Frederic L. Holmes
Frederic Lawrence Holmes (6 February 1932, Cincinnati, Ohio – 21 March 2003, New Haven, Connecticut) was an American historian of science, specifically for chemistry, medicine and biology.
Holmes earned his bachelor's degree in biology from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1954 and then began graduate study in the history department of Harvard University, where he graduated with MA in 1958. His graduate study was interrupted by two years of service in the United States Air Force and when he returned to Harvard he transferred to the department of the history of science, graduating with PhD in 1962 with thesis Claude Bernard and the concept of internal environment. For his dissertation, he reconstructed Claude Bernard's path of discovery of basic physiological functions, such as those of the liver, on the basis of Bernard's laboratory books from the 1840s. Mirko Grmek referred the laboratory books to Holmes.[1] He then spent two years at MIT as a postdoc. At Yale University he became in 1964 an assistant professor and in 1968 an associate professor of the history of science. In 1972 he became a professor at the University of Western Ontario and head of his department. In 1979 he returned to Yale as a full professor and chair from 1979 to 2002 of the Section of the History of Medicine in the Yale School of Medicine.[2]
He became Avalon Professor in 1985, and from 1982 to 1987 was Master of Jonathan Edwards College. He became a leading force in building the history of science and medicine at Yale. He initiated an undergraduate major in the history of science/history of medicine and in 1986 a graduate program in the history of medicine and the life sciences. In 2002 he helped establish a new Program in the History of Medicine and Science.[2]
Holmes was the author of more than sixty papers and several books on the history of medicine and the biological sciences. For his two-volume work on Hans Adolf Krebs and the discovery of the citric acid cycle, Holmes not only evaluated Krebs's lab books, but also conducted detailed interviews with Krebs. Holmes won several prizes and was a leading contributor to the history of medicine and the biological sciences for two generations.[2]
During the final months of his life, he was intent on attempting to finish his study of Seymour Benzer and molecular biology, and those who visited him at the Yale Health Service Clinic recall a room filled with books, papers, a laptop, and a scholar eager to talk about ideas. He completed the final chapter two weeks before his death ...[1]
He and his wife Harriet Vann Holmes (d. 2000) had three daughters.
Awards and honors
- 1962 — Schumann Prize of the History of Science Society
- 1975 — Pfizer Award of the History of Science Society
- 1978 — William H. Welch Medal of American Association for the History of Medicine
- 1981–1983 — President of the History of Science Society
- 1994 — Dexter Award for Outstanding Achievement in the History of Chemistry from the American Chemical Society.[3]
- 1994 — Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- 2000 — George Sarton Medal of the History of Science Society
- 2000 — Member of the American Philosophical Society
Selected publications
- Claude Bernard and Animal Chemistry, Harvard University Press 1974
- Lavoisier and the Chemistry of Life: an exploration of scientific creativity, Princeton University Press, 1985; Reprint University of Wisconsin Press, 1987
- Antoine Lavoisier - the next crucial year: or, the sources of his quantitative method in chemistry, Princeton University Press 1997; Reprint (pbk), 2014
- Hans Krebs: the formation of a scientific life 1900–1933, Oxford University Press 1991
- Hans Krebs: Architect of intermediary metabolism 1933–1937, Oxford University Press 1993
- Meselson, Stahl and the Replication of DNA: A history of the most beautiful experiment in biology, Yale University Press 2001; Reprint (pbk), 2008 (See also Meselson–Stahl experiment.)
- Investigative Pathways: pattern and stages in the careers of experimental scientists, Yale University Press 2004[4]
- with William C. Summers: Reconceiving the gene: Seymour Benzer's adventures in phage genetics, Yale University Press 2006;[5] Reprint (pbk), 2008
- Historians and Contemporary Scientific Biography, Pauling Symposium 1995
References
- ^ a b Warner, John Harley (January 2004). "Frederic Lawrence Holmes 1932–2003". Medical History. 48 (1): 112–114. doi:10.1017/s0025727300007080. ISSN 0025-7273. PMC 546298. PMID 14968648.
- ^ a b c "Frederic L. Holmes (1932–2003) (biographical information supplied by Susan Holmes), copyrighted material of the Division of History of Chemistry of the American Chemical Society" (PDF). www.scs.illinois.edu/~mainzv. 2006.
- ^ "Dexter Award for Outstanding Achievement in the History of Chemistry". Division of the History of Chemistry. American Chemical Society. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
- ^ Kohler, Robert E. (Autumn 2004). "Review of Investigative Pathways: Patterns and Stages in the Careers of Experimental Scientists by Frederic Lawrence Holmes". Journal of the History of Biology. 37 (3): 585–588. doi:10.1007/s10739-004-2086-3. JSTOR 4331900.
- ^ Weiner, Jonathan (28 December 2006). "Review of Reconceiving the Gene: Seymour Benzer's Adventures in Phage Genetics by Frederic Lawrence Holmes, edited by William C. Summers". N Engl J Med. 355: 2794–2795. doi:10.1056/NEJMbkrev57338.