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John Graham Kerr

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Nationality
  
Scottish

Fields
  
Embryology

Influenced
  
Hugh B. Cott


Role
  
Member of Parliament

Name
  
John Kerr

Awards
  
Linnean Medal

John Graham Kerr httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Alma mater
  
University of Edinburgh Christ's College, Cambridge

Known for
  
embryology of lungfishes, dazzle camouflage

Notable awards
  
Linnean Medal (1955) Fellow of the Royal Society

Died
  
April 21, 1957, Barley, United Kingdom

Books
  
A Naturalist in the Gran Chaco

Education
  
Royal High School, Edinburgh, University of Cambridge, Christ's College, Cambridge

Sir John Graham Kerr FRS FRSE FLS FZS LLD (18 September 1869 – 21 April 1957), known to his friends as Graham Kerr, was a British https://todayinsci.com/9/9_18.htmembryologist and Unionist Member of Parliament (MP). He is best known for his studies of the embryology of lungfishes. He was involved in ship camouflage in the First World War, and through his pupil Hugh B. Cott influenced military camouflage thinking in the Second World War also.

Contents

John Graham Kerr FileSir John Graham Kerr Photograph by T R Annan Sons Ltd

Early life

He was born at Rowley Lodge, Arkley in Hertfordshire to Scottish parents: John Kerr former Principal of Hooghly College in Calcutta and his wife, Sybella Graham.

Kerr was educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh, and then studied Medicine at the University of Edinburgh.

Zoology

Kerr interrupted his medical studies to join an Argentinian expedition to study the natural history of the Pilcomayo River. On his return, he studied natural sciences at Christ's College, Cambridge, graduating with first class honours in 1896. The Argentinian expedition had ended with the loss of most of the collections, but after graduating he mounted an expedition to the Gran Chaco, bringing home a large collection of material related to the South American lungfish, Lepidosiren paradoxa. Kerr was accompanied by John Samuel Budgett, who studied the frogs of the area and discovered a new genus.

After a period acting as Demonstrator in the Animal Morphology lectures at Christ's College, Cambridge (1898 to 1902), he was appointed in August 1902 as Regius Professor of Natural History in the University of Glasgow replacing John Young. Kerr stayed until 1935. Kerr was particularly interested in teaching medical students, and published widely.

In 1903 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir Isaac Bayley Balfour, James Cossar Ewart, Frederick Orpen Bower, and James Geikie. He won the Society's Neill Prize in 1904. He served as the Society's Vice President from 1928 to 1931.

He was President of the Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh from 1906 to 1909 and elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1909. He received LLDs from the University of Edinburgh in 1935 and the University of St Andrews in 1950.

Camouflage

Kerr made early contributions to ship camouflage in the First World War. He wrote to First Sea Lord Winston Churchill on 24 September 1914, advocating camouflage by disruptive coloration — breaking up outlines with patches of strongly contrasting tone — and countershading — shading guns into invisibility with lighter paint below, darker paint above. Kerr openly supported the controversial camouflage claims of American artist Abbott Handerson Thayer. Kerr's aim was to make ships difficult to spot and fool range finders by disrupting their outlines, or in his own words "to destroy completely the continuity of outlines by splashes of white", to make ships harder to hit with gunfire at long range. Kerr's principle was applied to ships in various ways, but Kerr found it difficult to promote or control the use of his camouflage ideas, and they fell out of favour after Churchill's departure from the Admiralty. The Royal Navy reverted to plain grey. A rival proposal for disruptive camouflage emerged in 1917 from the marine artist Norman Wilkinson. Wilkinson, unlike Kerr, had little difficulty fitting in with the naval establishment, and was put in charge of a large-scale program of painting ships in disruptive patterns that became known as "Dazzle camouflage". After the war, Kerr engaged in an unsuccessful legal dispute over the credit for creating dazzle camouflage. Wilkinson successfully promoted the false idea that Kerr's camouflage sought invisibility rather than image disruption.

Kerr again influenced British camouflage in the Second World War, this time through his pupil Hugh B. Cott.

Politics and Late Life

Kerr was elected as MP for the Combined Scottish Universities at a by-election in 1935 after the MP and novelist John Buchan resigned his seat when he was appointed as Governor General of Canada. After his election to Parliament, Kerr resigned his professorship, and moved to Hertfordshire. He held the seat until the university constituencies were abolished for the 1950 general election, serving for a time as Chairman of the Parliamentary and Scientific Committee.

He was knighted in the King's Birthday Honours in 1939

St Andrews University awarded him an honorary doctorate (LLD) in 1950.

He died on 21 April 1957 at Barley House in Royston, Hertfordshire.

Family

He married twice. Firstly in 1903 he married Elizabeth Mary Kerr. She died in 1934. He then remarried in 1936 to Isobel Clapperton (née Macindoe), a widow.

Legacy

The Zoology Building of the University of Glasgow was renamed the Graham Kerr Building in his name.

Publications

  • Textbook of Embryology with the Exception of Mammals (1919)
  • Zoology for Medical Students (1921)
  • Evolution (1926)
  • An Introduction to Zoology (1929)
  • Publications

  • A Textbook of Embryology with the Exception of Mammalia (1914–19)
  • Zoology for Medical Students (1921)
  • Evolution (1926)
  • References

    John Graham Kerr Wikipedia