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Hamish
Boyd Gilliland was born on 2nd October 1911 in Southern
Rhodesia, educated at George Watson's College, Edinburgh, and read
Botany and Zoology in the University of Edinburgh, for the degree of
B.Sc. In due course he read for an honours degree under Professor Sir
William Wright Smith, Regius Professor and Regius Keeper of the Royal
Botanic Garden. Later he studied at the British Museum of Natural
History, where he improved his knowledge of systematic botany and
generally prepared himself for a career in southern Africa.
Gilliland’s
own studies in North-east Africa provided information which he admirably
worked up after the war for a thesis for the degree of D.Sc., which was
awarded by the University of the Witwatersrand in 1947. Abstracts from
this thesis were published in the Journal of Ecology in 1952.
Gilliland
came to Singapore in September, 1955 as the second holder of the Chair
of Botany in the then University of Malaya. Within a couple of years of
his arrival Gilliland was faced with the necessity of establishing a new
and separately equipped and staffed department at the new Kuala Lumpur
Division of the University of Malaya. In 1960 the department in Kuala
Lumpur became separate under its own professor, and in the 1961/62
session, when the two divisions of the University of Malaya split, that
in Kuala Lumpur retaining the University name, while that in Singapore,
where Gilliland remained, became the University of Singapore, and
eventually, years later, the National University of Singapore.
During his years as head of the department, he established the herbarium, as a
teaching collection. His interests were both taxonomic and ecological,
and conducted succession studies on secondary vegetation, building on
the observations of earlier workers. His special botanical interest was
in grasses, an interest that followed him from his earlier days in South
Africa. Modern readers are fully aware of his ‘Grasses of Malaya’
which was published as Volume 3 of the Flora of Malaya. His keen
interest in conservation led him to serve as trustee on the Singapore
Nature Reserves Board for more then five years, during the period 1955
to 1961.
After
some five years in Singapore Gilliland began to suffer from an asthmatic
condition. In 1964 he was taken seriously ill with a respiratory illness
(possibly asthma or pneumonia) and had to spend some time in hospital.
To regain full health he would have to move to a drier climate and he
left Singapore on 3rd February, 1965 for South Africa and
took up an appointment at the Botany Department of the University of
Natal at Pietermaritzburg. Soon after his arrival in Pietermaritzburg,
he made an 800 mile car journey to Johannesburg and back to attend his
son's graduation at Witwatersrand University. The effort of this, the
sudden change to a high elevation climate, and lack of his physical
reserves of strength brought on a relapse of his illness. Shortly after
he had an attack of pneumonia which brought his life to an end on 23rd
June, 1965 at the age of 54 years.
Glliland was more than just a researcher. He had sought to bring out the
educational aspects of conservation so that the common citizen with no
special training in biology, as well as biology students, might learn to
understand and appreciate natural Biology. Although by nature reserved,
Gilliland showed to those he worked a kindliness, a warmth and a
generosity of spirit.
SOURCE:
J. Purseglove & H. M. Burkhill, 1967. H. B. Gilliland, 1911-1965. An Appreciation. Gardens
Bulletin, Singapore:
107-111.
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