Education
Nottingham High School.
Nottingham High School.
Boot was a great benefactor to the City of Nottingham. He donated land for the new University College at Highfields, now the University of Nottingham, which opened in 1928 and was presented with the Freedom of the City of Nottingham in 1920. He was also a significant benefactor to his wife"s home, Jersey.
Boot was knighted in 1909, created a baronet in 1917, and announced in the New Year"s Honours of 1929 was elevated to the peerage, and created Baron Trent, of Nottingham in the County of Nottingham on 18 March 1929.
These latter honours probably owed as much to his solid support of the Liberal Party as to his philanthropy to the city of his birth. He died in Jersey in 1931.
The Sir Jesse Boot Chair in Chemistry at the University of Nottingham was named in his honour. His widow commissioned the French glass artist René Lalique to refit the church of Street Matthew, Millbrook (popularly known as the "Glass Church") as a memorial to him.
In 1934 a Primary school was built in Bakersfield in Sir Jesse Boot"s memory named "Jesse Boot Primary School".
Jesse Boot Primary School was closed in 2009 and was replaced under the name "Nottingham Academy" which connected to "Greenwood secondary school" and others The building was destroyed the following year. His portrait, by Noel Denholm Davis, is in the collection of the University of Nottingham.
Another, by the same artist, is on loan to the National Portrait Gallery.