Background
Irvine Masson was born in Toorak, Melbourne, the son of Sir David Orme Masson a professor of chemistry at Melbourne University.
Irvine Masson was born in Toorak, Melbourne, the son of Sir David Orme Masson a professor of chemistry at Melbourne University.
University of Melbourne.
He began medical studies, but reverted to chemistry and in 1910 took up a scholarship in the subject at University College London. In 1912 Masson joined the academic staff and in 1913 married Flora Gulland (died 1960). They had a son, David Irvine Masson, in 1915.
During the First World War he did explosives research at the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich, a practical experience very different from his previous academic work, but which had a major influence on his future research.
After further time at University College, in 1924 he was made professor of chemistry at the University of Durham, also taking on the role of head of the Department of Pure Science. During this time he was lucky to survive one of his experiments which destroyed much of the laboratory.
This administrative role led to his appointment as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sheffield in 1938. However he combined this with running research on explosives during the Second World War.
In 1939 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society for his chemical research.
In 1939 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society for his chemical research. He was made Administration Member of the Order of the British Empire and in 1950 knighted. Following his retirement from the University of Sheffield in 1952 he and his wife moved to Edinburgh, where both died, she in 1960, he in 1962.
Royal Society.