Quantitative Problems in Biochemistry; Microbial Energetics
Children
2 sons
Edwin Alfred Dawes (6 July 1925 – 3 March 2023) was a British biochemist and magician from Yorkshire. As a biochemist, he authored two textbooks and was the long-term and founding head of the Biochemistry department at the University of Hull, where he led its research into bioplastics. As a magician, he was an internationally recognised authority on the history of magic.
Early life and education
Dawes was born in Goole in the West Riding of Yorkshire on 6 July 1925.[1] He developed an interest in magic at the age of 5 when his father and grandfather performed for him during a period of illness. His interest in chemistry developed while at grammar school in Goole, and when he received a gas-mask during World War 2, he decided to test it by producing chlorine gas in the family shed.[2]
Dawes completed his Bachelor of Science with Honours at the University of Leeds in 1946, and his PhD in 1948.[1]
Academic career
Dawes lectured at the University of Leeds from 1947 to 1950, and at the University of Glasgow from 1951 to 1963. In 1963, he founded the University of Hull's Biochemistry department, and headed it until 1986. From 1963 to 1990 he was Hull's Reckitt Professor of Biochemistry. As director of Hull's biomedical research unit from 1981 to 1992, he led its work on polyhydroxyalkanoatebioplastics, which led to the commercialisation of Biopol by ICI.[2][1][3]
Dawes was chairman of the Philip Larkin Society from its founding in 1995, ten years after the death of the poet. The two became friends while Larkin was librarian at the university's Brynmor Jones Library and Dawes was Chairman of the Library Committee (1974 to 1987).[8] On 2 December 2016, after a long campaign, Larkin's memorial was unveiled at Poet's Corner in Westminster Abbey by Dawes and Anthony Thwaite (the Society's president).[9][10]
Works
Dawes's 1956 textbook Quantitative Problems in Biochemistry was translated into 6 languages, and as of 2016[update] remained in print in Japan.[2] Reviews of its 1972 5th edition noted that it had "become a classic for many honours students and teachers of bio-chemistry"[11] with its text "outstanding for being concise yet clear.[12] Its 1980 6th edition was considered as "disappointing" by two reviewers due to its abbreviated content and insufficient coverage of developments in the field,[13][14] however another reviewer would recommend it without hesitation "as a valuable teaching and reference resource".[15]
His 1986 textbook Microbial Energetics was aimed at the advanced undergraduate, with chapters on "microbial reserve compounds analogous to starch and glycogen of higher cells" deemed "especially authoritative and up-to-date",[16] and with a writing style which "affords considerable pleasure simply by the manner in which the material is presented".[17]
Magic
Dawes was President of the Scottish Conjurers' Association from 1959 to 1963, and edited its magazine from 1958 to 1962.[18] Dawes also edited the magazine for the Scottish Association of Magical Societies (SAMS), the national organisation for magical clubs in Scotland.[19]
He was President of the Hull Magicians Circle,[20] and historian for The Magic Circle.[21]
Dawes was a multi-award-winning historian of magic, and is likely to have been the most prolific.[5] His writings, which have been noted for consistently excellent scholarship and engaging prose,[5] include The Great Illusionists,[22]The Encyclopedia of Magic with Arthur Setterington,[23] a number of monographs, and hundreds of articles including (since 1972) his long-running "A Rich Cabinet of Magical Curiosities" monthly column in The Magic Circular.[5]
Dawes also wrote several biographical magic books for magicians, among them Charles Bertram: The Court Conjurer (1997), Stodare: The Enigma Variations (1998), and Stanley Collins: Conjuror, Collector and Iconoclast (2002).
With Amy Dawes
In magic shows, his wife Amy (née Rogerson[3]) performed both as his assistant and in her own right.[2] She was a domestic science student during his studies at Leeds, and subsequently became a teacher in Glasgow.[2] They married on 19 December 1950, and had two sons. The couple developed Only Make-Believe: A Plethora of Prestidigitation, an award-winning stage show, in which they performed as Professor Bluffman and Madame Patrice.[24] Amy Dawes died on 30 December 2014, aged 85.[25][2]
2020 - Honorary Vice President and Honorary Life Member of the Philip Larkin Society.[27]
2018 - Allen Slaight Lifetime Achievement award from Magicana.[28]
2017 – Gold Medal from The Magic Circle for "exemplary service to the Society or exceptional magical ability or both". Dawes was only the ninth recipient since 1926.[29]
^PRICE, N. C. (1 August 1981). "Quantitative Problems in Biochemistry (6th Edition)". Biochemical Society Transactions. 9 (4): 359.2–359. doi:10.1042/bst0090359a.