Robert Whytlaw-Gray (also Robert Whytlaw Whytlaw-Gray) was born in
Hampstead on 14 June 1877, son of Robert James Gray and Mary Gilkieson Gemmell Whytlaw. His early education was at
St Paul’s School, where little science was taught. When he was about 12, Whytlaw-Gray set up a laboratory at home and taught himself chemistry. At eighteen he went to the
University of Glasgow to study engineering and it was there that he heard a lecture by
William Ramsay which so inspired him that he determined to go to
University College London (UCL), to study under him. This he did, from 1896, so successfully that he won the Tufnell Scholarship in chemistry in 1898. The prize is awarded to “the best graduate, under the age of 24, progressing to the Research School” which presumably means Whytlaw-Gray gained a first degree, although there is no formal record of this. In 1903 he joined
Anschütz’s lab at the
University of Bonn, where he worked on the atomic weight of nitrogen and where he was awarded a
PhD in 1906. ==Academic career==