The Madras College Archive

     


Former Pupil Biographies

Robert Adamson (1821 - 1848)

Robert Adamson was born in St Andrews, one of ten children, and grew up in Burnside, the son of Alexander Adamson, a Fife farmer and his wife, Rachael Melville. He was educated at Madras College in St Andrews where he showed exceptional talents in mathematics and mechanics, twice winning the prize for mathematics. He became employed at an engineering shop from a young age, and apprenticed as a millwright for several months.

Adamson was keen on becoming an engineer, but ill health led to him pursuing photography. He was taught calotype by his eldest brother, John, and by the physicist David Brewster of the University of St Andrews in the late 1830s. As early as April 1839, Adamson's talents were recognized, and Fox Talbot, the inventor of the calotype. Adamson's brother John, a general practitioner, lecturer, and curator of the University Museum, produced the first calotype in Scotland in 1841. John's family home is marked by a blue plaque at 127 South Street; it was at one time the Post Office for St Andrews and is now a restaurant ('The Adamson').

He established his photographic studio at Rock House, Calton Hill Stairs in Edinburgh, on 10 May 1843.  In June 1943, Brewster recommended Adamson to David Octavius Hill (1802–1870), a painter of romantic Scottish landscapes, who hired him and they were commissioned in that year to make a group portrait of the 470 clergymen who founded the Free Church of Scotland. Hill had desired to make photographic portraits of the founders purely as reference material. This painting would not be completed until 1866, long after his death.


Over the next few years many famous people came to the Edinburgh studios to have their photographs taken. They also took photographs of ordinary working people in their own surroundings and also took many photographs of Edinburgh and further afield.

By 1947 Robert's health was deteriorating and he returned to St Andrews, dying on 14th January 1848.