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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Leonard George Holden Huxley 1902-1988
By R.W. Crompton
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records of Australian Science, vol.8, no.4, 1991.
Numbers in brackets refer to the notes at the end of the text.
Introduction
Leonard George Holden Huxley
was born in London on 29 May 1902, the eldest son of George Hamborough
and Lilian Huxley. George was the grandson of Thomas Huxley and
the grand nephew of another George Huxley from whom the famous
biologists Thomas Henry Huxley
(the prominent spokesman for Darwin
and advocate of his new theory of evolution) and Julian Huxley
were descended.
Although a Londoner by birth, and carrying with him throughout
his life many attributes of his English heritage and his later
education at Oxford, Huxley considered himself very much an Australian,
having spent more than three quarters of his life in the country
including his formative years. His parents, both schoolteachers,
migrated to Australia in 1905 when he was only three. Following
a brief sojourn in Western Australia, the family moved to Tasmania
where they were to remain.
Huxley's first academic distinction came early. From a small Tasmanian
country school in Mathinna, a community of no more than 200 or
300 people, he won a prestigious State scholarship to the Hutchins
School in Hobart. Once launched, he continued to support his education
through a series of bursaries, and finally a scholarship to the
University of Tasmania. At Hutchins, he did well not only academically
but also as a sportsman, and in his final year was both dux of
the school and captain of the athletics team. A Rhodes Scholarship
followed in his second year at the University, and in 1923, aged
21, he left for Oxford.
Oxford: 1923-1930
Huxley arrived in Oxford with his first degree yet to be completed.
The translation from Hobart to Oxford made such an impression
on him that he could still recall it vividly almost 50 years later:
In the first place, I became a member of a very famous and
ancient foundation, New College, which was founded in 1379 in
the reign of Richard II. It had most beautiful buildings. I remember
walking down from the railway station, down New College Lane,
and being absolutely entranced. It seemed like fairyland to me.
And then you enter this huge quadrangle; Gothic buildings, the
original buildings founded by William of Wykeham still there.
Of course, there are later additions from Victorian times. And
then the beautiful garden bounded by the old city wall, which
goes back to the time of Henry II. All this had a most colossal
and tremendous impact on me. And then in addition to this, I went
to the chapel and heard some of the finest choir music in Oxford
or in England for that matter (1).
Music was but one of the cultural experiences that he enjoyed
and which broadened his horizons immeasurably during his Oxford
years. He took full advantage of a ripening friendship with his
distant cousin Julian, then a Fellow of the College and a Reader
in Biology, and the social contacts that this friendship brought
with scholars such as 'J.B.S. Haldane and other leading luminaries' (2).
Their breadth of knowledge and depth of scholarship challenged
him 'to get interested in history and biography', thus laying
the foundations of his own broad cultural interests.
In New College, too, he first made contact with J.S. Townsend,
who lived at the college with his wife and family. Townsend was
to have a profound influence on him, and Huxley formed a close
personal relationship with him that was to remain until Townsend
died in 1957.
In 1925, having taken his first degree, Huxley commenced work
for his DPhil under Townsend. The subject of his research, electrical
breakdown in gases, was an area that Townsend had pioneered. But
it was another of Townsend's interests electron transport in
gases that was to become one of Huxley's longer-term interests
and the field to which he made many distinguished contributions.
By 1928, he had been awarded his DPhil and was starting on his
professional career. During a brief period as a tutor at Oxford
he married Ella Mary (Molly) Copeland, who was reading history
at Somerville College. Intellectually they were well matched.
Molly Huxley took a First in history; a year or two later she
was to become the first, part-time lecturer in British History
at the then newly-established Canberra University College.
Also during this time, Huxley was sought out by J.P.V. (later Sir John) Madsen,
who was head-hunting for his new Radio Research Board (RRB) which
had been established as an adjunct to the CSIR. Huxley applied
for a position involving radio research, about which he professed
then to know nothing, and was eventually appointed, together with
A.L. Green, D.F. Martyn
and G.H. Munro.
The prewar years: 1930-1939
The voyage to Australia to take up the RRB appointment was not
altogether a honeymoon for the newly-wed Huxleys. On instructions
from the Board, Huxley and Munro, who travelled with them, had
acquired a newly-developed cathode-ray direction finder, which
had been generously lent by R.A. Watson-Watt even before there
had been time for it to be installed and used in his own laboratory.
Together, Huxley and Munro embarked on a series of observations
of the frequency and bearing of atmospheric disturbances. This
work was the subject of one of the five unpublished reports prepared
by Huxley and Munro in 1931, and it was Huxley's introduction
to radio research work.
The Huxleys arrived in Australia at the beginning of 1930 for
what turned out to be a brief sojourn, but it introduced them
both to Canberra. Huxley's work was based at Mt Stromlo, and it
was there also that he and his wife lived, apparently in very
primitive conditions. But it was the Depression, and not the hardship
of living on the mountain, that led him to resign before two years
had elapsed. The vicissitudes experienced by Huxley and others
of the Board's first staff members are well documented in W.F.
Evans' history of the first twenty years of the Board (3).
There were administrative tangles and great financial difficulties
as Madsen sought to establish the Board and struggled to keep
it alive during the height of the Depression, and Huxley and his
colleagues had much to contend with. It was little wonder, therefore,
that he thought it prudent to look elsewhere for his future. He
applied for a position in the Colonial Service, but eventually
accepted a lectureship at University College Nottingham.
The year 1932 thus saw the Huxleys back in England, but the stay
in Nottingham was to be brief also. In the same year Huxley accepted
a more senior appointment as head of the Physics Department at
University College Leicester, and there had his baptism of fire
as a university teacher. In his own words, he 'taught almost single-handed
the whole of the syllabus for London University: intermediate,
pass degree, and honours'. (Leicester was then a college of the
University of London.) Not surprisingly, his research took a back
seat in this period when he had little time and vanishingly small
financial support.
Two events from his time at Leicester were of particular importance
to him. One of these was his first experience of taking part in
the organization of a large and important scientific meeting
he was secretary for the Physics Division of the British Association
for its meeting in Leicester in 1933. He recalled his experience
in these words:
...this was an important year in physics. Rutherford
came over, the great man himself, from Cambridge, with his bright
young men, and this was the year in which two tremendous events
had occurred in the physical world. Chadwick had discovered the
neutron and we were told all about this, and Cockcroft and Walton
had for the first time artificially disintegrated atoms. This
was the dawn of a new age in atomic physics. We were very privileged
at the British Association to hear these great things from the
men themselves. It was an outstanding meeting and a very memorable
one. Apart from that, we had people like Eddington, the great
astronomer, floating around...
A friend of mine from Oxford days, who gained some distinction
in America, was Dr Van de Graaff who had invented the Van de Graaff
accelerator which became a key component in many of the nuclear
accelerating machines. He was there and gave the first public
account of his new electrostatic generator, in the presence of
Rutherford, and showed that by proper use of electrostatic principles,
you could get millions of volts. This interested Rutherford very
much indeed. Altogether, it was a memorable meeting (4).
The other event was his writing of an unsigned article for Nature,
entitled 'Early History of the Determination of Atomic Charge' (5).
For some years J.S. Townsend had felt increasingly that his major
contributions to the genesis of atomic physics through his measurement
of the atomic charge had been overlooked, largely due to misrepresentation
in J.J. Thomson's writings. Huxley, however, was fully familiar
with the facts from his personal association with H.A. Wilson
and from the writings of P. Langevin, both of whom had been working
in the Cavendish Laboratory at that time, and his article was
therefore authoritative. Although unsigned, its origin would have
been well known, and its authorship was an act of some courage
by Huxley at the outset of his career, challenging as it did the
establishment of the day. He was to record these facts in more
detail, and describe his long friendship with, and admiration
for, Townsend in a recorded interview for the National Library
of Australia shortly before his death (6).
The war years: 1939-1945
The Second World War transformed Huxley's professional career
as it did those of so many of his fellow physicists in Britain.
In the summer of 1939, just prior to the outbreak of war, the
secret of radar was revealed to a large group of physicists, Huxley
among them. Thus immediately war was declared, he found himself
recruited to the distinguished group at the Bawdsey Research Establishment,
which was to develop radar and promulgate it to the Services with
amazing speed. Later, after several changes of name and location,
it was to become the Telecommunications Research Establishment
(TRE).
Huxley's first posting was to Fighter Command where, during the
Battle of Britain, he advised on the operation of the chain of
stations established along the coast to detect enemy aircraft.
During this time he wrote a report on the operation of radar,
which was later described as a landmark in the history of operations
research. Even fifteen years later, it was seen as a relevant
document in this area for circulation to NATO countries (7).
The Fighter Command posting was followed by one to headquarters
at Swanage, where he was given the task of establishing and heading
a radar training school for both civilian and service personnel,
including new recruits to the Research Establishment itself and
those who were to train others in the use of the new equipment
that was constantly being produced in the laboratories of the
Establishment. The school which Huxley himself described as
'a sort of minor radar university' ran courses
that ranged from very high-grade 16-week courses for the new
recruits to the station from the universities, strategic courses
for air vice-marshals and so forth to tell them what use the types
of radar were and how to use them, courses for WAAF operators
on chain stations, courses for radio mechanics, bomber command,
fighter command, coastal command and so forth (8).
By the end of the war, the school, with the whole of the Telecommunications
Research Establishment, had moved to Malvern, and an estimated
7,000 people had attended it.
The post-war years: 1945-1949
It was the people Huxley met during the war as much as his new
scientific experiences that most influenced his future career.
Both were responsible for his first post-war academic appointment
at the University of Birmingham. Though first and foremost a physicist,
his wartime experience qualified him well for his new appointment
as Reader in Electromagnetism in the Department of Electrical
Engineering. In fact, it was because he was a physicist
that he was invited to this position in an engineering department.
D.M. Robinson, a colleague from TRE, was well aware of the impact
of physicists on the development of radar technology and 'wanted
to recruit a physicist to give his engineers fundamental electricity
with a physical basis before they got on to the practical stuff'.
So Huxley got the job.
Huxley's research at Birmingham combined two of his earlier interests:
the theory of electron motion in gases and the study of radiowave
propagation in the atmosphere. Here he collaborated with J.A.
Ratcliffe, another colleague from TRE with whom he retained a
lifelong friendship and for whom he had the highest regard. This
work, and a conversation with A.C.B. Lovell shortly before leaving
Birmingham in which Lovell suggested the study of meteors using
the new radar techniques developed at Jodrell Bank, provided the
basis on which a major part of his future research interests would
be built.
The appointment in Birmingham, like his pre-war appointments,
was to be short-lived. Robinson was soon attracted to a more lucrative
job as President of Van de Graaff's High Voltage Corporation in
the United States and Huxley was left carrying the department
until a successor was appointed. Shortly afterwards, in 1948,
M.L. Oliphant, himself
about to take up an appointment as first Director of the Research
School of Physical Sciences at the Australian National University,
drew Huxley's attention to an advertisement for the Elder Chair
of Physics at the University of Adelaide. Somewhat diffidently
apparently, Huxley applied for it.
Adelaide: 1949-1960
In Adelaide, A.P. Rowe, the war-time director of TRE, had recently
been installed as Vice-Chancellor. On receiving Huxley's application,
Rowe immediately replied with an offer of appointment, and 1949
saw the Huxleys returning to Australia, this time for good. It
was a move that unfortunately meant the splitting up of their
immediate family. Their 6-year-old daughter Margaret came with
them, but it was decided that their son George, now 17 and in
his senior years at school, should remain in England to complete
his schooling and go on to university.
Huxley found much the same situation in Adelaide as had existed
in Birmingham: a department starved as a result of the war of
both resources and opportunities to appoint new personnel. However,
in the years immediately following his appointment he had the
advantage of being able to expand his department rapidly as a
consequence of swelling student numbers, due to the influx of
mature-age students entering the university under post-war retraining
schemes, and support from an enthusiastic and energetic Vice-Chancellor.
These years also coincided with the introduction of PhD courses
throughout Australia, and the more generous allocation of Commonwealth
money to the universities in the late 1950s following the Murray
Committee's report.
Huxley took full advantage of the opportunities afforded by these
developments. He recruited new staff some home-grown and some
from overseas and established PhD training programmes around
the new research groups that were formed. Drawing on his war-time
experiences, he started a large and active group to track meteor
trails and upper atmosphere winds using radar. He started another
group to conduct laboratory studies of electron drift and diffusion
in gases to complement his interest in electromagnetic wave propagation
in the ionosphere. His new staff began equally active programmes
in biophysics and solid state physics under S.G. Tomlin, and in
seismology under D.J. Sutton. The seismological work was started
as a consequence of an initiative of the Australian Academy of Science
during the 1957-58 International Geophysical Year. The Academy
had provided funds to equip a six-component seismograph station
near Adelaide, and Huxley promoted the establishment of the new
station. The station was later re-equipped by the U.S. Coast and
Geodetic Survey as a world-wide standard station, and today a
network of eleven stations covers the active areas of South Australia
to provide information about the seismicity and crustal structure
of the region.
One enterprise, which was considerably more adventurous at that
time than it would be today, was the dispatch of equipment and
a PhD student to Mawson,
in Antarctica, to observe upper-atmosphere winds at high latitudes.
Because of his contact with P.G. Law
and the Commonwealth Antarctic Division at that time, and his
close association with Douglas Mawson as a colleague and friend
in Adelaide, the establishment some years later of the Mawson
Institute in one wing of his old department gave him great satisfaction.
Huxley's later days in Adelaide, with a now greatly enlarged and
flourishing department to his credit, were marked by increasing
friction with the Vice-Chancellor. Perhaps Rowe was ahead of his
time in believing that universities should be managed along the
lines of a government department or research institution, or even
a business enterprise. Though some have come to accept this view
Huxley never swerved from his opinion that 'a university is more
like a plateau, where there is general mixing at the top and a
general trading of ideas and much discussion which takes time
and is irritating to civil servants who have been used to committees
who decide this, (which is then) done'.
Huxley's students at Adelaide remember him as a meticulous lecturer
whose expertise lay in classical physics. He particularly enjoyed
teaching electromagnetic field theory. He returned to this following
his retirement, when he lectured for several years at the then
Canberra College of Advanced Education. His graduate students
will remember that he expected a high level of independence
though this was not to be taken as indifference on his part to
their progress. He was a constant visitor to their laboratories
and retained a keen interest in, and great enthusiasm for, the
work they were doing.
Huxley had long been interested in astronomy, but that interest
was now heightened. As the Professor of Physics, the mantle of
President of the South Australian Astronomical Society fell naturally
upon his not-altogether-willing shoulders. Initially he was disinclined
to accept yet another responsibility, even though a relatively
minor one, in addition to his increasing university duties. Nevertheless,
it led him to keep abreast, if only in a general way, with developments
in an area of rapidly expanding knowledge, and one of particular
importance to Australia. Because of his interest and knowledge he was persuaded to give extension lectures on astronomy to lay
audiences, including some in country areas of the State. This
was a challenge he enjoyed, for although the academic milieu was
the environment in which he was most at home, he nevertheless
greatly enjoyed meeting people in all walks of life. His heightened
interest in astronomy during his Adelaide days was to stand him
in good stead later.
By the end of his eleventh year in Adelaide he had established
a vigorous department and felt that it was time to move on. He
accepted an appointment to the Executive of CSIRO, but had scarcely
become settled in his new position when he was invited to succeed
Sir Leslie Melville as Vice-Chancellor of the ANU. This he accepted,
and thus entered on the most influential period of his career,
both within the university sphere and outside it.
The Australian National University: 1960-1967
Huxley took up his new position at a difficult but challenging
period in the University's short history. The Committee on Australian
Universities, chaired by Sir Keith Murray, had recommended that
careful consideration should be given to the relationship between
the existing Australian National University and the Canberra University
College which, prior to 1960, had prepared students for the degree
examinations of the University of Melbourne. However, no prescription
for the future relationship had been given. Subsequently, the
Australian National University Act was amended to incorporate
the College as the School of General Studies within the ANU.
It was intended that the new structure would preserve as much
as possible the autonomy of both the School and the old ANU,
which was to become the Institute of Advanced Studies within the
enlarged University.
Huxley's initial task was to bring about a harmonious university
community from these two components, neither of which fully welcomed
the association. It was a challenge he was well equipped to meet.
On the one hand, he had a deep and continuing commitment to research;
the mission of the Research Schools was therefore close to his
heart. On the other hand, he had always had a keen interest in
teaching and had devoted a considerable portion of his professional
life to it both within academia and outside it; moreover he well
understood the essential part that research and postgraduate
training played in the professional lives of those who would comprise
the newly-named School of General Studies. And perhaps his recent
experiences in Adelaide were to make him particularly sensitive
to the importance of leading rather than prescribing.
In the task of achieving the union now prescribed by Act of Parliament,
Huxley had the help of his wife, who worked tirelessly with him
towards this end. For the task was as much a social as an academic
one, and though Molly could do little to assist academically,
despite being an academic herself, she worked enthusiastically
from the outset to bring together the staff and their families
from both sides of the University. The problem was a larger one
than that resulting from association, for the University was expanding
rapidly and the Institute, with its high proportion of non-tenured
staff, had an ever-increasing flow of new staff as well as a large
number of visitors. In addition to hosting a constant round of
social gatherings, both large and small, which was their joint
responsibility, Molly founded a Club for Women to give the female
spouses of the new arrivals as well as new female staff an entree
to the University.
Though the challenges facing the new Vice-Chancellor were in some
respects formidable, many of them would be welcomed by his present-day
counterparts: rapid expansion in both student and staff numbers,
with rapidly expanding budgets to match; a massive building programme;
opportunities to create new Research Schools and Departments;
and a Commonwealth Government open to persuasion and with a more
buoyant economy to enable it to respond to worthwhile new initiatives.
When Huxley assumed office on 30 September 1960, the old Canberra
University College had no permanent buildings, apart from one
housing the existing Arts departments (although some had been
planned or started), while only the John Curtin School of Medical
Research (JCSMR) and the Research School of Physical Sciences
(RSPhysS) of the old ANU were permanently housed, or partly
so. The existing Research Schools JCSMR, RSPhysS, Social Sciences,
and Pacific Studies together had about 100 postgraduate students,
the College about 800 students. In 1961 the University's budget
was about $5.5 million. Seven years later, when he retired, there
were about 500 postgraduate students and over 3000 undergraduates
and the budget was over $17.5 million. Two new Research Schools
had been established Chemistry and Biological Sciences the
Commonwealth's Forestry School had been subsumed and its role
expanded as it became the Department of Forestry, and a second
observational site had been established at Siding Spring for the
Department of Astronomy. Permanent buildings were erected for
many of the departments in the School of General Studies, for
the Research Schools of Social Sciences and Pacific Studies, for
the new Research School of Chemistry, and for the Administration.
The Menzies Building
of the University Library was completed and the Chifley Building
started and finished. So also were a Student Union building and
several students' colleges and halls of residence, while off-campus
housing for staff, students and visiting academics was greatly
expanded.
It was a period of great change and activity. At first Huxley
chaired the newly established academic boards for both the Institute
and the School of General Studies, but as time went on and administrative
practices became better established, he delegated this responsibility
to deputy chairmen, apparently to everyone's satisfaction including
his own. While he never shirked such responsibility, he seemed
less at home chairing large committees than in dealing with individuals
or smaller groups on a more personal level. He was also less interested
in the minutiae of financial matters which, particularly in his
later years, he left increasingly to J.G. Crawford, who was appointed
the University's Fiscal Adviser.
Huxley seems to have been a wise choice at this critical point
of the University's history. To the task of unification and expansion
he brought an understanding of the points of view of both sides
of the University and their different needs, while his background
and his broadly spread cultural interests made him equally at
ease with classicists and scientists. There were, of course, criticisms
it would have been impossible to satisfy all the aspirations
of the newly amalgamated staff with their different missions and
expectations. But his door was open to everyone: to staff, both
academic and non-academic, and to students. He will be remembered
as personally interested in the progress and wellbeing of the
whole University community.
Huxley was fortunate to inherit an experienced administrative
staff from both the old ANU and the College. Nevertheless,
his was a heavy administrative load. It is therefore the more
remarkable that he found some spare moments to pursue physics
he wrote at least two influential theoretical papers during
this period and to serve both his profession and the wider community
through his membership of a number of committees and boards outside the University, many of which he chaired.
Huxley served as Vice-Chancellor until his retirement in 1967.
He was knighted in 1964, and although the New Year's Honours list
for that year records his KBE as being conferred for 'services
to education', it marked the culmination of his distinguished
career as scientist, academic, and administrator.
Scientific achievements
Although Huxley was actively involved in his own profession from
his postgraduate years in Oxford in the late '20s until he left
the University of Adelaide at the end of 1960, relatively little
of that time was free for him to devote personally to his research
interests. His first five papers, on electrical discharge phenomena
in gases, reported the work he had done for his DPhil, and there
were four from his work on atmospherics while employed by the
Radio Research Board. During the years that remained before the
outbreak of war, his main preoccupation was teaching, particularly,
as we have seen, at Leicester. Five of the ten papers from this
period reflect his continuing interest in discharge phenomena
(one describes the work with his PhD student, the first to graduate
from Leicester) and in the theory of charged particle transport
in gases. Two others reveal his new interest in electromagnetic
wave propagation in the atmosphere. In the work reported in these
papers, he brought his knowledge of electron motion in gases to
bear on ionospheric phenomena, a subject in which his earlier
experience in Australia had kindled his interest.
Apart from one paper, in 1944, devoted to transmission line theory,
there is then a gap between 1940 and 1946 in which he published
no papers in the open scientific literature. The war years, which
spanned most of this period, nevertheless provided the material
for one of his most outstanding publications, the book Wave
Guides, published in 1947. From this period also came a number
of reports on operational and technical matters concerned with
radar, one of which has already been mentioned.
The period from 1947 until his appointment to the ANU in 1960
was his most scientifically productive and influential. At Birmingham
he laid the foundations for the two research areas he was to pursue
for many years. With J.A. Ratcliffe he undertook research on the
'Luxembourg effect', a phenomenon whereby the transmission from
one radio broadcasting station is cross-modulated by another,
more powerful, transmitter. The effect results in the superposition
of one broadcast on the other; its cause is the oscillatory heating
of the ionospheric electrons by the more powerful transmitter,
which produces modulation of the 'wanted' signal as it passes
through the ionosphere. This investigation brought home to Huxley
the importance of laboratory studies of electron motion in gases,
in this instance the constituents of air. He therefore initiated
such studies in Birmingham, and a continuation of that work formed
the basis of a programme actively pursued by him at the University
of Adelaide and later still at the Australian National University.
To this programme he brought a continuing flow of ideas and much
of the theoretical backing.
Though his work on diffusion and drift was to start in earnest
at Birmingham, one of the two papers on charged-particle transport
written in Leicester was fundamental to the interpretation of
the laboratory experiments commenced in Birmingham and continued
in Adelaide. In it he used the device of images, borrowed from
electrostatics, to determine the distribution of electrons or
ions drifting and diffusing from a point source, thus greatly
simplifying the computation required to interpret the results
of experiments of a type first devised by Townsend many years
before. In the days before computers this was a considerable advance
and the experimental technique now bears his and Townsend's names.
The papers written in Adelaide pursue four topics: the detailed
and sophisticated application of the method of free paths to electron
diffusion and drift; the theory and application of the Townsend-Huxley
experiment to situations where electron diffusion and drift are
accompanied by attachment and/or ionization; the theory of the
Luxembourg effect and the application of the results of laboratory
experiments to the interpretation of experimental observations
of ionospheric cross-modulation; and first reports of the long-running
and highly successful project he initiated to detect the trails
of ionized gases left by meteors, and hence to determine wind
patterns in the upper atmosphere. In the majority of these papers
he was reporting his own, mostly theoretical, work. He was content
to leave the development of the laboratory and field work to his
group of graduate students, some of whom continued as members
of staff. Here history repeated itself; as in Leicester he found
himself responsible for training the first batch of PhD students
to graduate from the university.
This period also saw the culmination of his work on the application
of the method of free paths to electron transport. Trained by
Townsend to approach the theory of electron and ion motion in
gases by this method, Huxley was perhaps unique in his ability
to relate the concepts and results of the free path approach to
the now more widely used methods of statistical mechanics. One
of his major achievements was the derivation of formulae for electron
mobility and diffusion coefficient, taking account of an energy-dependent
free path (that is, scattering cross section) and showing their
equivalence to the formulae derived from statistical mechanics.
Despite its limitations, the method of free paths provided Huxley,
as it had Townsend, with a tool with which he could visualize
and describe electron motion with remarkable clarity Thus he was
able to analyse and describe in physically understandable terms
phenomena whose origins were obscure in more formal treatments.
Huxley's work on the theory of ionospheric cross-modulation brought
him into vigorous controversy with V.A. Bailey,
who himself had made many distinguished contributions to both
laboratory studies of electron motion and the theory of radio-wave
interaction. On his side, Huxley had the advantage of more recent
and better understood results for electron motion in air, but
the dispute between them was never resolved.
With his appointment to the ANU, Huxley's interests in the
areas he had promoted in Adelaide necessarily narrowed. With the
encouragement of the University and particularly of Oliphant,
who was still the Director of the Research School of Physical
Sciences, he established a small Unit, the Electron and Ion Diffusion
Unit, to pursue the laboratory studies that had gathered considerable
momentum in Adelaide. Thus, soon after taking up his appointment,
he was followed by three of his staff from Adelaide and two graduate
students, who together established the laboratory. Though his
time to think about physics was very limited, he retained a keen
interest in the Unit's progress throughout his term as Vice-Chancellor and was stimulated to write several papers through particular
developments either within the Unit or brought to his attention
through its work. Like his earlier papers, some of them have been
the basis on which other researchers have built.
On his retirement, Huxley returned to physics with great enthusiasm.
Much progress had been made in the seven years since he had last
been able to give his undivided attention to the problems that
interested him, and he resolved to write a book. But this required
a major revision of his approach to the theory. No longer was
it profitable to use approximate theories to interpret the results
of laboratory 'swarm' experiments in terms of the elastic and
inelastic electron-molecule collision processes that determine
the overall motion of the electrons, that is, the macroscopic
behaviour of the swarm. The widespread use of computer-based numerical
methods had displaced the older approximate methods, making the
application of the more rigorous statistical mechanics approach
not only practicable but greatly superior. At about this time
also some major cracks became apparent in the theories that had
been developed and applied to this point, most of which assumed
spatial invariance of the average electron energy throughout the
swarm.
Not content simply to reproduce the work of others and, characteristically,
seeking a physical picture upon which to build the theory, Huxley
developed his own approach and used it as the basis for the theoretical
section of the book in order that new theoretical results, published
by others before and during the course of its preparation, could
be presented as part of a unified whole. Not surprisingly, the
book took a number of years to complete. Meanwhile he published
some of his original work in papers that appeared in 1972 and
1973. These and his other papers in this field, spanning a period
of over thirty years, show a smooth transition from analyses of
electron transport based on the free path method to those based
on statistical mechanics, and in them he demonstrated the underlying
unity of both.
With the completion in 1974 of this major monograph, The Diffusion
and Drift of Electrons in Gases, one might have expected Huxley,
now aged 72, to have rested on his laurels. However, another topic
caught his interest and held it until a year or two before his
death. This centred around some anomalous characteristics of the
sun's corona, which he sought to explain in terms of non-thermodynamical
equilibrium caused by charged particle motion. He may well have
been on the right track, and he had a unique advantage in applying
to this problem his knowledge of a field he knew so well. Unfortunately,
it would have required a great deal more work for him to have
assimilated and incorporated the results of recent observations
of the corona, and the work was never completed or published.
Service to science and education
From his early days in Adelaide to his retirement in 1967, and
for some years afterwards, Huxley received numerous invitations
to serve both his profession and the wider community through membership
of councils, boards and committees. His influence in the University
of Adelaide was soon felt, and he was elected to the Council in
1953. He continued as a member of the Council until he left Adelaide
in 1960. The later years in Adelaide also saw him appointed to
the Council of the ANU. After his retirement came his appointment
to the Council of the newly-established Canberra College of Advanced
Education, an institution to which he gave his enthusiastic support.
With typical objectivity, he saw such colleges filling a need
which he felt was not met by the universities. In his own words:
One of the weaknesses of the university system...is the pass
degree. For many people coming out with degrees, employment difficulties
are becoming increasingly acute, and a man with a pass degree
will find that he has a lot of general knowledge about subjects
but no specialisation or skill in anything in particular. He will
have a good education, but he still needs to acquire some skill
to fit him for some particular job. The honours man is in a somewhat
different category. So many pass degree people need what the College
calls the Capstone course, a short one that you can put on top
of a pass degree, a subject, say, like librarianship, secretarial
studies for women, and computer studies, this type of thing. That's
one of the activities the College engages in, but apart from that,
it runs courses for people who join from scratch and [the College
is] now allowed to award degrees on [its] three-year courses,
and these cover things with a professional bias. The bias is not
so much on pure studies, as you get in universities, but on professional
studies, applied knowledge (9).
Matching his action to his words, he served on the College Council
for seven years and, as has already been mentioned, delivered
several courses on electromagnetism to its students.
For an academic of his stature and experience, these were appointments
that were to be expected, although the appointment to the Council
of the ANU while he was still in Adelaide and only relatively
recently returned to Australia was evidence of a widening sphere
of influence. However, appointments to the other governing bodies
and committees, many of which he chaired, were a consequence of
his breadth of interests and a testimony to the wisdom he brought
to debate. The more important of the honorary offices he held
are listed in an appendix, but several are worthy of special mention.
(i) Australian Academy of Science
Leonard Huxley was a Foundation Fellow of the Academy. He served
on the Council from 1956 to 1962, was Vice-President in 1957/8,
and Secretary A (Physical Sciences) from 1959 to 1962. He was
appointed the convener of the National Committee for Space Research
on its establishment in 1958, and was Australia's first delegate
to the United Nations Committee on Space Research (COSPAR), the
inaugural meetings of which he attended at the Hague in 1959 and
Nice in 1960. In the latter capacity, he played a significant
role in the Academy's early participation in the moves to establish
the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT). He was Secretary for Physical
Sciences when the President of the Royal Society, Sir Cyril Hinshelwood,
approached the President of the Academy, J.C. Eccles, advising
him of renewed interest by British astronomers in siting a large-aperture
optical telescope in Australia as a Commonwealth facility, and
informing him that the Office of Commonwealth Relations had been
approached by the British government concerning the position of
the Australian government (10).
The Royal Society clearly expected the Academy to be playing a
part in determining the attitude of the latter.
By the end of 1961, the Council of the Academy felt it could do
no more than state its view that:
There is considerable scientific merit in the proposal to establish
an observatory with a large telescope at an appropriate site in
Australia. Whether this should be done under a British Commonwealth
scheme or in some other manner requires further investigation
and we recommend that this be pursued (11).
The Council was reluctant to take a more active part despite the
advocacy of Oliphant, Huxley and Bart J. Bok
(Head of the ANU's Mount Stromlo Observatory), and informal
approaches by the Australian government prompted by advice that
the British were looking with renewed interest at collaboration
with European rather than Commonwealth partners.
Perhaps the Academy's low-key involvement up to this point was
to have been expected. Unlike the Royal Society, it was not responding
to a ground swell from its own astronomical community but rather
to overtures from outside the country either directly or through
government sources.
By 1963, when the Academy was next drawn into the discussion,
Huxley had ceased to be Secretary A and had taken up his appointment
in Canberra as the Vice-Chancellor of the ANU. Now he was particularly
well placed, both geographically and professionally, to take a
key role in shaping the Academy's policy towards the proposed
new telescope, for the commencement of his term as Vice-Chancellor
coincided with the need to take critical decisions concerning
a second site for the ANU's observatory. By then the choice
had narrowed to two. Both had been subjected to extensive tests
but more were required, and Huxley gave his support to the continuation
of the site testing programme. In May 1962 the matter was still
unresolved and he convened a conference at which the cases were
made for the competing sites: Bingar, favoured by Bok, and Siding
Spring, by S.C.B. Gascoigne.
Siding Spring won the day; it was to become not only the ANU's
new astronomical site but also, eventually, the site for the Anglo-Australian Telescope.
The Academy's more formal involvement in discussions on the proposed
telescope was prompted by invitations to several Australian astronomers
to attend a British planning conference about a possible southern-hemisphere
telescope. Earlier in the year (1963) a meeting had taken place
in Australia between R. v.d. R. Woolley,
Sir John Cockcroft and Huxley (as Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor,
respectively, of the ANU), Oliphant,
Bok, Gascoigne, E.G. Bowen,
and B.Y. Mills, at which
it was unanimously agreed 'that a strong case existed for a large
optical telescope in Australia' (12).
Although the invitations to the planning conference were to individual
astronomers who were users of large telescopes, Oliphant felt
it important for the Australian representatives (Bok, Gascoigne,
A.W. Rogers and B. Westerlund) to be regarded as representing
their country and thus to be able to meet their counterparts on
an equal footing. Accordingly, he arranged for the Australians
to attend as representatives of the Academy, and at the same time
suggested the establishment of a committee, to be chaired by Huxley,
to 'deal with questions of justification, telescope design, and
Anglo-Australian co-operation'. This committee was soon matched
by its counterpart established by the Royal Society, and the stage
was set for real progress, although it was to be painfully slow.
However, even though a final decision to proceed had still to
wait another four years, it was not the fault of the new committee.
Within seven months it had submitted its final report to Council,
and a year later the Academy and the Royal Society approached
their respective governments with a proposal that the telescope
be built and operated by Britain and Australia as equal partners.
But there was still a long way to go, with both Britain and Australia
seemingly vacillating on their support for the proposal and each
wooing the Americans as possible alternative partners. At crucial
times Huxley teamed with Bowen to wait on J.G. Gorton, the relevant
Minister in Menzies' Cabinet. In later years Huxley liked to recall
that it was his duty at one of these meetings to inform the Minister
of the likely cost of Australia's share in the project. In anticipation
of a cool reception to the estimate, he delivered a carefully
prepared statement. To the astonishment of Bowen and himself,
the $5m estimate scarcely raised the Minister's eyebrows!
Not long after the meeting, in April 1967, Australia agreed to
open detailed discussions on the proposal, and Huxley's role in
the negotiations came to an end. It had been a long chapter, but
one whose conclusion gave him great satisfaction. Much later,
at a ceremony to mark the naming of a building on the ANU campus
in his honour, he was to recall his involvement in the choice
of the Siding Spring site and to remark that he ranked it as one
of the most significant events of his time as Vice-Chancellor.
It was a fortunate set of circumstances that saw him in the dual
role of ANU Vice-Chancellor and influential member of the Academy
at a time that was to prove a turning point in the history of
observational astronomy in Australia.
(ii) Radio Research Board
Huxley's appointment to the Radio Research Board was the result
of his early association with Sir John Madsen. Madsen had established
the Board in 1927 to foster basic research in radio and atmospheric
sciences, and on Huxley's return to Australia in 1949 he invited
him to join the Board. That was the beginning of an association
that was to last for more than fifteen years. In 1958 Madsen retired
as chairman and Huxley took over, holding that position until
1964, when he himself retired from the Board due to his increasing
commitments as Vice-Chancellor of the ANU.
The scientific interests of the RRB were well matched to Huxley's
professional interests, and he was closely in tune with its philosophy.
The official history of the early years of the Board quotes the
following passage from an article by G.H. Munro:
When the RRB was established in 1927 Sir Harry Brown insisted
on the principle that the Board should aim regularly to increase
fundamental research which was not tied to any particular application;
and it should support groups in Universities where interested
and experienced leaders were available who could stimulate the
interests of students in research work (13).
It appears that the Board followed this directive even through
the difficult times of the Depression when there was considerable
pressure on it to return more practical and useable results for
scarce tax-payers' pounds. The pressure was resisted, and writing
in 1973 W.F. Evans, the author of the history, commented that:
... the Board had, even in those early days, already slipped
quietly into what must now be considered in perspective as probably
its major role, namely that of providing ferment, facilities and
support to the training of post-graduate research scientists,
particularly in the field of electronics (14).
It was little wonder that Huxley joined the Board with enthusiasm
and that he served on it for so long.
At the time of Huxley's first brief contact with the Board in
the early '30s, it conducted or sponsored work in three main areas:
propagation of electromagnetic waves, atmospherics, and high-frequency
measurements. By 1949, when he became a member of the Board rather
than a member of its staff, it was heavily involved in studies
of the upper atmosphere and the ionosphere. Huxley was busily
promoting such studies in his rapidly expanding department in
Adelaide and looking for support for his graduate students. He
was thus not only well qualified to assist the Board in its work
but an appropriate recipient of support from it.
(iii) National Standards Commission
Coincidentally, Madsen's name is also linked with national standards,
although Huxley's appointment as the Chairman of the National
Standards Commission on its foundation in 1950 does not appear
to have followed from his association with Madsen through the
RRB. Madsen 'was one of the most influential people in the activities
leading to the establishment of the National Standards Laboratory' (15),
although there was a long interval (from 1914 to 1938) between
his early advocacy and the eventual establishment of the NSL at
its first site in the grounds of the University of Sydney. However,
the advent of the Laboratory was only the first, if essential,
stage in what Madsen and others saw as the urgent necessity for
uniform standards for weights and measures throughout the Commonwealth,
and until 1948, when the Weights and Measures (National Standards)
Act was passed by Federal Parliament, Australia was still, to
quote Huxley's own words:
...in a very peculiar position. Although CSIRO had set up this
very fine laboratory in Sydney, the National Standards Laboratory,
by our history the ordinary weights and measures legislation were
matters for the States and the whole thing had got into a complete
backwater and had become a Cinderella activity. In Adelaide, if
you went to visit the Weights and Measures Office there, you'd
find on the brass plate outside 'Weights and Measures and Rodent
Officer', which shows the prestige allocated to this very important
topic, and also if you went to see what standards of weights,
for instance, they were maintaining, you found a lot of old rusty
brass weights in the Mayor's parlour and some old rusty yard measure (16).
The Act was brought down to bring order into this situation. The
three-line clause defining the function of the Commission, namely
that it should 'advise the Minister with respect to weights and
measures', gave little hint of the formidable task that was to
be its first duty to draft a bill for an Act that would ensure
that the reference standards maintained by the National Standards
Laboratory were the only reference standards that had legal status
in Australia. For the Act to be acceptable to the States, and
therefore readily enforceable, the Commission had to ensure that
it had the support of the State governments and their weights
and measures officers, and the Commission devoted a considerable
fraction of its time in its first ten years to this vital liaison
work. Here Huxley's skills as a negotiator and mediator were no
doubt invaluable, for although he appears to have found some of
the routine work of the Commission tedious, he brought the same
talents to its crucial political role as he was to bring later
to the task of unifying the ANU. The passage of a second Act
in 1960 marked the end of the first phase of the Commission's
activities, and its Chairman and four other members could feel
justifiably proud that they had paved the way 'for the establishment
and use throughout Australia of uniform units of measurements,
and uniform standards of measurement, of physical quantities' (17).
(iv) Australian Institute of Physics
Huxley's influential years coincided with many developments and
organizational changes in Australia, and he played an important
role in several of them. His own profession of physics saw a significant
change in 1963 with the formation of the Australian Institute
of Physics. Before that date, there had been an Australian Branch
of the (British) Institute of Physics, which traditionally had
taken the dual role of a professional body and a physical society.
Huxley was the last President of the Australian Branch of the
British Institute and the foundation President of the A.I.P.
Some years earlier, G.H. Briggs,
the long-standing Secretary of the Branch, had proposed the formation
of an autonomous Australian organization and, with the full support
of the parent body, had polled its Australian members for their
reactions. To his surprise the result was negative. The proposal
was revived during the presidency of J.L. Pawsey
in the early '60s, and he and A.F.A. Harper,
who was then Secretary, carefully prepared the ground for another
referendum. This time the proposal was accepted and in February
1963, by which time Huxley had assumed the presidency of the Branch
the new A.I.P. came into existence and Huxley was elected its
first President.
So ended a long, direct association of the British Institute with
Australian physics and physicists. In recognition of this association
and the generous financial arrangements made by the parent body
at the time of separation, the new Australian body presented a
writing table and other furniture for the I.O.P. headquarters,
and Huxley, with A. Walsh
(foundation Vice-President), had the pleasant duty of making the
presentation personally during a visit to London. To this presentation
Huxley added his personal gift of a chair.
There was an appropriate sequel to these formalities. The Australian
Bicentennial year coincided with the 25th anniversary of the foundation
of the A.I.P. and Huxley, together with a remarkably large number
of the members of the first committee, attended a celebratory
dinner in Sydney. On that occasion the President of the day, J.G.
Collins, was presented with a gavel by the President of the British
Institute. This was almost certainly the last official function
that Huxley attended, and as he watched the presentation be must
have been pleasantly reminded of an important milestone in the
history of his profession in Australia.
(v) U.S. Educational Foundation in Australia, and Australian-American
Educational Foundation
As with the professional organization representing physicists
in Australia, the '60s saw a major change in the Fulbright scheme,
with Australia assuming henceforth a more equal role in it. Huxley
became a member of the Australian Board of the USEFA, which administered
the scheme in Australia, in the first year of his vice-chancellorship
of the ANU. Then, and for some years later, the scheme was entirely
funded from the United States, and the U.S. Ambassador chaired
the Board. In 1965, however, the Fulbright funds were exhausted
and Australia agreed to contribute equally to a new Australian-American
Educational Foundation, the charter of which was essentially the
same as that of the old Fulbright scheme. Huxley was invited to
chair the Board of the new body and held office until 1969. It
was a job he 'enjoyed as much as any, except perhaps the National
Standards Commission'.
(vi) The National Library and the Encyclopaedia Britannica
Awards
Two other honorary offices that Huxley held in the '60s are mentioned
because they illustrate the breadth of his interests and his willingness
to give his time to scholarly activities outside those associated
with his immediate professional responsibilities. These were his
membership of the Council of the National Library of Australia,
and his chairmanship of the General Council of the Encyclopaedia
Britannica Awards.
Huxley served on the Council of the National Library from 1961
to 1972. His own large library revealed his catholic tastes in
history, natural history, literature, music and the arts, and
it is little wonder, therefore, that he was a valued member of
the Council for the many years that he served on it.
In 1968, during his term on the Council, the Library was approached
by the Australian Museum with the view to its becoming associated
with a project to establish a National Photographic Index of Australian
Birds, one set of which, it was proposed, should be held by the
Library. In due course a Trust was established to oversee the
project, and Huxley was invited to become one of its members.
Subsequently, he was joined by another member of the Council after
the Council responded to an invitation for one of its number to
become a member ex officio.
The concept of the Index appealed greatly to him. A keen amateur
photographer himself, with a particular interest in birds, he
derived singular pleasure from the photographs that eventually
formed the collection.
As Chairman of the Encyclopaedia Britannica Awards Council from
its inception in 1964, Huxley played a key role in developing
its policies and monitoring the Awards. He was able to contribute
much to the work of the Council, but he also found it both stimulating
and rewarding, for it brought him into contact with some of the
most talented Australians in science, the arts and the humanities
who were winners of the Awards during the ten-year existence of
the scheme.
Personal
Leonard Huxley will be remembered for the warmth of his personality,
which was sometimes masked by his somewhat formal manner, for
the breadth of his interests and scholarship, and for his delight
in, and respect for, correct usage of the English language. Blessed
with an incredible memory right up to his death, and deeply interested
in literature and the arts in addition to his professional interests
of physics and mathematics, he had a remarkable capacity for recalling
what he had read and where he had read it. He combined his gift
for words and the breadth of his interests in the preparation
of the scholarly speeches he gave on formal occasions. These,
too, often revealed his puckish sense of humour.
Although in his later years much of Huxley's life was devoted
to administration and to promoting the work of others, his old
love of physics never failed to bring an enthusiastic gleam to
his eye. In the pursuit of his theoretical work there were many
false trails, especially as he grew older, but his intellectual
rigour kept him wrestling with a problem until he felt satisfied
with its solution. His work as a creative scientist stands well
beside his lifetime of service to education and to science. Writing
a major work with him was a challenging experience. Matters of
detailed editing were of no great moment to him; this applied
to the mathematics as much as to the text, for once he had formulated
a mathematical argument he was less interested in its subsequent
transcription. On the other hand, in his scientific prose he was
as meticulous with syntax and grammar and the choice of words
as he was in all his other writing. No doubt these qualities of
his writing as well as the scientific content contributed to two
of his papers being awarded the Ambrose Fleming Premium of the
Institution of Electrical Engineers.
The death of his wife in 1981 left him with a great sense of loss,
although it was well hidden except to those who knew him well.
Molly had given him constant and loyal support throughout his
public life and he owed much to her. When she died they were living
in quiet retirement when perhaps they were best able to appreciate
the mental stimulation that each provided the other through their
very different interests. By this time their immediate family
was far distant from Canberra. Their son George, who never joined
his parents in Australia, had made a distinguished career as a
classical archaeologist. With his wife and three daughters he
was living in Belfast, where he held the Chair of Classics at
the Queen's University. Their daughter Margaret had started her
professional career as a social scientist away from Canberra many
years before and now lived in Melbourne with her two sons. Len
and Molly were proud of the achievements of both George and Margaret
and took great delight in their grandchildren. Unable to enjoy
frequent contact with them, Len found great pleasure in the sons
of his neighbour and close friend Erika Leslie. He watched their
development with much interest and was as proud of their achievements
as he was of those of his own kin.
In retirement he was able to pursue more frequently his hobbies
of photography and fishing. Fishing trips were the only occasions
during which he could be found in anything other than the formal
dress he habitually wore, almost as if he were always prepared
to receive the unexpected visitor. Retirement also gave him more
time to watch birds. He was fond of both birds and animals; in
fact he confessed that he might have become a biologist had it
not been for the influence of one of his early teachers. One of
the delights of his earlier days, when he lived in the Vice-Chancellor's
house whose garden ran down to the edge of Lake Burley Griffin,
was taking his dog Ricky for a walk and a swim.
Huxley's physical resilience was as remarkable as his mental vigour.
At 86 his bearing was still that of a man twenty years younger,
and in August 1988 he left in great heart for what was to be his
last overseas trip. On his way to England to see George and his
family, and to visit Molly's relatives and other friends, he broke
the journey in the United States, where he stayed at the home
of an old friend and colleague in Atlanta. His hosts had not seen
him for many years but they reported that he had aged little since
that time and they delighted again in the old-world charm that
was so characteristic of him.
Leonard Huxley died suddenly on 4 September, 1988, in London,
while visiting his brother-in-law Tom and his family. For a man
of his disposition and independence it was the ending he would
have most desired. A memorial service was held shortly afterwards
in Canberra at the Church of St John the Baptist where Molly had
been a parishioner for many years, and although some questioned
its appropriateness given his agnosticism, those closest to him
felt it was proper to honour him in this way. His relatives and
friends were joined by many others representing the numerous institutions
and organizations that he had served during his lifetime.
Huxley was a man of great integrity. He belonged to the generation
of scholars whose depth of scholarship was matched by its breadth,
and who had a clear vision of the age-old function of universities.
His steadfast defence of the values for which he stood will be
remembered not only by those who knew him well, but also by the
many others who came in contact with him during his long and influential
life.
Acknowledgements
Many people assisted in various ways in the preparation of this
memoir. I wish to thank them all but especially Ms Margot Huxley,
Professor D.N.F. Dunbar, Professor S.C.B.
Gascoigne, Mr A.F.A. Harper, Mr F.J. Lehany, Professor Sir Mark
Oliphant and Mr C.G. Plowman. The recorded interview made by the
National Library of Australia in 1971 was a valuable source of
information on the late Sir Leonard Huxley's early life; the quotations
from this spoken record were included to capture something of
the vitality Huxley retained right up to the end of this life.
I am particularly grateful to Mrs A. Duncanson for her patience
in preparing the manuscript, and to her and Mrs Erika Leslie for
their help in compiling the bibliography. I also wish to thank
the CSIRO Division of Applied Physics for searching their records
for the photograph of the foundation committee of the Australian
Institute of Physics, and for their permission to reproduce it.
Appendix: Honorary public appointments
- Member of Council, University of Adelaide, 1953-1960
- Member of Council, Australian National University, 1956-1959
- Chairman, Australian Radio Research Board, 1958-1964
- First Chairman, National Standards Commission, 1950-1965
- Chairman, Radio Frequency Allocations Committee, 1960-1964
- Member of Council, National Library of Australia, 1961-1972
- Member of Board, U.S. Educational Foundation in Australia, 1960-1965.
- Australian Delegate on Committee on Space Research, 1959-1960
- First President, Australian Institute of Physics, 1963-1965
- Member, Queen Elizabeth II Fellowships Committee, 1963-1966
- Chairman of General Council, Encyclopaedia Britannica Awards,
1964-1973
- Chairman of Board, Australian/American Educational Foundation,
1965-1969
- Trustee, Australian Humanities Research Council, 1968-1970
- Member of Council, Canberra College of Advanced Education, 1968-1974
Notes
(1) Sir Leonard Huxley, tape
of an interview conducted by Mel Pratt, 8 September 1971; National
Library of Australia, Oral History, TRC 121/5, p.11.
(2) With the exception of the
later section describing Huxley's work for the Academy of Science,
quotations that are not referenced are from ref. 1.
(3) W.F. Evans, History of
the Radio Research Board, 1926-1945 (Melbourne, 1973).
(4) Sir Leonard Huxley, tape
of an interview conducted by Mel Pratt, 8 September 1971; National
Library of Australia, Oral History, TRC 121/5, p.25.
(5) (unsigned) Early history
of the determination of atomic charge. Nature, 131
(1933), 569-570.
(6) Sir Leonard Huxley, tape
of an interview conducted by R.W. Crompton, 14 April 1988; National
Library of Australia, Oral History, TRC 2268.
(7) Ronald W. Clark, The
Huxleys (London, 1968).
(8) Sir Leonard Huxley, tape
of an interview conducted by Mel Pratt, 8 September 1971; National
Library of Australia, Oral History, TRC 121/5, p.39.
(9) Sir Leonard Huxley, tape
of an interview conducted by Mel Pratt, 8 September 1971; National
Library of Australia, Oral History, TRC 121/5, p.163.
(10) S.C.B. Gascoigne, K.M.
Proust and M.O. Robins, The Creation of the Anglo-Australian
Observatory (Cambridge, 1990).
(11) F. Fenner and A.L.G.
Rees (eds.), The First Twenty-five Years (Canberra, 1980),
p.49.
(12) In this section, quotations
that are not referenced are from ref. 10.
(13) G.H. Munro, 'The Work
of the Radio Research Board', Proc. Inst. Rad. Eng., 12
(1951), 41; quoted by Evans, op. cit. (n.3). H.P. Brown (later
Sir Harry) was then Director-General of Posts and Telegraphs and
a foundation member of the Board.
(14) W.F. Evans, History
of the Radio Research Board, 1926-1945, (Melbourne, 1973),
p. 77.
(15) J.F.H. Wright, Measurement
in Australia, 1938-1988 (Sydney, 1988), p.8.
(16) Sir Leonard Huxley, tape
of an interview conducted by Mel Pratt, 8 September 1971: National
Library of Australia, Oral History, TRC 121/5, p. 148.
(17) Weights and Measures
(National Standards) Act, 1960, clause 4(1).
R.W. Crompton, Professor and Head of the Atomic and Molecular Physics Laboratories, Research School of Physical Sciences and
Engineering, Australian National University.
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