Anna MacGillivray Macleod (15 May 1917 – 13 August 2004) was a Scottish biochemist and academic, an authority on brewing and Distillation. She was a professor at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh. She was the world's first female Professor of Brewing and Biochemistry.
Her father, Rev. Alasdair MacGillivray Macleod, was a Minister of the Church, died at an early age. He and her mother, Margaret Ingram Sangster were both in 1914 graduates of Aberdeen University. Her two brothers were both doctors of medicine: her elder brother was Dr. John George Macleod, editor of Davidson's Textbook of Medicine and the author of Macleod's Clinical Examination, and her younger brother was Dr. Alasdair MacGillivray Macleod, a general practitioner in Linlithgow.The Macleods - The Genealogy of a Clan, Section Four by Alick Morrison, M.A., by Associated Clan Macleod Societies, Edinburgh, 1974
She showed an interest in her family's genealogy, research on which she had started.
In 1961, together with Leslie Samuel Cobley, she co-edited "Contemporary Botanical Thought", published by Oliver and Boyd. She edited the Journal of the Institute of Brewing from 1964 to 1976, and she was the first female President of that organisation (now the Institute of Brewing and Distilling), from 1970 to 1972. In 1975, she was appointed Professor of Brewing at Heriot-Watt University. In 1976, she was the recipient of the Horace Brown medal. She retired in 1977, as professor emeritus.
During her time at Heriot-Watt University, Macleod supervised the PhD work of Sir Geoff Palmer.
In 1993, Heriot-Watt University awarded her an honorary degree Doctorate of Science for her discovery of gibberellic acid, which was a great advantage for the , as it shortened the malting process. At that occasion, the Dean of the Faculty of Science, Professor Philip G. Harper, mentioned that Macleod's association with the brewing industry puts her in the same fraternity as other scientists, such as James Watt (power), Louis Pasteur (pasteurisation), Peter Griess (colour chemistry), Joseph Williams Lovibond (colour physics), Gosset (statistics) and the man after whom the medal was named. He said that she was recognised nationally and internationally with distinction as a university teacher, scholar, scientist, technologist and as a brewer. Heriot-Watt University, retrieved 1 April 2013
Heriot-Watt University's Edinburgh campus has a residence hall named in her honour.
Heriot-Watt University's International Centre for Brewing and Distilling (ICBD), as it is now called, started the Anna Macleod Scholarship with a financial gift she had bequeathed to that University in her will.
Death and legacy
Sources
External links
|
|