John Anderson, Professor of Natural Philosophy at Glasgow University and the founder of Anderson’s Institution (the ancestor of the University of Strathclyde), was a remarkable man. He had a great many scientific interests including natural philosophy (physics), natural history, antiquities, meteorology, ballistics and military engineering. He was also a prolific writer and inventor. Thoroughly influenced by the Scottish Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution, his interests lay in the practical application of science to the production of material objects.
This engraved portrait by William Kay, completed in 1792 and published in 1793, shows Anderson seated at a table surrounded by various objects denoting his interests and creativity.
Hanging on the wall above his head is the firearm that Anderson had carried as a volunteer officer defending the town of Stirling against the Jacobites in 1745.
On the right is a lightening rod protector, representing an interest Anderson shared with his friend and correspondent, the American scientist and politician, Benjamin Franklin.
In the centre is a portable six-pounder cannon designed by Anderson, which had minimum recoil through a compressed air mechanism and was suitable for transport by cavalry litter. As a gesture of support for the French Revolution, Anderson presented the cannon to the French nation in 1791, and it was used at the Battle of Jemappes. The title of the engraving, ‘The instruments of Liberty from the hands of Science,’ possibly refers to Anderson’s early sympathies with the French Revolutionaries.
Above the cannon is Anderson’s ‘fire’ balloon for signals dispatch, which the Revolutionary Government in France adopted as a means of carrying propaganda across the German frontier.
To the left is Anderson’s improved instrumentation in rain gauges. He collected local weather data for over 35 years, and advocated the establishment of ‘accurate weather registers throughout Britain’.
In the bottom left corner is a copy of the Institutes of Physics, Anderson’s groundbreaking textbook of 1786, which went through five editions in ten years.
Below the Institutes are eight volumes whose spines proclaim Anderson’s ideals and interests: religion; liberty; science; agriculture; mechanic arts; manufactures; elegant arts, and commerce.
Archives reference: OP 4/1/3 Illustration of John Anderson, 1792
