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| Prof. S.P. Thompson Optical Examiner who wrote on light and electricity. |
The need for formal teaching in optics was highlighted when the first professional examinations for ophthalmic opticians were introduced by the British Optical Association in 1895. With a few honourable exceptions the medical professions refused to get involved and it was left to opticians to organise their own classes.
Classes were provided by individual tutors who included:
- Lionel Laurance - from premises in Oxford Street and later Bloomsbury Square, both London. He also held classes in Manchester.
- J.H. Sutcliffe - from his practice in Blackpool, Lancashire and later from the BOA's first London HQ in Shaftesbury Avenue
- John Baird
- W. Banks - at the 'Northern School of Optics' in Bolton, Lancashire
J.S. Wallbridge's recollections of his late tutor, Lionel Laurance, who died in 1936:
One old gentleman (a pupil of over 60 years - yes, old gentlemen were students in those days, and in earnest too!) was very nervous and asked if he could spend a day with me to explain some points as Mr. Laurance expected you to know all he said instantly. I know that well as he marked some of my home work 'idiotic'.
Other quotes attributed to Laurance:
Go and get a schoolmaster to give you some lessons in algebra.
I like the raw student, not the man who has tested sight in his own way for a long time.
Thank goodness no ladies are present, or you would suffer with your learning as I should always have to mind my P's and Q's when speaking
Laurance was prescient when he predicted the growth of the profession in the new twentieth century:
Now you fellows, get busy when you have your certificate as in 25 years the calling will be overcrowded.