Andy Arthur 🐣 Threadinburgh 🧵 Profile picture
Jan 18 30 tweets 8 min read Read on X
In 1839, Dr. Thomas Smith of 21 Duke (now Dublin) Street in #Edinburgh tried on himself a purified extract of "Indian Hemp" - Cannabis sativa. He "gave an interesting account of its physiological action!". He was most probably the first person in Scotland to get high. Dr Thomas Smith of T. & H. Smith. 1807-1893
The medicinal and psychoactive properties of "Indian Hemp" had only just been introduced to Western medicine that year by Irish doctor William Brooke O'Shaughnessy, so it's unlikely anyone had done so before.
Cannabis seeds were advertised for sale in Edinburgh in the Caledonian Mercury as far back as 1761 (apply to the Gardener at Hermitage House in Leith), but these probably refer to Hemp: Cannabis sativa. 🌱
In 1849, Dr. Alexander Christison Esq. was the first to cultivate Cannabis in Scotland, when seeds from "fresh gunjah" (the flowering tops of the plant) were successfully raised to maturity at @TheBotanics
Christison, a medical student at the time, came from a long line of medical men, and his thesis would be on the medical uses of cannabis, making him one of the first Western doctors to write on this subject.
Christison was in correspondence with western Doctors in India, who were now very much interested in what Indians had long known. He described that his plants failed to produce much in the way of "churrus" (the Indian word for Cannabis resin)
Christison tried his specimens to test the "physiological action" with some friends. In small doses they found it "exciting the cerebral and digestive systems". In large quantities it was "powerfully sedative and anti-spasmodic" and would "induce insensibility"
He noted that its effects were well known in the East, both for "the purposes of creating intoxication", where Gunjah was sold in 2-3 foot long bundles in India for smoking. But also he noted its medical use in treating Tetanus and Hydrophobia.
In 1848, Dr Winslow Forbes' Physchological Journal reported that a Dr Auber had tried administering C. indica to plague sufferers in India. A Royal Navy officer so treated saw "puppets dancing on the roof of his cabin", another "believed he was the piston of a steam engine".
A young artist believed he was made from elastic and could "enter into a bottle and remain there at his ease". A colleague, Dr Moreau, believed "his whole body was inflated like a balloon [thus] enabled to elevate himself and vanish in the air" .
As early as 1840, Thomas Smith was producing for himself an "Essence of Coffee" by concentrating percolate of coffee beans. He was the first to do this, and used it to make "instant" coffee when working in his lab. James Young Simpson suggested he should commercialise it.
Smith's nephew Peter joined the business and pursued the development of coffee essence. You could buy it by 1845 in 2 shilling bottles. Advertisment for T. & H. Smith Coffee Essence,  Greenock Advertiser, 15th August 1845
Coffee Essence would become a Victorian fashion, but if that wasn't your thing then T. & H. Smith would also sell you a "fluid extract of Senna" if you fancied that other Victorian trend of "purging" yourself. Your bowels would be "[excited] to a gentle and healthy action". Advert for T. & H. Smith's Extract of Senna.  Dundee, Perth, and Cupar Advertiser - 14th March 1845
Another T. Smith first was proving the artificial sweetener Mannite (Mannitol) was produced from the roots of Dandelions by synthesis, *not* extraction. He collected over 80lbs of the roots in 1849 from the embankments of the newly landscaped W. Princes St Gardens for the purpose West Princes Street Gardens, c. 1858, showing the embankments where Smith collected Dandelion roots
The aforementioned James Young Simpson had approached Smith in 1847, asking him to produce Chloroform on an industrial scale. This was done, but Smiths chose not to pursue it further and so the plant and method was transferred to fellow Edinburgh chemists Duncan & Flockhart James Young Simpson
Chloroform was invented in 1831 but in 1847 Simpson was the first to show its effect on humans. He and his assistants were in the habit of sniffing chemicals to see if they would induce anaesthesia. On trying Chloroform they got giddy and all 3 were knocked out until the next day
T. & H. Smith would regret handing over the method they had developed and plant to Duncan & Flockhart, as the latter made William Flockhart's name and the firm made big business out of it. Smiths were left playing catchup.
It was another substance - Morphine - where Smiths really made their name. In 1831, Dr William Gregory invented a new process for producing Morphine Hydrochloride from Opium at Edinburgh University, In 1837 Thomas Smith went into partnership with Henry to commercialise it
Henry would focus on the retail business, allowing Thomas to focus on the research and production side. They realised they would need separation of premises too, so bought Heriothill and Blandfield Houses in Canonmills; the former as a residence, the latter for a factory Heriothill House
You may recognise this building as it's now the Royal Navy & Royal Marines Club house, with the landmark mast and rigging out front. Image
Blandfield was immediately to the east and is where Tesco (or Willie Lows in old money) is now situated. The below photo looks westr over the works, with Broughton Road on left (pre-1890s tenements) and Heriot Hill House in right background. Image
These works were developed in a haphazard manner and were largely wooden sheds constructed around whatever new piece of equipment Thomas was trialling. When the company finally moved to modern works at Gorgie in 1906, they transplanted the "Blandfield Works" name there The Blandfield Chemical Works Morphine Department
Thomas was not alone in working on Morphine, but a refined, mass-producable drug in many chemical formats made them their money. In the 1860s they were producting Morphine alkoloids, hydrochlorides, sulphates and acetates and Codeine amongst other opiates
Although junior brother to Thomas, Henry Smith predeceased him, dying in 1865. He was replaced by others in the family; first eldest brother James (who fell out with Thomas and left) and then his sons - James and Peter Shanklie-Smith. Henry Smith, 1810-1865
Thomas lived a longer life; he retired aged 74 in 1881 to his house at Heriot Hill. Here he spent the last 12 years of his life refusing to retire completely, and pottering around in his home laboratory on problems that he had never quite solved in his working days.
Thomas Smith died, aged 87, on 19th July 1893 at Heriot Hill House. He lived quite the life for the son of a Paisley Shawl weaver who had been apprenticed as a cabinetmaker. His obituary noted he had studied medicine under Dr Knox, infamous for buying bodies off of Burke & Hare Dr Knox with Burke, a cartoon by R. H. Nimmo portraying them in a scene from Macbeth. CC-by-NC National Galleries Scotland
The company continued to prosper however, the Shanklie-Smith brothers had been sent to Neuwied, on the Rhine, to complete their Chemistry studies and would bring a number of German research chemists to the firm, including a Herr Gottfried Delitsch.
They were amongst the first firms to commercially produce Diamorphine - Heroin. Their descendant company (Veranova) still produces variants of it and many other controlled substances to this day at the 118 year old "New" Blandfield Works in Gorgie "New" Blandfield Works at the end of Wheatfield Road, a converted brewery to which T. & H. Smith moved in 1906-08.
In an irony of ironies, in 1958, T. & H. Smith accidentally discovered the bitterest substance known to science - Denatonium Benzoate - at their factory called Blandfield. This is marketed as "Bitrex" and is what they put in antifreeze and meths to stop you drinking it
In 2017, Nintendo admitted that the little game cards for the Nintendo Switch were coated in Bitrex to try and stop children ingesting them. This admission was prompted by complaints from adults who had licked/tasted the cards and been upset with the results 🤪 Image

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More from @cocteautriplets

May 11
The derailment by strikers of the Flying Scotsman on May 10th 1926 has meant a much more serious and fatal rail accident in Edinburgh later that same day which claimed 3 lives and injured many has been somewhat overlooked 🧵👇🚂
The 1:06PM train from Berwick-upon-Tweed to Edinburgh hit a goods train being shunted across its path at St. Margaret's Depot just west of the tunnel under London Road. Due to the General Strike, most signal boxes were unmanned and only a rudimentary signalling system was running
The busy but confined St. Margaret's depot was on both sides of the LNER East Coast Mainline as it approached Edinburgh, with Piershill Junction for Leith and north Edinburgh to its east and the 60 yard tunnel under London Road constraining it to the west. OS 1944/5 Town Survey of Edinburgh showing the mainline running through St. Margaret's Depot. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of Scotland
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Apr 30
It's been hard to find time recently for any in-depth threading, but I think tonight we can sneak in the story of the lesser-known Leith shipyard of Ramage & Ferguson, builders of luxury steam mega-yachts to the Victorian and Edwardian elites. ⛵️🧵👇 The modelmakers loft at Ramage & Ferguson, 1906. © Edinburgh City Libraries
In its working life from 1877 to 1934, the Ramage & Ferguson yard built 269 ships: 80, almost 1/3 of the total, were luxury steam yachts, built mainly to the designs of the 3 most prominent yacht designers in the world. It became the go-to shipyard for the rich and famous Image
When I say yachts, don't think about those little plastic things bobbing around in marinas these days. We're talking about multi-hundred (up to two thousand!) ton wooden and steel palaces, fitted out to the standards of ocean liners Launch of a yacht for an American customer at Ramage & Ferguson, late 1890s or early 20th century.
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Apr 7
As promised / threatened, there now follows a thread about the origins and abolition of the Tawse as the instrument of discipline in Scottish teaching. So lets start off with the Tawse - what is it and how did it evolve? 🧵👇
"Tawis" or "tawes" is a Scots word going back to c. 16th c., a plural of a leather belt or strap. In turn this came from the Middle English "tawe", leather tanned so as to keep it supple. Such devices were long the favoured instrument of corporal punishment in Scottish education "The Dominie Functions",  George Harvey (1806–1876). © The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum via ArtUK
In 1848, George Mckarsie sued Archibald Dickson, schoolmaster of Auchtermuchty, for assaulting his son without provocation with a tawse "severely on the head, face and arms to the effusion of his blood". He was awarded a shilling but had to pay all expenses!
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Jan 24
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Dec 29, 2023
Between 1950 and 1973, #Edinburgh built 77 municipal, multi-storey housing blocks (of 7 storeys or more), containing 6,084 flats across 968 storeys. So as promised, I've gone and made a spreadsheet inventory of them all. Let's have a look at them chronologically 🧵👇 Screenshot - spreadsheet of Edinburgh's multi-storey municipal housing blocks.
1950-51 saw the first such building - the 8 storey Westfield Court with 88 flats (and a nursery on the roof!) Built by local builders Hepburn Bros, it was heavily inspired by London's Kensal House by Maxwell Fry. It was a bit of a 1-off though and is rather unique in the city. Westfield Court
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Dec 11, 2023
The potential eviction of long-sitting community groups and public services from #Edinburgh's South Bridge "Resource Centre" means it's time for a thread on the history of the South Bridge Public School itself, a useful case study in 150 years of inner city social change 🧵👇
It was opened by the Edinburgh School Board on Nov. 2nd 1886, Secretary of State for Scotland the Right Hon. Arthur J. Balfour (later PM) officiating, and had cost them £7,942 to build. The Board's architect, Robert Wilson, designed it in the favoured "collegiate gothic" style South Bridge Public School, very much in the collegiate gothic style of the 1870s
It had an opening roll of 1,170 children (although not all attended at nonce). The ESB was falling over itself at this time to build schools to meet the demands of the 1872 act which made Education in Scotland compulsory (but not free!) and a booming inner-city population. The roundel of the Edinburgh School Board, education being dispensed to the young. Dean Public School, one of the ESB’s first new schools after the 1872 act. © Self
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