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Brian Duncan Shaw

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Name
  
Brian Shaw

Thesis
  
1927

Died
  
November 7, 1999


Brian Duncan Shaw

Born
  
10 February 1898 (
1898-02-10
)
Ilkeston, Derbyshire, England

Residence
  
185 Queens Road, Beeston

Spouse(s)
  
Margaret Elsie Wheldon (m. 1916) Alice Maud (m. 1990)

Awards
  
Military Medal, Territorial Decoration

Alma mater
  
University of Nottingham

Doctoral advisor
  
Frederick Kipping

Lieutenant colonel Brian Duncan Shaw (10 February 1898 – 7 November 1999) MM TD was a chemistry lecturer at the University of Nottingham, widely known for his demonstrations on explosives.

Contents

Early life

Shaw was born in Ilkeston, Derbyshire, the fourth and youngest child of Samuel Shaw and Lydia Emma Shaw, his brothers and sisters being named Lydia Emma, Mabel and Clarence Gordon. His father was a brick manufacturer and his mother had been working as a teacher.

He started working at Boots the Chemist in 1914 as an apprentice pharmacist.

In May 1916, he married to his first wife, Margaret Elsie Wheldon. After her death, in 1990, he would marry to Alice Maud on 5 June of the same year, who, in turn, would die in 1998, a year before Shaw died.

He fought on the battles of Somme, Cambrai and Passchendaele, during the First World War.

In the Second World War, at the Fall of France, on June 10, 1940, he was cut off in Normandy by German tanks, and was separated from the battalion he was with. After that, he got a bike and spent ten weeks hiding from the Nazis, while trying to reach Spain, eventually cycling 300 miles (480 kilometres). Near Poitiers, a French gendarme stopped him because the bicycle lacked a plaque used for annual tax, and phoned the Germans, who made him prisoner. He was sent to Germany and spent the rest of the war in five POW camps, mainly at Spangenburg bei Kassel.

He published several articles on pyridines, maninly in the Journal of the Chemical Society.

After his retirement in 1965, he continued giving lectures and worked as an expert witness in several court cases, such as the defence of the Angry Brigade.

A blue plaque was installed on 16 November 2012 at his home. As a part of the Periodic table of videos, Prof. Martyn Poliakoff and Brady Haran filmed the event.

The Shaw Medal

In 1988, the University of Nottingham created a medal in his honour called the Shaw Medal. BD Shaw himself was the first recipient of this prize.

References

Brian Duncan Shaw Wikipedia