Scottish chemist
Sir Ian Heilbron
Born Isidor Morris Heilbron
(1886-11-06 ) 6 November 1886Died 14 September 1959(1959-09-14) (aged 72) Nationality Scottish Alma mater Royal Technical College and University of Leipzig Spouse Elda Marguerite Davis Children 2 Awards Scientific career Fields Organic chemistry Institutions Academic advisors Arthur Rudolf Hantzsch
Sir Ian Heilbron DSO FRS (6 November 1886 – 14 September 1959) was a Scottish chemist,[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] who pioneered organic chemistry developed for therapeutic and industrial use.[ 5]
Early life and education
Isidor Morris Heilbron was born in Glasgow on 6 November 1886 to a wine merchant (David Heilbron) and his wife (Fanny Jessel).[ 6] He was Jewish .[ 7] [ 8]
He was educated at Glasgow High School and then the Royal Technical College with G. G. Henderson . Following an award of a Carnegie Fellowship he went to the University of Leipzig to study under Arthur Rudolf Hantzsch for his doctoral thesis (1907–1910).[ 9]
He was awarded a Ph.D. He received a D.Sc. at the University of Glasgow in 1918 for his 'Contribution to the Study of Semi-carbazones ' and other papers.[ 6]
Military service
He served in the Royal Army Service Corps (1910–1920). He was awarded a Distinguished Service Order in 1918 for distinguished service related to operations in Salonika .[ 6] He was also appointed an Officer of the Order of the Redeemer by the Greek government. He achieved the rank of lieutenant colonel , Assistant Director of Supplies.[ 10]
During the Second World War from 1939 to 1942 he worked as a scientific advisor to the Department of Scientific Research in the Ministry of Supply . After 1942 he became a scientific advisor to the Ministry of Production .[citation needed ]
Career
His independent research career focused on the chemistry of natural products , including work on sterols , vitamin D , vitamin A , polyene synthesis , Squalene , terpenes , pyrylium salts , algal pigments, and spiropyrans .[ 10] He was also instrumental in the development of DDT to fight malaria and yellow fever .[ 11] Heilbron, with Arthur Herbert Cook, also studied the synthesis and structure of penicillin .[ 12]
Appointments
Lecturer, Royal Technical College, 1909–14
Scientist, later consultant at British Dyestuffs Corp . (later renamed Imperial Chemical Industries )
Professor of organic chemistry, Royal Technical College, 1919–20
Professor, University of Liverpool , 1920–33 (Heath Harrison Chair of Organic Chemistry)
Professor, University of Manchester , 1933-8 (Sir Samuel Hall Chair of Chemistry , 1935-8)
Professor of Organic Chemistry and Director of the Laboratories, Imperial College , 1938–49
1949: Retired from academic research[ 9]
Director, Brewing Industry Research Foundation , 1949–58
Chairman of the Advisory Council of the Royal Military College of Science [ 10]
International Union of Pure & Applied Chemistry
Editor-in-chief of the “Dictionary of Organic Compounds” and
Chairman of the editorial board of “Thorpe’s Dictionary of Applied Chemistry.”
Notable trainees
Source:[ 13]
Notable collaborators
Awards and honours
References
^ a b Cook, A. H. (1960). "Ian Morris Heilbron. 1886–1959" . Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society . 6 : 65– 85. doi :10.1098/rsbm.1960.0025 . ISSN 0080-4606 .
^ Alan Cook (2004). "Heilbron, Sir Ian Morris [formerly Isidor Morris]". In Watson, K. D (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/33799 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ Profile of Ian Heilbron Archived 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
^ "On This Day – Nov 06 : Ian Heilbron was born" . RSC Education . Retrieved 25 March 2020 .
^ "HEILBRON, Sir Ian Morris" . Who's Who & Who Was Who . Vol. 1920– 2015 (2015 ed.). A & C Black. Retrieved 25 January 2015 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ a b c "University of Glasgow :: Story : Biography of Lieutenant Colonel Isidore Morris Heilbron" . universitystory.gla.ac.uk . Retrieved 25 March 2020 .
^ Rubinstein, W. D. ; Jolles, Michael; Rubinstein, Hilary L. , eds. (2011). The Palgrave dictionary of Anglo-Jewish history . Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 410. ISBN 978-0-230-30466-6 . OCLC 793104984 .
^ Levy, A. (1955). "The Origins of Scottish Jewry". Transactions (Jewish Historical Society of England) . 19 : 129– 162. ISSN 2047-2331 . JSTOR 29777950 .
^ a b c "Chemical & Engineering News: The Priestly Medal – 1945: Ian Morris Heilbron (1886–1959)" . pubsapp.acs.org . Retrieved 25 March 2020 .
^ a b c d e f "Isador M. Heilbron (1881–)". Journal of Chemical Education . 17 (2): 51. 1 February 1940. Bibcode :1940JChEd..17...51. . doi :10.1021/ed017p51 . ISSN 0021-9584 .
^ Heilbron, I. M. (1945). "The New Insecticidal Material DDT". Journal of the Royal Society of Arts . 93 (4682): 65– 71. ISSN 0035-9114 . JSTOR 41361779 .
^ Billimoria, J. D.; Cook, A. H.; Heilbron, Ian (1949). "307. Studies in the azole series. Part XVI. Synthesis of a new analogue of penicillamine" . Journal of the Chemical Society (Resumed) : 1437– 1440. doi :10.1039/jr9490001437 . ISSN 0368-1769 .
^ "Chemistry Tree – Ian (Isidore) Morris Heilbron Family Tree" . academictree.org . Retrieved 25 March 2020 .
^ Gay, Hannah (2016). The Chemistry Department at Imperial College, London : a history, 1845–2000 . Griffith, W. P. (William Pettitt), 1936–. New Jersey. p. 227. ISBN 978-1-78326-974-7 . OCLC 965146304 . {{cite book }}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link )
^ Goodwin, T W (1977). "R. A. Morton" . Nature . 266 (5600): 394. Bibcode :1977Natur.266..394G . doi :10.1038/266394a0 . S2CID 31211784 .
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