Thomas Lumsden


Thomas Arnot Lumsden was a Scottish mathematician, who was educated at the University of Edinburgh, and lectured at Birmingham University. He published "A certain type of Fourier-Bessel Series", a paper about Bessel functions, in 1924. Lumsden, who served during both World War I and World War II, was killed in action in 1944.

Personal life, education, and World War I

Thomas Lumsden was born on 19 September 1895 in Edinburgh, to Mary Scott Arnott, who was born in Glasgow in 1857, and William Lumsden, a wood turner born in 1858 in Penicuik, Scotland. He had an older sister, Janet, and younger brother, Andrew.
Lumsden started studying at George Heriot's in 1906, a private school in Edinburgh. He matriculated at the University of Edinburgh in October 1912.
Lumsden took a break from his studies to fight in World War I where he was assigned to a Special Brigade of the Royal Engineers. He was a corporal from July 1915 to April 1917. Lumsden worked then in Munitions until December 1918. Lumsden was awarded a BSc in absentia on 5 July 1917. He returned from his service in 1918 to continue his studies at the University of Edinburgh, graduating with honours for his master's degree in 1919.
On 4 August 1924, Lumsden married Florence Milne Falconer in Abernyte, Perthshire. Their only child, William Fairly Lumsden was born on 6 February 1926.

Career

Between 1919-1920, Lumsden remained at the University of Edinburgh as an Assistant in Natural Philosophy. Following this, he moved to Birmingham to take a position as a lecturer in mathematics at University of Birmingham.
In 1922, he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society. In 1922, Lumsden helped G. N. Watson, a mathematics professor at the University of Birmingham, publish a book on Bessel functions. Lumsden later published his own paper on Bessel functions in 1924, titled: "A certain type of Fourier-Bessel Series". This paper was cited in Thomas John I'Anson Bromwich's book, "An Introduction to The Theory of Infinite Series" in 1926.

World War II

During World War II, Lumsden once again served his country. He arrived in New York City on the RMS Queen Elizabeth on 26 December 1942, intending to stay indefinitely, but no intention to become a citizen. He was identified as a government official and a diplomat.
Lumsden was killed in action on 17 August 1944.