Carson and Pillans Class Club (Edinburgh)
Biography
The Carson and Pillans Class Club of the Royal High School, Edinburgh, had been instituted in 1832. The members or fellows of the Club were those High School students spending their 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 6th years in the classes of Dr. Aglionby Ross Carson between 1815 and 1821, and the 5th year with Dr. James Pillans, between 1819-1820.
Born in Holywood, Dumfriesshire, in 1780, and educated at Wallace Hall and then Edinburgh University, Carson had been elected Rector of Dumfries Grammar School in 1801. In 1806 he became Classics master at the Royal High School in Edinburgh, and then Rector in 1820 until 1845. Carson died in Edinburgh on 4 November 1850.
Born in Edinburgh in April 1778, and educated at the Royal High School then Edinburgh University, Pillans became Rector of the Royal High School in 1810 then proceeded to develop the teaching of Greek, classical geography, and Latin verse composition. In 1820, Pillans was elected to the Chair of Humanity and Laws (or Latin, or Roman literature) at Edinburgh University. He was also President of the Watt Institution and School of Art (later to become the Heriot Watt College and then Heriot Watt University). He resigned his Chair in 1863 and died at his home in Inverleith Row on 27 March 1864.
The Carson and Pillans Class Club would remain in existence for over fifty years, and then on 10 March 1884 it was noted in the proceedings of the Club that a box containing records of the meetings from 1832 until 1883, as well as photograph albums and a Bible, were to be deposited at Edinburgh University Library. The deaths of the fellows, or their great ages, marked the end of the meetings of the Carson and Pillans Class Club.
(compiled using material in the collection, and: (1) Lee, Sidney (ed.).Dictionary of national biography. Vol.15. Owens-Pockrich. London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1909. (2) Stephen, Leslie. and Lee, Sidney (eds.).Dictionary of national Biography. Vol.3. Brown-Chaloner. London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1908.
