James Watson (Scottish chemist)

Professor James Robertson Watson (31 May 1859 – 1923) was a Scottish chemist and political activist.

In 1889, he returned to Glasgow, where he was appointed as Professor of Chemistry at Anderson's College.

[1] Watson was a founder member of the Independent Labour Party (ILP), for which he stood unsuccessfully in 1893 in the Mile End ward of Glasgow City Council, then at the 1895 general election in Glasgow Bridgeton, where he took less than 10% of the vote.

[1] After his second defeat, Watson drifted away from the ILP, but remained politically engaged, and spent the 1900s campaigning on tariff reform.

[1] A supporter of World War I, he stood as an independent at the 1917 Aberdeen South by-election,[2] taking second place with 29.4% of the vote, then again in Aberdeen South at the 1918 general election, where his vote dropped back to only 16.8%.