1865 he had gone to New Zealand to give evidence at the trial of Captain W. A. Jarvey, charged with the murder of his wife by poison. The jury failed to agree, and on the voyage home, Macadam fractured his ribs in rough weather. On medical terms, he was advised not to attend the adjourned trial. However, he insisted on going, accompanied by John Drummond Kirkland, his medical-student assistant. He sailed in the Alhambra, but died on the voyage on 2 September 1865. Kirkland gave evidence at the trial and Jarvey was convicted. Macadam's body, sealed in a lead coffin, was brought back for burial in the Presbyterian section of the Melbourne General Cemetery.
The Australian News commented, "At the time of his death, Dr Macadam was but 38 years of age; there can be little doubt that the various and onerous duties he discharged for the public must be attributed in great measure the shortening of his days." The Australian Medical Journal stated, "For some time it had been evident to his friends that his general health was giving way: that a frame naturally robust and vigorous was gradually becoming undermined by the incessant and harassing duties of the multifarious offices he filled." The inquest verdict stated, "His death was caused by excessive debility and general exhaustion."