Abstract

In 1919 the Animal Breeding Research Department was established in Edinburgh. This Department, later renamed the Institute of Animal Genetics, forged an international reputation, eventually becoming the centrepiece of a cluster of new genetics research units and institutions in Edinburgh after the Second World War. Yet despite its significance for institutionalising animal genetics research in the UK, the origins and development of the Department have not received as much scholarly attention as its importance warrants. This paper sheds new light on Edinburgh’s place in early British genetics by drawing upon recently catalogued archival sources including the papers of James Cossar Ewart, Regius Professor of Natural History at the University of Edinburgh between 1882 and 1927. Although presently a marginal figure in genetics historiography, Ewart established two sites for experimental animal breeding work between 1895 and 1911 and played a central role in the founding of Britain’s first genetics lectureship, also in 1911. These early efforts helped to secure government funding in 1913. However, a combination of the First World War, bureaucratic problems and Ewart’s personal ambitions delayed the creation of the Department and the appointment of its director by another six years. This paper charts the institutionalisation of animal breeding and genetics research in Edinburgh within the wider contexts of British genetics and agriculture in the early twentieth century.

Highlights

  • After more than a decade of effort and negotiation, the Animal Breeding Research Department (ABRD) was founded in Edinburgh in 1919, one of a number of government-funded agricultural research institutes around Britain

  • This paper sheds new light on Edinburgh’s place in early British genetics by drawing upon recently catalogued archival sources including the papers of James Cossar Ewart, Regius Professor of Natural History at the University of Edinburgh between 1882 and 1927

  • The Department, renamed the Institute of Animal Genetics in 1930, forged an international reputation that influenced the situating of new genetics research units and institutions in Edinburgh after the Second World War, including the predecessors of the current Roslin Institute (Robertson, 1983)

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Summary

Introduction

The Department, renamed the Institute of Animal Genetics in 1930, forged an international reputation that influenced the situating of new genetics research units and institutions in Edinburgh after the Second World War, including the predecessors of the current Roslin Institute (Robertson, 1983).1 Despite this importance in the history of European genetics, the ABRD has not received as much scholarly attention as it might, nor certainly as much as archival sources allow.. Professor of Natural History from 1882 until his retirement in 1927 He was a consistent advocate for improvements in the University’s provision for science and medicine, and founded new departmental lectureships in embryology and invertebrate zoology, as well as genetics Despite his role in the ABRD’s establishment, Ewart was partly responsible for delaying the appointment of its director, and it would be several years before Edinburgh began to build an international reputation as a major centre for genetics research

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