Priestley , Joseph

Priestley , Joseph
(1733–1804) British chemist and Presbyterian minister
Priestley was the greatest British chemist of the 18th century and also one of the century's greatest men. Born in the English city of Leeds, his father was a cloth dresser and a Congregationalist. Priestley was educated at a nonconformist seminary, later becoming a minister at Needham Market in 1755. After a few years in Nantwich in a similar post he went to teach at Warrington Academy in 1761.
On visits to London he met Benjamin Franklin, who aided him in his History of Electricity (1767). He moved to Leeds in 1767 and, being near a brewery, “began to make experiments in the fixed air that was continually produced in it.” It was around this time that he invented soda water with the ample supply of carbon dioxide (‘fixed air’) from the brewery. In 1772 he became Lord Shelburne's librarian, which involved only nominal duties and allowed him to do some of his most important work. He left in 1780 to become a minister in Birmingham, where he mixed with such members of the Lunar Society as Erasmus Darwin, James Watt, Josiah Wedgwood, and Matthew Boulton. As a dissenting radical he preached against the discrimination suffered by non-Anglicans and, in reply to Edmund Burke's Reflections on the French Revolution, wrote in favor of the principles of the French Revolution. This led a Birmingham mob to break into his home (1791) and burn it, destroying all his books, papers, and instruments. He moved to London for a short while but finding no security there moved to America in 1794 to join his sons who had emigrated there earlier. In Pennsylvania he continued with his scientific and theological work until his death.
Priestley attempted to understand the facts of combustion and respiration. His first insight came from the realization that, since even a small candle uses an enormous amount of pure air, there must be a provision in nature to replace it. After trying various techniques to purify the foul air left after combustion he eventually found that a sprig of mint would revive the air so it could support combustion once more (1771). In the next few years, using a variety of new techniques, he isolated various gases – nitrous oxide, hydrogen chloride, sulfur dioxide – and, in 1774, he produced oxygen. Using a powerful magnifying glass to focus the rays of the Sun, he heated oxides of mercury and lead confined in glass tubes over mercury. He found that they gave off large amounts of a gas in which a candle would burn with an enlarged flame. At first he identified the gas as nitrous oxide but found that, unlike that gas, it was barely soluble in water. He next thought it might simply be ordinary air but on putting mice in it he found that they lived longer than in a similar volume of normal air. Being an ardent believer in the phlogiston theory, he named this gas ‘dephlogisticated air’. Antoine Lavoisier realized the crucial value of this discovery in explaining combustion and named the gas ‘oxygine’.
Priestley continued to discover more compounds. He determined the relative densities of various gases by weighing balloons filled with them and also investigated gaseous diffusion, conductivity of heat in gas, and the effect of electrical discharge on gases at low pressure. He also produced numerous substantial theological works.

Scientists. . 2011.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Priestley,Joseph — Priestley, Joseph. 1733 1804. British chemist noted for work on the isolation of gases and his discovery of oxygen (1774). * * * …   Universalium

  • Priestley, Joseph — born March 13, 1733, Birstall Fieldhead, near Leeds, Yorkshire, Eng. died Feb. 6, 1804, Northumberland, Pa., U.S. English theologian, political theorist, and physical scientist. He worked as a teacher and lecturer in various subjects before… …   Universalium

  • Priestley, Joseph — ► (1733 1804) Teólogo y hombre de ciencia britanico. Descubrió el oxígeno y otros gases y el fenómeno de la respiración de los vegetales. * * * (13 mar. 1733, Birstall Fieldhead, cerca de Leeds, Yorkshire, Inglaterra–6 feb. 1804, Northumberland,… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • PRIESTLEY, JOSEPH —    a Socinian divine, born near Leeds; wrote in defence of Socinianism, and in defence of Christianity; gave himself to physical research, particularly pneumatic chemistry; is claimed as the discoverer of oxygen; sympathised with the French… …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Priestley, Joseph — (1733 AD 1804 AD) Discovered oxygen …   The writer's dictionary of science fiction, fantasy, horror and mythology

  • Priestley — Joseph …   Scientists

  • Joseph Priestley — (13 March 1733 (Old Style) – 6 February 1804) was an 18th century British theologian, Dissenting clergyman, natural philosopher, educator, and political theorist who published over 150 works. He is usually credited with the discovery of oxygen,… …   Wikipedia

  • Joseph Priestley and Dissent — Joseph Priestley (March 13, 1733 (old style) ndash; February 8, 1804) was a British natural philosopher, political theorist, clergyman, theologian, and educator. He was one of the most influential Dissenters of the late eighteenth century.A… …   Wikipedia

  • Joseph Priestley and education — Joseph Priestley (OldStyleDate|March 24|1733|March 13 ndash; February 8 1804) was a British natural philosopher, Dissenting clergyman, political theorist, and theologian. While his achievements in all of these areas are renowned, he was also… …   Wikipedia

  • PRIESTLEY (J.) — PRIESTLEY JOSEPH (1733 1804) Chimiste anglais, théologien, chef principal (avec Theophilus Lindsey), du mouvement des unitariens ou antitrinitaires, pédagogue et théoricien politique, né à Birstall Fieldhead (près de Leeds) et mort à… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”