Sir Laurence Kirwan, Director and Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society from 1945 to
1975, and one of the founders of the Institute, of which he was an Honorary Member, died in
London on 16 April 1999 aged 91. The events that took place early in 1946, and led to the
foundation of the Institute of Navigation the following year, have been well documented by Pat
Hansford in his article in the special issue of the Journal (September 1997) published to
commemorate the Institute's fiftieth anniversary. Kirwan was a member of the original Steering
Committee and then of the Provisional Council which undertook the preliminary work that
culminated in the inaugural meeting in March 1947. He served on the first elected Council as
Chairman of the Executive Committee, which in those days assumed responsibility for
administering the Institute between meetings of the Council.
In his article, Hansford recalls how the Royal Society, when approached about the formation
of the Institute, had suggested that (in the somewhat uncertain situation immediately after the
war) the new body might thrive best, at any rate to start with, under the aegis of an existing
scientific society with similar objectives. Kirwan, then the recently appointed Director of the
Royal Geographical Society, took the suggestion up by proposing various ways in which the
RGS might assist the new body, and notably by offering it accommodation; and the Institute
has, of course, been at the Society's house ever since. The original accommodation was not
lavish but, quite apart from the prestigious address and pleasant and appropriate surroundings,
the facilities available included the use of the Society's lecture theatre and the Council and
committee rooms. It is difficult to see how the new body, with a handful of members and no
money, could have survived without some such assistance. But it was perhaps at a deeper level
that the arrangement was to prove so influential, for it brought the young Institute into
immediate contact with the liberal traditions of the learned societies in this country, concerned
essentially with the subject rather than the benefit of its members, no doubt very much as the
Royal Society would have wished.