William Grant Craib
William Grant Craib FLS FRSE (born 10 March 1882 in Banff, Aberdeenshire – died 1 September 1933 in Kew) was a British Botanist. Craib worked at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.[1]
Life
Craib was born in Banff, Aberdeenshire in northern Scotland on 10 March 1882 and he was educated at Banff and Fordyce Academies.[2] He entered Aberdeen University as an Art student but due to problems with his eyes he left and worked for a while on a ship as an engineer.[2] When his eyes were better he returned to Aberdeen University and took a Master of Arts degree.[2] He was ready to study for his Batchelor of Science degree but he took an opportunity to take a temporary post at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Calcutta.[2]
While in Calcutta he became the curator of the Herbarium and made a large collection of plants from the North Cachar Hills which he later named.[2] In 1899 he was offered a job as Assistant for India at Kew Gardens in London, a role in which he contributed his knowledge of Indian and South West Asian botany.[2]
In 1915 he was offered and took the post as a Lecturer in Forest Botany and Indian Trees at Edinburgh.[2] In 1920 he was appointed Regius Professor of Botany at Aberdeen University.[2] As well as his teaching work and training research students, he studied with his pupils Siamese flora on which he wrote many books.[2] In 1921 at a meeting of the British Association, Craib lost one of his legs in a serious accident.[2]
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1920. His proposers were Sir Isaac Bayley Balfour, Sir David Prain, Sir Thomas Hudson Beare, and James Hartley Ashworth.[3]
During his vacations for University he worked in the Herbarium at the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew in London, particularly on the flora of Siam.[2] It was during one of his stays at Kew that he became ill and died on 1 September 1933 aged 51.[2]
Family
He married Mary Beatrice Turner in 1917. They had no children.