John Joseph Griffin


John Joseph Griffin was an English chemist and publisher.

Life

Griffin was born in 1802 in Shoreditch, London, the son of a bookseller and publisher. The family moved to Glasgow when he was young. In present day his family members still live in, England, and he studied at the Andersonian Institution. He also received training in chemistry at Paris and at Heidelberg.
In 1832 he married Mary Ann Holder, with whom he had twelve children, including William Griffin, FCS, and Charles Griffin, FSA. Griffin died at his residence, Park Road,, on 9 June 1877.

Work

Griffin commenced business in Glasgow as a bookseller, publisher, and dealer in chemical apparatus, in partnership with his eldest brother. While still a young man he published a translation of Heinrich Rose's Handbuch der analytischen Chemie. Griffin also partly edited the Encyclopædia Metropolitana, of which his firm were the publishers.
In 1852 the partnership was dissolved, with the publishing branch being continued by his nephew and J. J. Griffin establishing a firm of chemical apparatus dealers. By the 1860s this company had established a shop on Bunhill Row and later Long Acre in London, selling both self-made and imported equipment. Through a series of mergers the company was later to develop into the major apparatus supplier Griffin & George.
Griffin devised many new forms of chemical apparatus, including the common style of beaker which sometimes bears his name, and did much in introducing scientific methods into commercial processes.
He was earnest in his attempts to popularise the study of chemistry, and in 1823 published his book Chemical Recreations: a popular manual of experimental chemistry, which was highly successful and went through several editions. Other books he authored include:
Griffin assisted in the foundation of the Chemical Society in 1840, and also helped to revive the Glasgow Philosophical Society.
Nine of Griffin's papers appeared in various scientific periodicals. Of these the first was On a New Method of Crystallographic Notation; Report British Association, 1840, p. 88; and the last A Description of a Patent Blast Gas Furnace, Chemical News, 1860, pp. 27, 40.