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8 - James Stuart: engineering, philanthropy and radical politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2009

Richard Mason
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

Professor James Stuart is possibly the least remembered of this collection of ‘Cambridge minds’. What, then, are his claims for inclusion in the company of say, the Darwins, Keynes or Wittgenstein? My subtitle offers a clue. His was an unusually wide range of interests, and in Stuart we see the academic venturing into the public sphere, ultimately at the cost of his reputation in Cambridge.

Stuart played a significant part in the movement for university reform in the mid-nineteenth century. He was anxious to extend the work of the University beyond Cambridge – to today's adult education, to provide opportunities for women's higher education, and to develop engineering as a proper subject for undergraduate study. But for Stuart reform went beyond the confines of the University. He was involved in one of the great moral reform movements of the period, the campaign to repeal the Contagious Diseases Act, Britain's only foray into the controversial area of regulated prostitution. He was later a Liberal MP on the radical wing of the party, he ran a major London newspaper, was a devoted member of the London County Council, and ended his career as an industrialist, managing the country's most celebrated mustard works.

Even this summary glosses over aspects of a career which reveals a spread of commitment far wider than would be found today.

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Cambridge Minds , pp. 100 - 109
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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