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Home » Sir Geoff Palmer, Scotland’s first black professor, dies aged 85 | UK News
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Sir Geoff Palmer, Scotland’s first black professor, dies aged 85 | UK News

By uk-times.com13 June 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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PA Media Sir Geoff Palmer, wearing a suit, glasses and with white hair, stands in front of a portrait of himself.PA Media

Sir Geoff Palmer became Scotland’s first black professor in 1989

Scotland’s first black professor Sir Geoff Palmer has died, aged 85.

Sir Geoff, chancellor and professor emeritus at Heriot-Watt University, moved to the UK from Jamaica as a teenager and became known as both an academic and a human rights advocate.

Scottish Labour MSP Foysol Choudhury paid tribute to Sir Geoff on social media – describing him as a “father figure” and a “courageous voice for justice and equality”.

Professor Richard A Williams, the principal and vice-chancellor of Heriot-Watt University, said: “Sir Geoff was an inspiration not just to me but to colleagues past and present, and countless students around the world.

“His infectious enthusiasm and passion for education was impossible to ignore and this University was all the richer for having such a strong association with him over the years.

“He will be dearly missed, and our thoughts are with his loved ones at this difficult time.”

In a social media post Mr Choudhury said he was “deeply saddened” to share the news of the passing of Sir Geoff.

He added: He was not only a distinguished scientist & academic, but also a courageous voice for justice & equality. My sincere condolences to his family & all who knew and admired him

“May his soul rest in peace.”

He later thanked people for their messages of sympathy, saying: “Geoff wasn’t just my dad’s best friend, he was a father figure to me, took me under his wing as a teen and continued to inspire me his entire life.

“It’s a huge loss, but I’m grateful for the memories.”

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar wrote: “Sir Geoff was a gentleman, a pioneer and an intellectual giant. He will be dearly missed. Love to his family and friends.”

PA Media Sir Geoff Palmer, wearing a suit, glasses and with white hair, stands alongside a plaque commemorating the historic Scottish slavery case, Knight v WedderburnPA Media

Sir Geoff’s links to Heriot Watt began in the 1960s

Sir Geoff moved to London from St Elizabeth, Jamaica, in 1955, joining his mother in the city.

After studying at the University of Leicester, he completed his PhD in grain science and technology jointly with Heriot-Watt College and the University of Edinburgh in the 1960s.

Following a spell in Surrey, he returned to Heriot Watt in 1977, going on to become Scotland’s first black professor in 1989 before eventually retiring in 2005.

Sir Geoff’s academic work saw him invent the barley abrasion process – which involves deliberately damaging the protective husk of grains to speed up the process of malting.

His efforts won him the American Society of Brewing Chemists Award of Distinction, an honour dubbed the Nobel prize of the beer world, while the success of his discovery attracted funding that established the International Centre for Brewing and Distilling as part of the Heriot-Watt campus.

PA Media Sir Geoff Palmer, wearing a suit, glasses and with white hair, standing in front of a plate glass muralPA Media

Sir Geoff later served as leader of Edinburgh’s Slavery and Colonialism Legacy Review Group

Sir Geoff was also known as a passionate advocate for the rights of black communities, work which saw him invited by Edinburgh City Council to chair a review group looking at the city’s colonial legacy.

The group presented a number of recommendations, including that the city council should apologise for Edinburgh’s past role in slavery and colonialism.

In 2014 Sir Geoff was knighted for services to human rights, science and charity and four years later he he was appointed Jamaica’s first Honorary Consul in Scotland.

He was the 2020 recipient of the Jamaican national honour, the Order of Distinction (Commander Class) and in 2021 was appointed chancellor of Heriot Watt university.

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