The first meeting of the trustees and executors of Anderson’s Institution (the ancestor of the University of Strathclyde) was held on 23 March 1796 at the Tontine Tavern in Glasgow. The meeting unanimously resolved to carry out John Anderson’s wishes for the foundation of a new university as far as funds allowed. Since Anderson’s bequest was insufficient for the purpose, donations were quickly sought. A circular soliciting patronage and subscriptions was drafted in April and sent to the most respectable people in Glasgow. It set out the advantages of the new institution in the following terms:
'… it is calculated to diffuse that useful branch of knowledge more generally among Artists and Manufacturers connected with the trade and prosperity of this City and its environs, as well as to afford a rational and agreeable amusement to the Ladies …'
This list of the first donors to Anderson’s Institution reads like a roll call of the great and the good of Glasgow. It is headed by David Dale, founder of the New Lanark cotton mill.
Archives reference: OB 5/1/2/1 List of subscribers to Anderson’s Institution, 1796