Dictionary of Australian Biography

SMITH, HENRY GEORGE (18521924)

economic chemist
was born at Littlebourne, Kent, England, on 26 July 1852. He was educated at schools at Ickham and Wingham, and also had private tuition from the Rev. Mr Midgley, M.A. He went to Sydney in 1883 for health reasons, and in 1884 obtained a semi-scientific position on the staff of the Sydney technological museum. He began studying scientific subjects and chemistry in particular, in 1891 was appointed a laboratory assistant at the museum, and in the same year his first original paper was published in theProceedingsof the Linnean Society of New South Wales. He became mineralogist at the museum in 1895, and in the same year in collaboration withJ.H. Maiden(q.v.) contributed a paper on "Eucalyptus Kinos and the Occurrence of Endesmia" to theProceedingsof the Royal Society of New South Wales. This was Smith's first contribution to organic chemistry; later on from 1898 to 1911 he lectured on this subject to evening students at the Sydney technical college. In 1896 he began his collaboration withR. T. Baker(q.v.) with an investigation into the essential oils of the Sydney peppermint. With Baker working on the botanical side and himself on the chemical, their studies resulted in a remarkable work,A Research on the Eucalyptus especially in Regard to their Essential Oilswhich was published in 1902. A revised edition of this work embodying later researches appeared in 1920. Another authoritative work of great value by these authors,A Research on the Pines of Australia, was published in 1910. Smith had been appointed assistant curator and economic chemist at the Sydney technological museum in 1899 and held this position until his retirement in 1921. After his retirement he continued working with Baker and in 1924 they brought out another volume,Wood-fibres of Some Australian Timbers. From about 1914 Smith had been informally associated with the organic chemistry department of the university of Sydney, and he continued to work there after his retirement from the museum. In 1922 he was awarded theDavid Symeprize of the university of Melbourne for original research. He died at Sydney on 19 September 1924. He was twice married, and left a widow and family, including three sons. He was president of the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1913, of the New South Wales branch of the Australian Chemical Institute in 1922-3, and of the chemistry section of the Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science at the meeting held in Wellington in 1923. He was the author of over 100 papers, 62 of which appeared in theProceedingsof the Royal Society of New South Wales, and others in theJournal of the Chemical Society. An unselfish, modest man, devoted to the pursuit of knowledge, his pioneering work upon the chemistry of the essential oils of the Australian flora achieved a world-wide reputation.
Journal of the Chemical Society, 1925, p. 958;Journal and Proceedings Royal Society of New South Wales, 1925, p. 11;Report of the Eighteenth Meeting, Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science, p. 2;The Sydney Morning Herald, 20 September 1924.