Founder(s) | Dr Edward Albert Sturman, M.A., F.R.S.L. |
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Established | 1882 |
President | Sir Henry Valentine Goold |
Chair | Sir Henry Valentine Goold (1882–1893) |
Members | 1,500 (1892) |
Owner | Dr Edward Albert Sturman, M.A., F.R.S.L. |
Location | Addison House, 160 Holland Road, Kensington, London (demolished) , England |
Dissolved | after 1902 |
The Society of Science, Letters and Art, also known as the Society of Science or SSLA, was a soi-disant learned society which flourished between 1882 and 1902. Dr Edward Albert Sturman, M.A., F.R.S.L., owned and ran the Society for his own financial benefit from his house at Holland Road in Kensington, London. He took the title of Hon. Secretary and worked under the name of the Irish baronet Sir Henry Valentine Goold, who was given the title of President and chairman, until Goold died in 1893.
The Society sold the privilege of wearing academic dress[1] and using the postnominal letters F.S.Sc. to both eminent and ordinary people around the world, without the obligation to sit an examination or to submit papers. Many members of legitimate learned societies were duped into thinking that they were being offered fellowships by a department of their own respected institution. The Society also sold diplomas and masqueraded as an examination board for schools, although it merely provided exam papers and did not examine candidates. In 1883 Sir Henry Trueman Wood accused the Society of Science, Letters and Art of needing the "borrowed light" of the Royal Society of Arts, after the SSLA sold its own Fellowships to members of the RSA, allowing them to assume that the offer was supported by the RSA.[2] After an 1892 exposure of the Society in the investigative journal Truth, The Evening Post in Auckland said the SSLA was "a bogus literary society."[3]
Joseph Ostler and SSLA
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).EPNZ 7 June 1893
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).