The Herbert Lapworth ClubAll former students of Engineering Geology at Imperial (BSc, MSc, DIC, MPhil or PhD) are automatically members of the Herbert Lapworth Club. If you had forgotten that and wish to make contact with the Club,
please click the photo of Dr. Herbert Lapworth below:
The Herbert Lapworth Club was founded in 1970 for the benefit of former students of Engineering Geology. The annual production of the Herbert Lapworth medal is provided by generous donation from a Club Member.
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The Lapworth Medal, funded by donations from the members of the Herbert Lapworth Club presented by the Club to the College, to be and awarded annually to a meritorious student of Engineering Geology, normally on completion of the advanced course (also known as the MSc course) in that subject.Membership is open to all who studied Engineering Geology at Imperial. News, names and addresses, and other information can be obtained from the Alumnus Office of the College and through the Alumni Newsletter "icMatters".
General enquiries should be addressed to
Email: m.defreitas@ic.ac.uk
Telephone: 0207 594 6023
Fax: 0207 225 2716
Web: http://www.ad.ic.ac.uk/xr/alumni
Members meet on Friday 13th : the London venue is the Admiral Codrington, in Mossop Street, about 5 minutes walk from South Kensington Station.
By 1910 Herbert Lapworth had started his own private practice and had commenced giving an annual series of lectures at the RSM; this teaching continued until 1922. In those days a four year period of study was required for Associateship of the RSM, and the fourth year was for the specialised study of a subject covered in the third year. One of the special subjects was a 40 lecture course (with laboratory work) in Economic Geology (Price £ 3.00): 20 lectures in Mining Geology and 20 in Engineering Geology; Lapworth taught the latter.
Lapworth became a close friend of the then Professor of Geology at Imperial, Professor Watts, who was a frequent visitor to his home and accompany him on his many walks across the Chalk Downs.
In 1927 Lapworth was elected President of the Institution of Water Engineers
and such was his eminence that in 1934, a year after his death, a sum of
money was donated to the Institution by another of its former Presidents
to constitute "the Herbert Lapworth Memorial Fund". From this fund a Herbert
Lapworth Medal would be made and presented .... 'no more often than in
alternate years'. One of the few recipients of this medal was W.J.E. Binnie,
founder of the famous firm of consulting engineers, Binnie and Partners.
That medal, which is illustrated here, later led to the Department obtaining
use of the Institution's dies for making our own Lapworth medal. But this
required money, many hundreds of pounds. Here the support of the Herbert
Lapworth Club was sought. The appeal was launched and within a year sufficient
donations had been received from former students of Engineering Geology,
now employed around the world, to permit the new reverse die to be commissioned.
The early stages of the appeal were greatly helped by generous donations
from the Lapworth family and eminent engineers who were closely associated
with Herbert Lapworth. Their gifts provided the appeal with the momentum
it needed to succeed. With money in the bank, a proposal could be put before
the College Board of Studies that there be established in the Department.
"The Lapworth Medal, normally for annual award to a meritorious student
on completion the Advanced Course in Engineering Geology." The recommendation
was approved in June 1981 and the medal became available in time for the
academic year 1981 - 82. Nominations for the medal came from the MSc Board
of Examiners in Engineering Geology, and there lay another curious link
with the past; the Visiting Examiner to the Board that provided the nomination
for the first medal was Mr. M. Kennard, a Partner of the firm consulting
engineers; Rofe, Kennard and Lapworth.