- William A. Noyes
William Albert Noyes (1857-1941) was an American analytical and organic
chemist . He made pioneering determinations ofatomic weights , chaired the Chemistry Department at theUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign from 1907 to 1926, was the founder and editor of several important chemical journals, and received theAmerican Chemical Society 's highest award, thePriestley Medal , in 1935.Early life and education
Noyes was born on
November 6 ,1857 nearIndependence, Iowa . He earnedA.B. and B.S. degrees fromGrinnell College in 1879 (having originally enrolled in 1875 in classical studies, with chemistry as a side subject). As an undergraduate, in the winter quarters Noyes taught school full time in the countryside. On graduating he studied and taughtanalytical chemistry at Grinnell, until he began graduate school atJohns Hopkins University in January 1881. There, working withIra Remsen , Noyes earned hisPh.D. in 1882. His doctoral dissertation "On the oxidation of benzene with chromic acid" was completed in only one and a half years (despite his also having to do water analyses to earn a living). Grinnell also awarded him an A.M. degree for this work.Career
After receiving his doctorate, Noyes taught a year as an instructor at the
University of Minnesota . He was next a professor of chemistry at theUniversity of Tennessee , followed by seventeen years atRose Polytechnic Institute inTerre Haute, Indiana (starting there in 1886). In 1903, Noyes was hired as the first "Chief Chemist" for theUnited States National Bureau of Standards inBaltimore, Maryland . His determination ofatomic weight s lead to "one of the most precise chemical determinations ever made", the ratio of the masses ofhydrogen tooxygen (which he found to be 1.00787:16). WithH.C.P. Weber , he received theNichols Medal in 1908 for determining the atomic weight ofchlorine .In 1907 he became chair of the Chemistry Department at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , a position he would hold until 1926. In the process, he helped it to become one of the leading departments ofchemistry in theUnited States . Despite his earlier work in analytical chemistry, Noyes is perhaps best known as an organic chemist. He was the first to prove the structure ofcamphor definitively and studied rearrangements in camphor and related compounds. He also worked on "electronic theories of valence, and the valence and nature ofnitrogen innitrogen trichloride " as well as developing "methods for the determination ofphosphorus ,sulfur , andmanganese iniron ".Editor
Noyes was the
Editor-in-Chief of theJournal of the American Chemical Society from 1902 to 1917. In addition, he foundedChemical Abstracts and was its first editor from 1907 to 1910. He also foundedAmerican Chemical Society Scientific Monographs (serving as its first editor from 1919 to 1941) andChemical Reviews (serving as its first editor from 1924 to 1926). Following theFirst World War , Noyes sought to promote international understanding and to reestablish harmonic relations between French and German chemists.Death and honors
Noyes received the Priestley Medal, the American Chemical Society's highest award, in 1935. He died on
October 24 ,1941 .The
Noyes Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was so named in his honor in 1939. The lab was originally built in 1902, expanded under Noyes in 1916 (more than doubling its size) and named aACS National Historical Chemical Landmarks by the ACS in its 100th year, 2002.Family
Noyes was the youngest son of Spencer W. Noyes and Mary Noyes, and was born on their farm. His first wife was Flora Collier Noyes. They had several children, but all except
William Albert Noyes, Jr. , (bornApril 18 ,1898 , inTerre Haute, Indiana ) died in early childhood. Flora was in poor health for some years before her death in March 1900. Noyes remarried in 1901 and had a son, Charles, in 1904. His second wife died of a stroke in August 1914. In the fall of 1915, Noyes married his third wife, Katharine Macy Noyes. They had two sons, Richard and Pierre. Albert, Richard, and Pierre all followed their father into the sciences and academia.References
*Quotations taken from [http://www.scs.uiuc.edu/chem/bios/noyes.htm A biography of William A. Noyes (University of Illinois Department of Chemistry website)] . [http://www.scs.uiuc.edu/chem/about/illini_chemists/noyes.html New page for this] , accessed September 9, 2008.
*ACS National Historic Chemical Landmarks website [http://center.acs.org/landmarks/landmarks/noyes/noyes.html William Albert Noyes: The Department Comes of Age (1857-1941)]
* [http://center.acs.org/landmarks/landmarks/noyes/index.html Noyes Laboratory: One Hundred Years of History]
*Wives and children information taken from [http://fermat.nap.edu/books/0309049784/html/340.html Biography of William A. Noyes Jr.]
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