Background
He was born at 189 Duke Street in Glasgow on 4 August 1852 the son of Alexander Dobbie a local chemistry
He was born at 189 Duke Street in Glasgow on 4 August 1852 the son of Alexander Dobbie a local chemistry
He was educated at Glasgow High School and then Glasgow University graduating Master of Arts in 1875.
He isolated hydroxycodeine from opium and synthesized diphenylene. He carried out Ultraviolet-VIS spectra of gaseous main group elements and organic compounds. He continued as a postgraduate at University of Edinburgh under William Ramsay, receiving a Doctor of Science in 1879.
Dobbie was appointed first head of chemistry at Bangor University, then the University College of North Wales, in 1884 and built the department up in its early years.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1903. His proposers were Sir Francis Grant Ogilvie, Alexander Crum Brown, Ramsay Heatley Traquair and Andrew Gray.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1904. He was director of the Royal Scottish Museum from 1903 to 1909, and principal of the Government Laboratory, London from 1909 to 1920.
He was appointed President in the Royal Institute of Chemistry from 1915–1917 and was elected president of the Chemical Society in 1919.
He was knighted in 1915. He died in Fairlie, North Ayrshire on 19 June 1964. He is buried in Largs Cemetery.
Royal Society.