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Professor David Robinson BSc(Hort), MS, PhD, VMM, FI(Hort).1928 - 2004
Education and early experienceDavid Robinson worked in horticulture all his life.
He obtained his Bachelors degree in horticulture from
He gained practical early experience on a fruit farm near Pershore and a vegetable farm at Musselburgh, East Lothian. He worked as Horticultural Adviser in South Co. Down, Northern Ireland for the Ministry of Agriculture (1950 - 53). However, the late 1940s and early 1950s was a time of great food shortage in Europe and Governments were pouring money into horticultural research. New Research Stations were being set up in a number of countries and so in 1953 he was appointed Deputy Director at the newly formed Horticulture Research Centre in Loughgall Co Armagh. His first major job was to help clean up the weed problem in fruit crops. His research into the many chemical tools that were becoming available at the time established him as an expert in this field. However, he had at the time no training in research methods or statistical analysis and felt that he was in a job for which he was inadequately trained. This was soon to change. As David later wrote, "I knew early in 1954 that the well endowed W.K. Kellogg Foundation was giving grants to people in Britain to provide further training in the USA for agricultural graduates. I happened to be in London in March 1954 and by pure chance I passed by the headquarters of the Foundation. I still don’t know what gave me the courage but I walked in, asked to see the Director (without an appointment) and told him I wanted a Kellogg Foundation Grant to study at Cornell University in New York State for a year. At the time I worked for the Ministry of Agriculture in Northern Ireland, a most bureaucratic organisation, and when I returned all hell was let loose for the Ministry felt (understandably) that they and they alone should decide who would benefit from Kellogg grants. Anyway I was released for a year and spent 1954/55 in the States where I learned a great deal about research and plants. The US had not suffered from the War the way Europe had and it was an exhilarating time." [1] Move to the South of IrelandDavid remained a research worker at the
Horticultural Centre, Loughgall, Northern Ireland until 1964. During that period
he had been invited down south to the Republic of Ireland on a number of
occasions to give advice. John Daly, the father of the RTÉ gardening expert
Gerry Daly had invited him on several occasions in the 1950s to come and lecture
to the fruit growers in Wexford on his research into weed control. At that
period there was virtually no contact between the horticulturists of the North
and South. It was as a result of these trips down south that he eventually got
the post as Director of Horticultural Research in the Kinsealy Research Centre,
Agricultural Research Institute (now Teagasc) in the Republic of
Other educational work and society membershipsDavid was External Examiner for BSc, MS and PhD degrees at University Colleges Dublin and Cork, the Dublin and Tralee Institutes of Technology, Bath University, England, Wye College, University of London and the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. He was a Past President of the Horticultural
Education Association of Great Britain and
PublicationsDavid was the author of over 120 scientific
publications, mainly on weed control, and joint editor of three books on
horticultural science Earlscliffe garden
Journalism and media appearances
ConsultancyDavid Robinson was employed as an overseas consultant by a number of organisations including FAO (Food and Agricultural Organisation), Department of Foreign Affairs, APSO and the Irish Horticultural Development Board. Countries involved included Lesotho, Swaziland, Sudan, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Namibia, South Africa, Kenya, Zimbabwe and Malta. He carried out garden/plant reconnaissance
tours in the
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