Thomas Charles Hope

Thomas Charles Hope, Portrait by [[Henry Raeburn]]<ref name="Reference for the Hope family, portraits">{{cite book|author1=William Raeburn Andrew|title=Life of Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A.: With Appendix|date=1894|publisher=W. H. Allen & Company, limited|page=156|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I65FAQAAMAAJ&q=thomas+charles+hope+raeburn&pg=PA128|accessdate=24 July 2017|chapter=Appendix, 156 – Hope, Thomas Charles, M.D.}}</ref> Thomas Charles Hope (21 July 1766 – 13 June 1844) was a Scottish physician, chemist and lecturer. He proved the existence of the element strontium, and gave his name to '''Hope's Experiment''', which shows that water reaches its maximum density at .

In 1815 Hope was elected as president of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (1815–19), and as vice-president of Royal Society of Edinburgh (1823–33) during the presidencies of Walter Scott and Thomas Makdougall Brisbane.

Charles Darwin was one of Hope's students, and Darwin viewed his chemistry lectures as highlights in his otherwise largely dull education at the University. Provided by Wikipedia

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