British Science Association
The British Science Association is a charity and learned society founded in 1831 to aid in the promotion and development of science. Until 2009 it was known as the British Association for the Advancement of Science. The Chief Executive is Katherine Mathieson. The British Science Association's mission is to get more people engaged in the field of science by coordinating, delivering, and overseeing different projects that are suited to achieve these goals. The British Science Association envisions a society in which a diverse group of people can learn and apply the sciences in which they learn. The British Science Association is managed by a professional staff located at their Head Office at the Wellcome Wolfson Building. The British Science Association offers a wide variety of activities and events that both recognize and encourage people to be involved in science. These include the British Science Festival, British Science Week, the CREST Awards, Huxley Summit, Media Fellowships Scheme, along with regional and local events.
History
Foundation
The Association was founded in 1831 and modeled on the German Gesellschaft Deutscher Naturforscher und Ärzte. It was founded during post-war reconstruction after the Peninsula war to improve the advancement of science in England. The prime mover was Reverend William Vernon Harcourt, following a suggestion by Sir David Brewster, who was disillusioned with the elitist and conservative attitude of the Royal Society. Charles Babbage, William Whewell and J. F. W. Johnston are also considered to be founding members. The first meeting was held in York on Tuesday 27 September 1831 with various scientific papers being presented on the following days. It was chaired by Viscount Milton, President of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society, and "upwards of 300 gentlemen" attended the meeting. The Preston Mercury recorded that those gathered consisted of "persons of distinction from various parts of the kingdom, together with several of the gentry of Yorkshire and the members of philosopher societies in this country". The newspaper published the names of over a hundred of those attending and these included, amongst others, eighteen clergymen, eleven doctors, four knights, two Viscounts and one Lord.From that date onwards a meeting was held annually at a place chosen at a previous meeting. In 1832, for example, the meeting was held in Oxford, chaired by Reverend Dr William Buckland. By this stage the Association had four sections: Physics, Chemistry, Geology and Natural History.
During this second meeting, the first objects and rules of the Association were published. Objects included systematically directing the acquisition of scientific knowledge, spreading this knowledge as well as discussion between scientists across the world, and to focus on furthering science by removing obstacles to progress. The rules established included what constituted a member of the Association, the fee to remain a member, and the process for future meetings. They also include dividing the members into different committees. These committees separated members into their preferred subject matter, and were to recommend investigations into areas of interest, then report on these findings, as well as progress in their science at the annual meetings.
Additional sections were added throughout the years by either splitting off part of an original section, like making Geography and Ethnology its own section apart from Geology in 1851, or by defining a new subject area of discussion, such as Anthropology in 1869.
A very important decision in the Association's history was made in 1842 when it was resolved to create a "physical observatory". A building that became well known as the Kew Observatory was taken on for the purpose and Francis Ronalds was chosen as the inaugural Honorary Director. Kew Observatory quickly became one of the most renowned meteorological and geomagnetic observatories in the world. The Association relinquished control of the Kew Observatory in 1871 to the management of the Royal Society, after a large donation to grant the observatory its independence.
In 1872, the Association purchased its first central office in London, acquiring four rooms at 22 Albemarle Street. This office was intended to be a resource for members of the Association.
One of the most famous events linked to the Association Meeting was an exchange between Thomas Henry Huxley and Bishop Samuel Wilberforce in 1860. Although it is often described as a "debate", the exchange occurred after the presentation of a paper by Prof Draper of New York, on the intellectual development of Europe with relation to Darwin's theory and the subsequent discussion involved a number of other participants. Although a number of newspapers made passing references to the exchange, it was not until later that it was accorded greater significance in the evolution debate.
Electrical standards
One of the most important contributions of the British Association was the establishment of standards for electrical usage: the ohm as the unit of electrical resistance, the volt as the unit of electrical potential, and the ampere as the unit of electrical current. A need for standards arose with the submarine telegraph industry. Practitioners came to use their own standards established by wire coils: "By the late 1850s, Clark, Varley, Bright, Smith and other leading British cable engineers were using calibrated resistance coils on a regular basis and were beginning to use calibrated condensers as well."The undertaking was suggested to the BA by William Thomson, and its success was due to the use of Thomson's mirror galvanometer. Josiah Latimer Clark and Fleeming Jenkin made preparations. Thomson, with his students, found that impure copper, contaminated with arsenic, introduced significant extra resistance. The chemist Augustus Matthiessen contributed an appendix to the final 1873 report that showed temperature-dependence of alloys.
The unit system was "absolute" since it agreed with previously accepted units of work, or energy:
Other
The Association introduced the British Association screw threads, a series of screw thread standards in sizes from 0.25 mm up to 6 mm, in 1882. The standards were based on the metric system, although they had to be re-defined in imperial terms for use by UK industry. The standard was modified in 1884 to restrict significant figures for the metric counterpart of diameter and pitch of the screw in the published table, as well as not designating screws by their number of threads per inch, and instead giving an approximation due to considerable actual differences in manufactured screws.In 1878 a committee of the Association recommended against constructing Charles Babbage's analytical engine, due to concerns about the current state of the machine's lack of complete working drawings, the machine's potential cost to produce, the machine's durability during repeated use, how and what the machine will actually be utilized for, and that more work would need to be done to bring the design up to a standard at which it is guaranteed to work.
The Association was parodied by English novelist Charles Dickens as 'The Mudfog Society for the Advancement of Everything' in The Mudfog Papers.
In 1903, microscopist and astronomer Washington Teasdale died whilst attending the annual meeting.
Perception of Science in the UK
The Association's main aim is to improve the perception of science and scientists in the UK. Membership is open to all.At the beginning of the Great Depression, the Association's focus began to shift their purpose to account for not only scientific progress, but the social aspects of such progress. In the Association's 1931 meeting, the president General Jan Christiaan Smuts ended his address by the proposal of linking science and ethics together but provided no means to actuate his ideas. In the following years, debate began as to whom the responsibilities of scientists fell upon. The Association adopted a resolution in 1934 that dedicated efforts to better balance scientific advancement with social progress.
J.D. Bernal, a member of the Royal Society and the British Association, wrote The Social Function of Science in 1939, describing a need to correctly utilize science for society and the importance of its public perception. The idea of the public perception of science was furthered in 1985 when the Royal Society published a report titled The Public Understanding of Science.
In the report, a committee of the Royal Society determined that it was scientists' duty to communicate to and educate the public. Lord George Porter, then president of the Royal Society, British Association, and Director of the Royal Institution, created the Committee on the Public Understanding of Science, or COPUS, to promote public understanding of science.
Professor Sir George Porter became the president in September 1985. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1967 along with Manfred Eigen, and Ronald George Wreyford Norrish. When asked about the scientific literacy of Britain, he stated that Britain was the least educated country compared to all the other advanced countries. His idea to solve this problem would be to start scientific education for kids at the age of 4. He says his reason for such an early age is because that is the age when kids are the most curious, and implementing science during that age will help them gain curiosity towards all disciplines of science. When asked why public ignorance to science matters, his response was
It matters because among those who are scientifically illiterate are some of those who are in power, people who lead us in politics, in civil service, in the media, in the church, often in industry and sometimes even in education. Think, for example, about the enormous influence of scientific knowledge on one's whole philosophy of life, even one's religion. It is no more permissible for the archbishops of today, who advise their flocks on how to interpret the Scriptures, to ignore the findings of Watson and Crick, than it was right for clerics of the last century to ignore the work of Darwin. Science today is all-pervasive. Without some scientific and technical education, it is becoming impossible even to vote responsibly on matters of health, energy, defense or education. So unless things change, we shall soon live in a country that is backward not only in its technology and standard of living but in its cultural vitality too. It is wrong to suppose that by foregoing technological and scientific education we shall somehow become a nation of artists, writers or philosophers instead. These two aspects of culture have never been divorced from each other throughout our history. Every renaissance, every period that showed a flowering of civilization, advanced simultaneously in the arts and sciences, and in technology too.
Sir Kenneth Durham, former Director of Research at Unilever, on becoming President in August 1987 followed on from Sir George Porter saying that science teachers needed extra pay to overcome the scarcity of mathematics and physics teachers in secondary schools, and that "unless we deal with this as matter of urgency, the outlook for our manufacturing future is bleak". He regretted that headmasters and careers masters had for many years followed 'the cult of Oxbridge' because "it carried more prestige to read Classics at Oxbridge and go into the Civil Service or banking, than to read engineering at, say, Salford, and go into manufacturing industry". He said that reporting of sciences gave good coverage to medical science, but that "nevertheless, editors ought to be sensitive to developments in areas such as solid state physics, astro-physics, colloid science, molecular biology, transmission of stimuli along nerve fibres, and so on, and that newspaper editors were in danger of waiting for disasters before the scientific factors involved in the incidents were explained.
In September 2001 Sir William Stewart, as outgoing president, warned that universities faced "dumbing down" and that
we can deliver social inclusiveness, and the best universities, but not both from a limited amount of money. We run the risk of doing neither well. Universities are underfunded, and must not be seen simply as a substitute for National Service to keep youngsters off the dole queue... scientists have to be careful and consider the full implications of what they are seeking to achieve. The problem with some clever people is that they find cleverer ways of being stupid.
In the year 2000, Sir Peter Williams had put together a panel to discuss the shortage of physics majors. A physicist called Derek Raine had stated that he has had multiple firms call him up asking for physics majors. The report they made stated that it is critical that they increase the number of physics teachers, or it will have a detrimental effect on the number of future engineers and scientists.
British Science Festival
The Association's major emphasis in recent decades has been on public engagement in science. Its annual meeting, now called the , is the largest public showcase for science in the UK and attracts a great deal of media attention. It is held at UK universities in early September for one week, with visits to science-related local cultural attractions.The 2010 Festival, held in Birmingham with Aston University as lead University partner, featured a prank event: the unveiling of Dulcis foetidus, a fictional plant purported to emit a pungent odour. An experiment in herd mentality, some audience members were induced into believing they could smell it.
The Festival has also been the home to protest and debate. In 1970 there were protestors over the use of science for weapons.
Science Communication Conference
The Association organised and held the annual for over ten years. It was the largest conference of its kind in the UK, and addressed the key issues facing science communicators. In 2015, the BSA introduced a new series of smaller events for science communicators, designed to address the same issues as the Science Communication Conference but for a more targeted audience.British Science Week
In addition to the British Science Festival, the British Science Association organises the British Science Week, an opportunity for people of all ages to get involved in science, engineering, technology and maths activities, originating as the National Week of Science, Engineering and Technology.The Association also has a young people's programme, the CREST Awards which seeks to involve school students in science beyond the school curriculum, and to encourage them to consider higher education and careers in science.
Huxley Summit
Named after Thomas Huxley, the Huxley Summit is a leadership event run by the British Science Association, where 250 of the most influential people in the UK are brought together to discuss scientific and social challenges that the UK faces in the 21st century and to develop a link between scientists and non-scientists to ensure that science can be understood by society as a whole. On the 8th of November 2016, the British Science Association held the very first Huxley Summit at BAFTA, London. The theme of the summit was "Trust in the 21st Century" and how that would affect the future of science, innovation, and business.
Media Fellowship Schemes
The British Science Association's Media Fellowship provides the opportunity for practicing scientists, clinicians, and engineers to spend a period of time working at media outlets such as the Guardian, BBC Breakfast or The Londonist. After their time with the media placement, the fellows attend the British Science Festival which will offer these practitioners valuable working experience with a range of media organizations along with learning from a wide range of public engagement activities and be able to network with academics, journalists and science communicators.
CREST Awards
CREST Awards is the British Science Association's scheme to encourage students aged 5–19 to get involved with STEM projects and encourage scientific thinking. Awards range from Star Awards to Gold Awards. Overall, 30,000 awards are undertaken annually. Many students who do CREST Awards, especially Silver and Gold Awards which require 30 and 70 hours of work respectively, enter competitions like the UK Big Bang Fair.Patrons and Presidents of the British Science Association
Traditionally the president is elected at the meeting usually held in August/September for a one-year term and gives a presidential address upon retiring. The honour of the presidency is traditionally bestowed only once per individual. Written sources that give the year of presidency as a single year generally mean the year in which the presidential address is given. In 1926/1927 the association's patron was King George V and the president was his son Edward, Prince of Wales. The vice-presidents for the Leeds meeting at this time included City of Leeds Alderman Charles Lupton and his brother, The Rt. Hon. the Lord Mayor of Leeds Hugh Lupton. The husband of the brothers' first cousin once removed - Lord Airedale of Gledhow - was also a vice-president at the Leeds meeting.- 2011 Professor Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell FRS, FRSE
- 2012 John Krebs, Baron Krebs FRS
- 2013 Lisa Jardine CBE, historian
- 2014 Sir Paul Nurse FRS, President from 2010–15 of the Royal Society, and joint winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- 2015 Dame Athene Donald FRS, physicist and Master since 2014 of Churchill College, Cambridge
- 2016 Dame Nancy Rothwell DBE DL FRS FMedSci FBPhS, physiologist and President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Manchester
- 2017 Dame Uta Frith FRS, developmental psychologist
- 2018 Professor Jim Al-Khalili FRS, physicist and broadcaster
- 2019 Professor Alice Roberts anatomist and broadcaster
- 2010–11: David Sainsbury, Lord Sainsbury of Turville
- 2009–10: Robert May, Baron May of Oxford
- 2007–08: Sir David King, Government Chief Scientific Adviser from 2000–08
- 2006–07: John Browne, Lord Browne of Madingley
- 2005–06: Frances Cairncross CBE, economist
- 2004–05: Prof Robert Winston, Lord Winston of Hammersmith
- 2003–04: Dame Julia Higgins
- 2002–03: Sir Peter Williams CBE, physicist
- 2001–02: Sir Howard Newby, sociologist
- 2000–01: Sir William Stewart, Government Chief Scientific Adviser from 1990–95
- 1999–2000: Anne, Princess Royal
- 1998–99: Sir Richard Sykes, biochemist and chief executive from 1993–7 of Glaxo
- 1997–98 Prof Colin Blakemore, neuroscientist
- 1996–97: Sir Derek Roberts CBE, electronics engineer, and Provost of UCL from 1989–99
- 1995–96: Ronald Oxburgh, Baron Oxburgh, geologist and Rector of Imperial College London from 1993–2000
- 1994–95: Sir Martin Rees, Baron Rees of Ludlow FRS, astrophysicist
- 1993–94: Dame Anne McLaren, IVF biologist
- 1992–93: Sir David Weatherall, haemotologist
- 1991–92 Sir David Attenborough
- 1990–91: Sir Denis Rooke
- 1989–90: Claus Moser, Baron Moser, Director from 1967–78 of the Central Statistical Office
- 1988–89: Sir Samuel Edwards, physicist
- 1987–88: Sir Walter Bodmer, geneticist
- 1986–87 Sir Kenneth Durham, Chairman from 1982–6 of Unilever
- 1985–86: Prof George Porter, Baron Porter of Luddenham, Nobel Prize winning chemist
- 1984–85: Prof Sir Hans Kornberg, biochemist
- 1983–84: Sir Alastair Pilkington, inventor
- 1982–83: Sir Basil John Mason CB, Director-General from 1965–83 of the Met Office
- 1981–82: Prof Sir Charles Frederick Carter, economist
- 1980–81: HRH the Duke of Kent
- 1979–80: Frederick Dainton, Baron Dainton
- 1978–79: Frank Kearton, Baron Kearton OBE,
- 1977–78: Prof Dorothy Hodgkin, Nobel Prize winning chemist
- 1976–77: Sir Andrew Huxley, Nobel Prize winning physiologist, known for discovering nerve action potentials
- 1975–76: John Baker, Baron Baker OBE, structural engineer known for limit state design
- 1974–75: Sir Bernard Lovell, astronomer
- 1973–74: Sir John Kendrew CBE, Nobel Prize winning biochemist who discovered the structure of myoglobin
- 1972–73: Sir Kingsley Charles Dunham, geologist and mineralogist
- 1971–72: Sir Vivian Fuchs FRS, explorer
- 1970–71: Sir Alexander Cairncross, economist
- 1969–70: Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd, Nobel Prize winning biochemist known for nucleotides and coenzymes
- 1968–69: Sir Peter Medawar, zoologist and immunologist
- 1967–68: Dame Kathleen Lonsdale, physicist who discovered the cyclic nature of benzene in 1929
- 1966–67: Willis Jackson, Baron Jackson of Burnley, technologist and electrical engineer
- 1965–66: Sir Joseph Hutchinson, biologist
- 1964–65: Sir Cyril Norman Hinshelwood, Nobel Prize winning chemist
- 1963–64: Russell Brain, 1st Baron Brain, neurologist
- 1962–63: Eric Ashby, Baron Ashby, Vice-Chancellor from 1950–59 of Queen's University Belfast
- 1961–62: Sir John Cockcroft CBE, Nobel Prize winning physicist
- 1960–61: Sir Wilfrid Le Gros Clark, primatologist and palaeoanthropologist
- 1959–60: Sir George Paget Thomson, physicist
- 1958–59: Sir James Gray, zoologist
- 1957–58: Alexander Fleck, 1st Baron Fleck, industrial chemist
- 1956–57: Patrick Blackett, Baron Blackett, physicist
- 1955–56: Sir Raymond Priestley, geologist and Vice-Chancellor from 1938–52 of the University of Birmingham
- 1954–55: Sir Robert Robinson, chemist
- 1953–54: Edgar Adrian, 1st Baron Adrian, neuroscientist
- 1952–53: Sir Edward Victor Appleton, Nobel Prize winning physicist
- 1951–52: Archibald Vivian Hill, physiologist
- 1950–51: Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
- 1949–50: Sir Harold Hartley, physical chemist
- 1948–49: Sir E. John Russell, agriculturalist
- 1947–48: Sir Henry Tizard, chemist and inventor
- 1946–1947: Sir Henry Dale, physiologist
- 1939–1946: Sir Albert Charles Seward, geologist
- 1938: Robert Strutt, 4th Baron Rayleigh, physicist and son of Nobel Prize–winning John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh
- 1937: Sir Edward Bagnall Poulton, evolutionary biologist
- 1936: Josiah Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp, statistician
- 1935: William Whitehead Watts, geologist
- 1934: Sir James Hopwood Jeans, astronomer
- 1933: Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, Nobel Prize winning biochemist who discovered vitamins
- 1932: Sir James Alfred Ewing, physicist and Vice-Chancellor from 1916–29 of the University of Edinburgh
- 1931: General Jan Christiaan Smuts FRS
- 1930: Frederick Orpen Bower, botanist
- 1929: Sir Thomas Henry Holland, geologist
- 1928: Sir William Henry Bragg, physicist
- 1927: Prof Sir Arthur Keith, anatomist and anthropologist
- 1926: Edward, Prince of Wales
- 1925: Sir Horace Lamb, physicist
- 1924: Major-General Sir David Bruce, microbiologist
- 1923: Professor Sir Ernest Rutherford, physicist
- 1922: Professor Sir Charles Scott Sherrington, neuroscientist
- 1921: Sir T. Edward Thorpe, chemist
- 1920: William Abbott Herdman, oceanographer
- 1916–1919: Sir Charles Algernon Parsons, engineer
- 1916: Sir Arthur Evans, archaeologist
- 1915: Sir Arthur Schuster, physicist
- 1914: William Bateson, geneticist
- 1913: Sir Oliver Lodge, physicist
- 1912: Edward Albert Schäfer, physiologist
- 1911: Sir William Ramsay, chemist
- 1910: Rev. Professor Thomas George Bonney, geologist
- 1909: Sir J. J. Thomson, physicist
- 1908: Sir Francis Darwin, son of Charles
- 1907: Sir David Gill CB, astronomer
- 1906: Sir Ray Lankester, zoologist
- 1905: Sir George Darwin, older brother of Francis
- 1904: Arthur James Balfour MP, FRS
- 1903: Sir Norman Lockyer FRS, astronomer and physicist
- 1902: Sir James Dewar FRS, chemist and physicist
- 1901: Arthur William Rücker FRS, physicist
- 1900: Sir William Turner, anatomist and Vice-Chancellor from 1903–16 of the University of Edinburgh
- 1899: Sir Michael Foster, physiologist
- 1898: Sir William Crookes FRS, chemist and physicist
- 1897: John Evans, archaeologist
- 1896: Joseph Lister, 1st Baron Lister
- 1895: Captain Sir Douglas Strutt Galton FRS, civil engineer
- 1894: Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury FRS
- 1893: Sir John Scott Burdon-Sanderson, medical doctor
- 1892: Sir Archibald Geikie, geologist
- 1891: Sir Frederick August Abel FRS
- 1890: Sir William Huggins FRS, FRAS, FBAS, astronomer
- 1889: Sir William Henry Flower CB, anatomist
- 1888: Sir Frederick Bramwell, civil engineer
- 1887: Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe, chemist
- 1886: Sir John William Dawson CMG, geologist
- 1885: Lyon Playfair, 1st Baron Playfair MP, FRS, FRSE
- 1884: John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh FRS, FRAS, FGS, physicist
- 1883: Arthur Cayley, mathematician
- 1882: C. W. Siemens FRS, FRSA, engineer
- 1881: John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury MP, FRS
- 1880: Sir Andrew Crombie Ramsay FRS, geologist
- 1879: George James Allman FRS, naturalist
- 1878: William Spottiswoode FRS, mathematician
- 1877: Allen Thomson MD, FRS, FRSE
- 1876: Thomas Andrews MD, FRS, chemist
- 1875: Sir John Hawkshaw FRS, civil engineer
- 1874: John Tyndall FRS, physicist
- 1873: Alexander William Williamson FRS, chemist
- 1872: William Benjamin Carpenter MD, FRS
- 1871: Sir William Thomson FRS, FRSE, physicist
- 1870: Thomas Henry Huxley FRS, biologist
- 1869: Sir George Stokes, 1st Baronet FRS, mathematical physicist
- 1868: Joseph Dalton Hooker MD, FRS, botanist
- 1867: Walter Montagu Douglas Scott, 5th Duke of Buccleuch FRS
- 1866: William Robert Grove FRS
- 1865: John Phillips FRS, geologist
- 1864: Sir Charles Lyell, geologist
- 1863: William Armstrong, engineer and inventor
- 1862: Rev. Robert Willis FRS, civil engineer
- 1861: Sir William Fairbairn, civil engineer
- 1860: John Wrottesley, 2nd Baron Wrottesley FRAS, astronomer
- 1859: Albert, Prince Consort
- 1858: Sir Richard Owen MD, FLS, FGS, naturalist
- 1857: Rev. Humphrey Lloyd FRS, FRSE, physicist
- 1856: Charles D. B. Daubeny MD, FRS, botanist
- 1855: George Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll FRS, FRSE, FGS
- 1854: Dudley Ryder, 2nd Earl of Harrowby FRS
- 1853: William Hopkins FGS, mathematician and geologist
- 1852: Colonel Edward Sabine, Vice-president of the Royal Society
- 1851: Sir George Biddell Airy, Astronomer Royal
- 1850: Sir David Brewster, physicist
- 1849: Rev. Thomas Romney Robinson, astronomer
- 1848: Spencer Compton, 2nd Marquess of Northampton, geologist
- 1847: Sir Robert Harry Inglis
- 1846: Sir Roderick Impey Murchison, geologist
- 1845: Sir John F. W. Herschel, astronomer & polymath
- 1844: Rev. George Peacock, mathematician
- 1843: William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, astronomer
- 1842: Lord Francis Egerton
- 1841: Rev. William Whewell, polymath and philosopher of science
- 1840: John Campbell, 2nd Marquess of Breadalbane, F.R.S.
- 1839: Canon William Vernon Harcourt, FRS
- 1838: Algernon Percy, 4th Duke of Northumberland, Naval officer
- 1837: William Cavendish, 2nd Earl of Burlington, Chancellor of the University of London
- 1836: Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne, statistician
- 1835: Rev. Humphrey Lloyd, physicist
- 1834: Sir Thomas Makdougall Brisbane, astronomer
- 1833: Rev. Adam Sedgwick, geologist
- 1832: Rev. William Buckland, palaeontologist
- 1831: Charles Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, 5th Earl Fitzwilliam, statistician.
List of annual meetings
- 1831 York, England.
- 1832 Oxford, England.
- 1833 Cambridge, England.
- 1834 Edinburgh, Scotland.
- 1835 Dublin, Ireland.
- 1836 Bristol, England.
- 1837 Liverpool, England.
- 1838 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
- 1839 Birmingham, England.
- 1840 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 1841 Plymouth, England.
- 1842 Manchester.
- 1843 Cork, Ireland.
- 1844 York, England.
- 1845 Cambridge, England.
- 1846 Southampton, England.
- 1847 Oxford, England.
- 1848 Swansea, Wales.
- 1849 Birmingham, England.
- 1850 Edinburgh, Scotland.
- 1851 Ipswich, England.
- 1852 Belfast, Northern Ireland.
- 1853 Hull, England.
- 1854 Liverpool, England.
- 1855 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 1856 Cheltenham, England.
- 1857 Dublin, Ireland.
- 1858 Leeds, England.
- 1859 Aberdeen, Scotland.
- 1860 Oxford, England.
- 1861 Manchester, England.
- 1862 Cambridge, England.
- 1863 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
- 1864 Bath, England.
- 1865 Birmingham, England.
- 1866 Nottingham, England.
- 1867 Dundee, Scotland.
- 1868 Norwich, England.
- 1869 Exeter, England.
- 1870 Liverpool, England.
- 1871 Edinburgh, Scotland.
- 1872 Brighton, England.
- 1873 Bradford, England.
- 1874 Belfast, Northern Ireland.
- 1875 Bristol, England.
- 1876 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 1877 Plymouth, England.
- 1878 Dublin, Ireland.
- 1879 Sheffield, England.
- 1880 Swansea, Wales.
- 1881 York, England.
- 1882 Southampton, England.
- 1883 Southport, England.
- 1884 Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
- 1885 Aberdeen, Scotland.
- 1886 Birmingham, England.
- 1887 Manchester, England.
- 1888 Bath, England.
- 1889 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
- 1890 Leeds, England.
- 1891 Cardiff, Wales.
- 1892 Edinburgh, Scotland.
- 1893 Nottingham, England.
- 1894 Oxford, England.
- 1895 Ipswich, England.
- 1896 Liverpool, England.
- 1897 Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
- 1898 Bristol, England.
- 1899 Dover, England.
- 1900 Bradford, England.
- 1901 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 1902 Belfast, Northern Ireland.
- 1903 Southport, England.
- 1904 Cambridge, England.
- 1905 Various, South Africa.
- 1906 York, England.
- 1907 Leicester, England.
- 1908 Dublin, Ireland.
- 1909 Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
- 1910 Sheffield, England.
- 1911 Portsmouth, England.
- 1912 Dundee, Scotland.
- 1913 Birmingham, England.
- 1914 Various, Australia.
- 1915 Manchester, England.
- 1916 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
- 1917 No meeting
- 1918 No meeting
- 1919 Bournemouth, England.
- 1920 Cardiff, Wales.
- 1921 Edinburgh, Scotland.
- 1922 Hull, England.
- 1923 Liverpool, England.
- 1924 Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
- 1925 Southampton, England.
- 1926 Oxford, England.
- 1927 Leeds, England.
- 1928 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 1929 Various, South Africa.
- 1930 Bristol, England.
- 1931 London, England.
- 1932 York, England.
- 1933 Leicester, England.
- 1934 Aberdeen, Scotland.
- 1935 Norwich, England.
- 1936 Blackpool, England.
- 1937 Nottingham, England.
- 1938 Cambridge, England.
- 1939 Dundee, Scotland.
- 1940 No meeting
- 1941 No meeting
- 1942 No meeting
- 1943 No meeting
- 1944 No meeting
- 1945 No meeting
- 1946 No full meeting
- 1947 Dundee, Scotland.
- 1948 Brighton, England.
- 1949 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
- 1950 Birmingham, England.
- 1951 Edinburgh, Scotland.
- 1952 Belfast, Northern Ireland.
- 1953 Liverpool, England.
- 1954 Oxford, England.
- 1955 Bristol, England.
- 1956 Sheffield, England.
- 1957 Dublin, Ireland.
- 1958 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 1959 York, England.
- 1960 Cardiff, England.
- 1961 Norwich, England.
- 1962 Manchester, England.
- 1963 Aberdeen, Scotland.
- 1964 Southampton, England.
- 1965 Cambridge, England.
- 1966 Nottingham, England.
- 1967 Leeds, England.
- 1968 Dundee, Scotland.
- 1969 Exeter, England.
- 1970 Durham, England.
- 1971 Swansea, Wales.
- 1972 Leicester, England.
- 1973 Canterbury, England.
- 1974 Stirling, Scotland.
- 1975 Guildford, England.
- 1976 Lancaster, England.
- 1977 Birmingham, England.
- 1978 Bath, England.
- 1979 Edinburgh, Scotland.
- 1980 Salford, England.
- 1981 York, England.
- 1982 Liverpool, England.
- 1983 Brighton, England.
- 1984 Norwich, England.
- 1985 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 1986 Bristol, England.
- 1987 Belfast, Northern Ireland.
- 1988 Oxford, England.
- 1989 Sheffield, England.
- 1990 Swansea, Wales.
- 1991 Plymouth, England.
- 1992 Southampton, England.
- 1993 Keele, England.
- 1994 Loughborough, England.
- 1995 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
- 1996 Birmingham, England.
- 1997 Leeds, England.
- 1998 Cardiff, Wales.
- 1999 Sheffield, England.
- 2000 London, England.
- 2001 Glasgow, Scotland.
- 2002 Leicester, England.
- 2003 Salford, England.
- 2004 Exeter, England.
- 2005 Dublin, Ireland.
- 2006 Norwich, England.
- 2007 York, England.
- 2008 Liverpool, England.
- 2009 Guildford, England.
- 2010 Birmingham, England.
- 2011 Bradford, England.
- 2012 Aberdeen, Scotland.
- 2013 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
- 2014 Birmingham, England.
- 2015 Bradford, England
- 2016 Swansea, Wales
- 2017 Brighton, England
- 2018 Hull, England
- 2019 Coventry, England
Structure