Was the son of a shepherd,
and was born near Galashiels Scotland, in 1857. He was brought up on a
farm and had sufficient schooling to be able to enter Edinburgh
university. He graduated M.A. in 1883, and obtaining a Highland and
Agricultural Society's bursary in 1884, studied agriculture and graduated
B.Sc. In 1887 he was appointed principal of the Roseworthy Agricultural
College, South Australia, where he made a special study of the effects of
fallowing and the use of water soluble phosphates as manures. Following
this Lowrie travelled throughout the wheat-growing districts of South
Australia, addressing farmers and endeavouring to persuade them to adopt
his methods. In 1901 he went to New Zealand as principal of the Lincoln
Agricultural College, Canterbury, and seven years later became director of
agriculture in Western Australia. In 1909 he declined the offer of the
chair of agriculture at the university of Sydney. He returned to South
Australia in 1912 as director of agriculture, but resigned in 1914 owing
to differences of opinion with the minister for agriculture regarding the
reorganization of the department. After his retirement Lowrie took up
farming at Echunga, South Australia, and specialized in pure-bred Border
Leicester sheep. He died at Echunga on 20 July 1933. Lowrie did excellent
work, especially in South Australia; no man of his time did more to make
farming payable. |