Colour photograph of a painting of Thomas Garnett.Thomas Garnett (1766-1802) was Professor of Natural Philosophy at Anderson’s Institution from 1796 to 1799. A medical graduate of the University of Edinburgh, Garnett was the first lecturer to be appointed by the managers of Anderson’s Institution. In addition to a daytime course on Arts and Manufactures, he offered two ‘popular’ evening lecture courses, one in natural and experimental philosophy and the other in chemistry. These popular courses were designed to entertain as well as to educate the citizens of Glasgow, and, in line with John Anderson’s wishes, they were also open to women. A total of 972 ladies and gentlemen attended Garnett’s classes at the Institution during the first session, making it,

‘the first regular institution in which the fair sex have been admitted…on the same footing as men’. 

Despite this success, however, the Institution’s managers could not afford to give Garnett the security of a fixed salary, and he resigned on 15 October 1799 to take up the more remunerative Chair of Experimental Philosophy, Mechanics and Chemistry at the Royal Institution in London.

The image is of an oil portrait of Garnett by an unknown artist. It is part of the University’s art collection and was donated by James Smith of Jordanhill (GLAEX A9).


Archives reference: OP 4/5/2 Painting of Thomas Garnett.

Archives reference: OB/1/1, Minute Book of Anderson’s Institution, 1796-1799, p.116.