- William Henry Perkin, Jr.
Infobox_Scientist
name = William Henry Perkin, Jr.
image_width =
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birth_date = 1860
birth_place = Sudbury,England
residence =England
nationality = English
death_date = 1929
death_place =
field =
work_institution =Heriot-Watt College ,Victoria University of Manchester ,Oxford University ,
alma_mater =Royal College of Science ,University of Würzburg ,University of Munich
doctoral_advisor =Adolf von Baeyer
doctoral_students = Robert Robinson ,Walter Haworth ,Chaim Weizmann
known_for =
prizes =
religion =
footnotes = :"For the earlier William Henry Perkin, the father of this William Henry Perkin, seeSir William Henry Perkin "William Henry Perkin, Jr. (1860-1929) was an Englishorganic chemist who was primarily known for his groundbreaking research work on the degradation of naturally occurring organic chemicals. He was the eldest son ofSir William Henry Perkin who had founded theaniline dye industry, and was born at Sudbury,England , close to his father's dyeworks atGreenford .Education
Perkin was educated at the
City of London School and then at theRoyal College of Science ,South Kensington ,London , England, and then inGermany at the universities of Würzburg and Munich. At Munich, he was a doctoral student underAdolf von Baeyer . From 1883 to 1886, he held the position ofPrivatdocent at theUniversity of Munich . He never lost contact with his friend Baeyer, and delivered the memorial lecture following Baeyer's death in 1917. [cite journal
title = Baeyer memorial lecture
author = William Henry Perkin, Jr.
journal =J. Chem. Soc. Trans.
volume = 123
issue =
pages = 1520–1546
year = 1923
doi = 10.1039/CT9232301520 ] In 1887 he returned to Britain and became professor of chemistry atHeriot-Watt College ,Edinburgh ,Scotland , for which the Chemistry wing of the main campus is currently named The William Perkin Building.Manchester
In 1892 he accepted the chair of organic chemistry at
Victoria University of Manchester , England, succeedingCarl Schorlemmer , which he held until 1912. During this period his stimulating teaching and brilliant researches attracted students from all parts, and he formed at Manchester a school oforganic chemistry famous throughout Europe. This was possible because he was assigned new laboratory buildings, which he planned together with the famous architectAlfred Waterhouse , similar to those built by Baeyer in Munich. The speech at the opening ceremony was given byLudwig Mond . An additional laboratory building together with a library and £20,300, was a donation of the chemist and industrialistEduard Schunck in 1895. His laboratory was removed brick by brick and recreated at Owens College.Frank Lee Pyman , Robert Robinson (who later won a Nobel Prize in chemistry),Walter Haworth andEduard Hope graduated at Owens College while Perkin was there.The conflict withChaim Weizmann , who held a postdoctoral position and was a friend of Perkin, over the fermentation of starch to isoamyl alcohol which was the starting material for synthetic rubber and therefore industrially relevant, led to the dimissal of Weizmann. In 1912, following a planned change in University politics involving industrial co-operations, which would have resulted in a significant loss of income for Perkin, he accepted a position in Oxford.Oxford
In 1912 he succeeded Professor
William Odling as Waynflete Professor of Chemistry atOxford University , England, a position he held until 1929. When he started five colleges had their own laboratories. He first had to move into the Odling laboratory, the mediaeval Abbot's Kitchen atGlastonbury . During Perkin's time there, new and more extensive laboratories were built (theDyson Perrins Laboratory ), and for the first time in England a period of research became a necessary part of the academic course in chemistry for an honours degree. But the constant rivalry with the physical chemistry department, for exampleFrederick Soddy , lead to the situation that most of the graduates chose physical or inorganic chemistry as their subject, and Perkin got most of his postdoctoral employees from other universities.Published work
Perkin's work was published in a series of papers in Transactions of the Chemical Society. The earlier papers dealt with the properties and modes of synthesis of cloud chain
hydrocarbon s and their derivatives. This work led naturally to the synthesis of manyterpene s and members of thecamphor group; and also to the investigation of variousalkaloid s and naturaldye s. In addition to purely scientific work, Perkin kept in close touch with thechemical industry . Together with ProfessorFrederick Kipping , Perkin wrotetextbook s on practical chemistry, inorganic and organic chemistry.Honours and awards
Perkin was a fellow of the
Royal Society . He was president of theChemical Society from 1913 to 1916. Perkin was awarded theLongstaff Medal of the Chemical Society in 1900, theDavy Medal of theRoyal Society in 1904, and theRoyal Medal of the Royal Society in 1925. In 1910, he was made an honorary graduate of theUniversity of Edinburgh , receiving the degree ofDoctor of Laws (LL.D.). [ [http://www.registry.ed.ac.uk/graduations/Honorary_Grads/surnames.htm Honorary Graduates of The University of Edinburgh] .]ources used
*cite journal
title = W. H. Perkin, Jr., at Manchester and Oxford: From Irwell to Isis
author = Jack Morrell
journal = Osiris 2nd Series
year = 1993
volume = 8
issue = 1
pages = 104–126
url = http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0369-7827%281993%292%3A8%3C104%3AWHPJAM%3E2.0.CO%3B2-J
*cite journal
title = The Life and Work of Professor William Henry Perkin, Jr.
author = Tenney L. Davis
journal = Osiris 2nd Series
year = 1933
volume = 19
issue = 1
pages = 207–208
url = http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0021-1753%28193304%2919%3A1%3C207%3ATLAWOP%3E2.0.CO%3B2-W
*cite journal
title = First Pedler lecture. The early history of the synthesis of closed carbon chains
author = William Henry Perkin Jr.
journal = J. Chem. Soc.
year = 1929
volume =
issue =
pages = 1347–1364
doi = 10.1039/JR9290001347References
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