Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 525 Title: Document Concerning the Controversy Between Faculty and Regius Professors Author(s): Couper, John Glasgw 133 Moor Place Nov 13th 1840 Dear sir, Your ſon Mr Lewis Gordon has just informed me that you write him saying you doubt the expediency of his announcing at present his intention to the heads of the Faculty of Senate. In asking him to consult you on that point my only wish was to prevent the poſsibility of his claims, if urged in a court, being met by a plea of acquiescence. If you think that this is affected by the few words which he introduced into his inaugural discourse, & which attracted no notice when read, I quite agree with you that no more should be done at present, as the leſs irritation is occasioned the better especially by a person situated as your ſon is. I may mention however for your consideration that meetings of the Faculty take place very often. To these meetings your ſon, like the other Regius Profeſsors, will not be summoned. He could not plead ignorance of their occurrence, because even his application for a claſsroom will be considered & decided at one of them, and the answer to his application will be in the shape of a formal extract from the minutes of Faculty. Will his silence under these circumstances not constitute acquienscence in his exclusion from the Faculty, to a set in which we hold that he has a right? Again, a Faculty profeſsor is always inducted in the Faculty, a Regius Profeſsor in the Senate. Your ſon was inducted in the Senate without objection on his part. How will this operate? You know much better than I can what insight to give to all this, but I thought it best to state it to you. In your letter to your ſon you ask if I can furnish any further information within as to the question of [¿], or as to the inconveniences arising from the division of the profeſsors into two claſses. In reply I send you, 1m the Printed Evidence taken before the [first] Royal Commiſsion. See especially a memorial from the then Regius Profeſsors explaining their grievances. 2d An anonymous pamphlet containing many facts substantiated by quotations from the evidence. 3d a memorial which I laid before the last Commiſsion. In it is especially the history of the additions made to the salaries of the Faculty profeſsors by themselves, the management of their houses, the distribution of the [medical] graduation fees, & above all the history of the lawsuit with the Faculty of Physicians & Surgeons. In detail all the evil consequences of the distinction would be endleſs. They are of daily and hourly occurrence. I may mention one, as an example, in addition to those in the above documents. By the will of the late Dr Hunter the Profeſsors of Glasgow College are appointed the sole trustees of the Hunterian Museum. The Faculty Profeſsors, aſsuming this to mean themselves alone, have usurped the entire control of the Museum, to the exclusion of the Profeſsors of Chemistry, Surgery, Botany, Natural History, Widwifery, & Materia Medica, the very persons best qualified, beyond all doubt, to manage the Museum. I suppose that such could be the intention of Hunter is to insult his memory. As to the effect of this arrange¬ ment, take the following which [¿] to Dr Thos Thomson Regius Profeſsor of Chemistry. A scientific friend from Paris (the celebrated [¿] if I recollect right) [¿] to be in Glasgow, requested Dr Thomson to take him to the Hunterian Museum. In complying with this request, as a small section for [¿] he had been admitted to the munificent collections of Paris, he was presented by the [¿] keeper at the door of the Museum with an open letter to the following [pasport]. Sir No Regius Profeſsor or lecturer is is permitted to introduce any stranger into the Hunterian Museum (Signed) Robert Davidson. Such a proceeding needs no commment. It may safely be aſserted that there was not another Museum in Europe where doors would not have been thrown open to the two individuals who were thus forced to withdraw without seeing the collection. Again, will the beginning of the present seſsion the trustees of the Hunterian Museum have ordered that the anatomical [¿] [¿] shall not in future be taken out of the Museum, as hitherto, by the Profeſsors to be shewn in their claſs in illustration of their lecturers. The only medical profeſsors, be it recollected, who are trustees of the Museum are the Profeſsor of Anatomy who is about 80 years of age, & who, by the bye, disapproves of the resolution of the trustees, and the profeſsor of Practice of Physic, who lives in Italy & does his duties at Glasgow by proxy. It would be difficult to invent a more striking illustration of the injurious effects of the existing constitution of the Museum Trust. I must conclude this too long letter by saying that if you happen to be intimate with Principal Lee he could give much valuable information about the abuses of Glasgow University and their causes. I remain very truly yours John Couper