Robert Meldrum Craig

Dr Robert Meldrum Craig FRSE FGS (1882-1956) was a prominent Scottish geologist and academic author. He left a large collection of fossils now housed in the collection of St Andrews University.[1]

Life

He was born on 13 July 1882 in Ardentinny in Argyllshire in northern Scotland, the son of Rev Robert Craig, the local minister. His younger brother John Douglas Craig grew to fame as a classicist. He was schooled at the local parish school and then attended Madras College in St Andrews University. James Manson Craig, Professor of English at St Andrews University was also his brother. Several other brothers grew to fame in the military: Brigade Major Henry David Cook Craig MC; Lt Falconer Gray Craig MC; Cpt Archibald Douglas Craig. Joseph Murison Craig became a surgeon, and his sister Constance Craig became a missionary in China.[2]

In 1909 he began lecturing in Geology at Dundee, then a branch of St Andrews University, moving to St Andrews in 1912.

In the First World War he served first in the Durham Light Infantry then in the 5th South Staffordshire Regiment (rising to the rank of Captain).[3] From 1918 to 1921 he acted as the Government Geologist to Nyasaland in Africa. He then received a professorship at Edinburgh University and remained there from 1921 until retiral, lecturing in Economic Geology. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1925.[4] His proposers were Thomas James Jehu, John Horne, Ben Peach, and Robert Campbell. He won the Society’s Keith Medal for 1925-27.[5]

He served as a President of the Edinburgh Geological Society 1934-6[6] and Trustee from 1939-48.[7]

He died on 28 March 1956.

Publications

See[8]


References

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