9-437: Horace Brown may refer to: Horace Tabberer Brown (1848–1925), British brewer and chemist Horace Brown (musician) , American singer Horace Brown (footballer) (1860–?), English footballer [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
18-601: A career which lasted over 50 years. His earliest work concerned treatment of sewage and analyses of the Burton waters. Later he took up study of geology , being led to it by pressing requirements in connection with the water supply of Burton. This entailed a good deal of field surveying, which was embodied in a paper on the Permian Rocks of the Leicestershire Coalfield. He was elected a Fellow of
27-732: The Brewers' Guild in 1929. The Guild and the Institute merged to form the Institute and Guild of Brewing (IGB) in 2001, which was later renamed as the Institute of Brewing and Distilling in 2005. The Brewer and Distiller International is a full colour monthly publication that is sent out to full IBD members. The Journal of the Institute of Brewing is a quarterly academic journal of peer-reviewed published research articles, with ISSN 0046-9750 and indexed in Scopus . This list
36-662: The Horace Brown Medal to eminent scientist every three years. The winner is invited to give a lecture, called the Horace Brown Medal lecture. Winners include: Institute of Brewing and Distilling The Institute of Brewing and Distilling ( IBD ) is an industry trade association for brewers and distillers , both in the United Kingdom and internationally. The IBD had its headquarters at Clarges Street in London London until 2014 at which time
45-606: The Institute moved to its current location in Curlew Street, south of the River Thames. The institute can trace its roots back to 1886 when a group of ten scientists with interests in malting and brewing science formed The Laboratory Club, which later became the Institute of Brewing (IoB). In October 1906 a group of Yorkshire brewers established the Operative Brewers' Guild, which changed its name to
54-873: The Royal Society in 1889. From 1890 onward studied the assimilation of Carbon dioxide in plants. He also established the Guinness Research Laboratory in Dublin in 1901. He died at 5 Evelyn Gardens, Kensington. He was awarded the Longstaff Medal of the Chemical Society in 1894, a Royal Medal of the Royal Society in 1903 and the Copley Medal in 1920. The Institute of Brewing and Distilling awards
63-465: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Horace_Brown&oldid=731210949 " Category : Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Horace Tabberer Brown Horace Tabberer Brown FRS (born Tabberer ; 20 July 1848 – 6 February 1925)
72-714: Was Adrian John Brown . He was educated at Burton and Atherstone Grammar Schools and at the Royal College of Chemistry . Brown started work at the Worthington Brewery in 1866. His focus was to solve practical brewing problems by employing and developing fundamental scientific principles. His research work considered barley germination , beer microbiology , water composition, oxygen and fermentation , beer haze formation, wort composition and beer analysis. A true polymath , he left his mark on virtually all areas of science as applied to brewing, in
81-641: Was a British chemist . Brown was born in Burton upon Trent , the sixth child of Benjamin Tabberer, a farmer, and Jane Atkin Tabberer. He had four elder sisters – Sophia, Jane, Julia, and Beatrice – and an elder brother, Benjamin. His father died in February 1848, five months prior to Brown's birth. In February 1849, his mother remarried Edwin Brown, a banker and amateur naturalist, which led to Brown's interest in science around age 12. His younger half brother
#130869