Title
Textbook of Physical Chemistry
Reference
ARCH/A/07/20
Production date
1962 - 1962
Creator
- Macmillan & Co LtdBiographyBiography
1843- , publisher, Cambridge
Founded in 1843 as a bookshop in Cambridge as Macmillan & Co. by Daniel Macmillan and his brother Alexander. The Macmillans began publishing textbooks in 1844, met with steady success, and published their first novel, Charles Kingsley’s Westward Ho!, in 1855. The firm went on to publish several important Victorian authors including Alfred Lord Tennyson, Thomas Henry Huxley, Lewis Carroll, Rudyard Kipling, and William Butler Yeats.
The Macmillan family formally ended its ownership in 1999, when the German media group Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck GmbH completed its acquisition of all the company’s shares. In the early 21st century, Macmillan had offices in more than 40 countries. Its headquarters are in London.
Scope and Content
A copy of 'Textbook of Physical Chemistry' by Samuel Glasstone used by Mary Archer during her undergraduate study between 1962 and 1966. On the front cover there is an inscription that reads 'Mary D Weeden Oxford Feb 1963'.
Extent
1 item
Language
English
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Archer, Mary DoreenBiographyBiography
Mary Doreen Archer, Baroness Archer of Western-super-Mare, born Mary Doreen Weeden is a scientist and chair of the Science Museum Group trustees. She was born on 22nd December 1944, the daughter of Harold Norman Weeden and Doreen Weeden in Epson, Surry. Initially, she attended Cheltenham Ladies’ College before attending St Annes College Oxford, where she read chemistry. Following this she would go on to Imperial College, London, where she completed a PhD in physical chemistry, submitting her thesis in 1968.
Following her time at Imperial, Archer went on to St Hilda’s College, Oxford, where she was a junior research fellow between 1968 and 1971. In 1971 she worked as a temporary lecturer at Somerville College before going on to work with George Porter at the Royal Institution. Here she worked on photoelectrochemistry, which was the start of a career writing and contributing to works on solar energy.
In 1976 Mary Archer became a Fellow of Newnham College and a lecturer in chemistry at Trinity College, Cambridge. Whilst here she would also become the Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum trust, a position she would hold until 1991.
In 1988 she joined the Council of Lloyds Insurance, a non-executive director of Mid Anglia Radio PLC and chair of the National Energy Foundation. She also released a CD of Christmas Carols entitled ‘A Christmas Carol’. The following year she would become the Chair of the Lloyds hardship Committee.
In 1990 Mary Archer became of Trustee of the National Science and Industry Museum, a position she would hold until 2000, and also became a senior academic fellow at De Montford University. In 2002 she became the chair of Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation and in 2009 became the director of Cambridge University Health Partners. This would work lead her to being appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2012 birthday honours.
Dame Mary Archer was appointed the Chair of the Trustees of the Science Museum Group in 2015 and chancellor of the University of Buckingham in February 2020.
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions