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Heidelberg in Cottonopolis
How Roscoe brought German ideas to Manchester
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Henry Enfield Roscoe was Professor of Chemistry at Owens College between 1857 and 1886, a period of nearly thirty years and a crucial one in the annals of the college. He not only built up the almost moribund Chemistry Department into one of the most important in the country, but he also played a crucial role in the move of the college to Oxford Road and the creation of Victoria University. He was also instrumental in bringing medicine into Owens College. Initially educated at UCL, Roscoe went to Heidelberg to study under the leading chemist Robert Bunsen and became one of his closest collaborators. Thereafter he became an advocate for the German model of higher education. Manchester at this time had a notable German community, the largest group of foreigners in the city, and they made a major contribution to the development of the British chemical industry and the German synthetic dye industry, as well as to Marxism. Roscoe brought German chemists to Owens (notably Carl Schorlemmer, a close comrade of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in the SPD and the First International) and sent Owens students to be educated in Germany. This chapter explores the links between Roscoe, Owens College, Manchester and Germany and their impact on the development of the University of Manchester.

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Manchester minds

A university history of ideas

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