Royal Microscopical Society
The Royal Microscopical Society is a learned society for the promotion of microscopy. It was founded in 1839 as the Microscopical Society of London making it the oldest organisation of its kind in the world. In 1866, the Society gained its royal charter and took its current name. Founded as a society of amateurs, its membership consists of individuals of all skill levels in numerous related fields from throughout the world. Every year since 1841, the Society has published its own scientific journal, the Journal of Microscopy, which contains peer-reviewed papers and book reviews. The Society is a registered charity that is dedicated to advancing science, developing careers and supporting wider understanding of science and microscopy through its Outreach activities.
Probably the Society's greatest contribution is its standardised 3x1 inches microscope glass slides in 1840, which are still the most widely used size today and known as the "RMS standard".
The Royal Microscopical Society is a member of the Foundation for Science and Technology, the European Microscopy Society and the International Federation of Societies for Microscopy.
History
On 3 September 1839, a meeting of 17 gentlemen including physicist Joseph Jackson Lister, photography pioneer Joseph Bancroft Reade, the botanists Edwin John Quekett and Richard Kippist, and artist and inventor Cornelius Varley, was held at Quekett's residence at 50 Wellclose Square "to take into consideration the propriety of forming a society for the promotion of microscopical investigation, and for the introduction and improvement of the microscope as a scientific instrument", following a decade of great advances in the field of microscopy. At this gathering it was agreed that a society should be founded and a committee appointed. It was named the Microscopical Society of London and a constitution was drawn up. On 20 December 1839, a public meeting was held at the Horticultural Society's rooms at 21 Regent Street in London. At the convention, Professor Richard Owen was elected president, along with Nathaniel Ward as Treasurer, and Farre as Secretary. A Council was also appointed, consisting of J.S. Bowerbank, Thomas Edwards, Dr F. Farre, George Gwilt, George Jackson, Dr John Lindley, George Loddiges, the Rev. C. Pritchard, Edwin John Quekett, M.J. Rippingham, Richard Horsman Solly and Robert Warington. With them, forty-five men were enrolled as members.At its foundation, the Society acquired the best microscopes then obtainable from the three leading makers, Powell & Lealand, Ross, and Smith. The first president of the Society was palaeontologist Sir Richard Owen, who is best known for coining the word "dinosaur" and for his role in the creation of London's Natural History Museum. It was renamed the Royal Microscopical Society in 1866, when the Society received its Royal Charter under the Presidency of James Glaisher. Its governing documents are its Charter and By-laws.
In 1870, the President, Rev. Joseph Bancroft Reade, in his maiden speech revealed that he had suggested adding the suffix "-al" to the name of the fledgling society to prevent "the possibility of ourselves being mistaken for microscopic objects".
John Thomas Quekett served as the Society's secretary from 1841 to 1860. Distinguished botanist Dukinfield Henry Scott served as president of the Society between 1904 and 1906
In 1885, botanist and women's rights campaigner Marian Farquharson, became the first female Fellow of the Society. Although not permitted to attend meetings, her greatest contribution to the scientific community was of her campaign in gaining women rights to full fellowship of learned societies. In 1900 she sent a letter addressed to the Royal Society and the Linnean Society petitioning that "duly qualified women should be eligible for ordinary Fellowship and, if elected, there should be no restriction forbidding their attendance at meetings". Both societies refused her requests to join, eventually the Linnean Society elected her as a fellow in 1908.
In September 1989, Royal Mail released a set of four stamps to mark the celebration of the Society's 150th anniversary entitled "Microscopes", one of which being the snowflake, its own logo.
In 2017, the Society appointed two patrons, Baroness Brown of Cambridge and Baroness Finlay of Llandaff, both of whom are members of the House of Lords.
Membership
RMS members come from a wide range of backgrounds within the biological and physical sciences, covering all areas of microscopy and cytometry.After three years of continuous Ordinary Membership, members are invited to become a Fellow of the Society after a set number of criteria have been met, which allows for individuals to benefit from voting and election rights as well as the use of the post-nominal letters FRMS after their names.
Honorary Fellows
The Society's by-laws previously limited the number of Honorary Fellowships to a maximum of 65 at any one time. However, a proposal to enable new Fellowships to be awarded beyond this figure was approved at the 2019 AGM, and subsequently by the Privy Council.Trustees
The Society has 23 Trustees including: Professor Maddy Parsons, a Professor of Cell Biology in the Randall Centre for Cell & Molecular Biophysics at King's College London, Professor Michelle Peckham, President of the Society from 2016-2019 and Peter J. O'Toole, current President of the Society.Presidents
The current President is Peter J. O'Toole.The Society had a number of eminent scientists as President since its founding in 1839. Notable former Presidents include:.
- 2019-23 Grace Burke
- 2016-19 Michelle Peckham
- 2013-16 Peter Nellist
- 1984-5 Archibald Howie, MA, PhD, FRS
- 1966 HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
- 1930-1 R. Ruggles Gates, MA, PhD, LLD, FLS, FRS
- 1926-7 James A. Murray, MD, BSc, FRS
- 1916-17 Edward Heron-Allen, FLS, FGS, FRS
- 1913-15 Sir German Sims Woodhead, MA, MD, LLD, FRSE
- 1911-12 Henry George Plimmer, FLS, FZS, FRS
- 1910-11 Sir J. Arthur Thomson, MA, FRSE
- 1909 Sir Edwin Ray Lankester, KCB, MA, LLD, FLS, FRS
- 1907-8 The Rt Hon. Lord Avebury, PC, DCL, LLD, FRS
- 1904-6 Dukinfield Henry Scott, MA, PhD, LLD, FLS, FRS
- 1902-3 Henry Woodward, LLD, FGS, FZS, FRS
- 1900-1 William Carruthers, FLS, FGS, FRS
- 1891-2 Robert Braithwaite, MD, MRCS
- 1888-90 Charles Thomas Hudson, MA, LLD, FRS
- 1884-7 Rev. William Henry Dallinger, MA, LLD, FRS
- 1881-3 Peter Martin Duncan, MB, FRS
- 1879-80 Lionel Smith Beale, MB, FRCP, FRS
- 1878 Henry James Slack, FGS
- 1875-7 Henry Clifton Sorby, LLD, FRS
- 1873-4 Charles Brooke, MA, FRS
- 1871-2 William Kitchen Parker, FRS
- 1869-70 Rev. Joseph Bancroft Reade, MA, FRS
- 1865-8 James Glaisher, FRS
- 1860 John Thomas Quekett, FRS
- 1858-9 Edwin Lankester, MD, LLD, FRS
- 1856-7 George Shadbolt
- 1854-5 William Benjamin Carpenter, CB, MD, LLD, FRS
- 1850-1 Arthur Farre, MD, FRS
- 1848-9 George Busk, FRS
- 1846-7 James Scott Bowerbank, LLD, FRS
- 1840-1 Sir Richard Owen, KCB, DCL, MD, LLD, FRS