Moneycontrol
HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesAdam Smith’s University of Glasgow years were his life’s ‘most useful, happiest & honourable period’

Adam Smith’s University of Glasgow years were his life’s ‘most useful, happiest & honourable period’

In his tercentenary, the man remains a prominent presence on the University of Glasgow campus — his name on the University’s Memorial Gate, the Adam Smith Chair in Political Economy, the triple-accredited Adam Smith Business School, and stories of him as a student and teacher.

June 12, 2023 / 14:27 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
A letter from Adam Smith to his mother in which he requests her to “send some stockings”. They were very close and lived together for most of Smith’s life. (Photo courtesy: University of Glasgow, Glasgow)

Adam Smith (1723-1790) spent a large part of his life in the University of Glasgow — from being a young student, to returning as a highly respected lecturer, and was eventually appointed to the position of Rector. In a telephonic interview, Professor Graeme Roy, professor in Economics and dean of External Engagement in the College of Social Sciences at the University of Glasgow, talks of Smith’s continued legacy and the lores about Smith the student and the teacher.

The Gilbert Scott Building of the University of Glasgow where Adam Smith enrolled as a student & later returned to the university as a professor (Photograph courtesy: University of Glasgow, Glasgow)

Story continues below Advertisement

“At the University of Glasgow, the fourth oldest university in the United Kingdom, the first question every Adam Smith student has to answer is ‘What is wealth?’ Before Smith, wealth was synonymous with gold but after the Industrial Revolution, the definition of wealth changed and Smith completely redefined it.” Thus began the conversation with Professor Graeme Smith, Dean of External Engagement in the College of Social Sciences at the University of Glasgow.

Professor Roy goes back in time — 286 years — to the day in October of 1737, when Smith, then barely 14, joined the University as a student entering directly into second year due to his exceptional Latin skills. He studied logic, metaphysics, mathematics, Newtonian physics and moral philosophy — a fairly standard set of subjects at the time.