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Edward Ash Hadow

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Name
  
Edward Hadow


Died
  
August 11, 1866

Edward Ash Hadow (18 April 1831 – 11 August 1866) was an English Chemist.

Contents

Edward Ash Hadow was born in Clifton, Bristol.

He attended Bristol medical school and subsequently the University of London. He achieved a diploma of the Royal College of surgeons and a bachelor of medicine. At Kings College, London, he won a Daniell Scholarship following an essay on gun-cotton. He became demonstrator of chemistry at King’s College and studied the detection of alum in bread. His research also examined the action of oxidizing agents on the sulphocyanides and the method of converting them into cyanides and the composition of the platinicyanides.

He also invented a process for producing "soluble cotton", involved in early photography This formula is described in the Photographic Journal.

He died of pneumonia, aged 35, following a protracted illness.

Parents

He was the son of George John Hadow (1789–1869) of the Madras Civil Service and later of Sundon House, Clifton and Margaret Julia Timins (1796–1875) and grandson of Reverend James Hadow of Streatley, Bedfordshire.

Marriage

He married Mary Ann Robinson in 1865.

Publications

  • "Notes on the action of oxidising agents on sulphocyanides" Q. J. Chem. Soc., 1859, 11, 174 - 180
  • "The Platinum bases" Journal of the Chemical Society: Transactions, Volume 4; Volume 19
  • He was joint editor of Hardwich’s Manual of Photography.

    References

    Edward Ash Hadow Wikipedia