[4] He presented Einstein's Blackboard in the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford (saved by University dons on 16 May 1931) after Albert Einstein's series of three lectures at Rhodes House that year.
This meant writing by hand up to 2000 such letters a year, and after his death, his wife, Lady Wylie, continued this in his place.
For one pre-Great War scholar from Germany who later emigrated to Africa this letter was a memorable feature of life for the whole family, and led the next generation of Popps to become good friends with later generations of Wylies.
[2] In 1933, Wylie received an honorary degree from Bowdoin College in the USA.
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