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Brief Biography of Paul D. Bartlett
Paul Doughty Bartlett, Erving Professor of Chemistry Emeritus,
died of natural causes in Lexington, on Oct. 11, 1997. He was 90.
After spending 40 years as a researcher at Harvard, Bartlett retired
and completed a second 11-year career at Texas Christian University
in Fort Worth.
He won national acclaim for basic research in several areas of
organic chemistry. He was fond of saying, "All life depends
on organic reactions."
"Paul's principal scientific contribution was to deepen fundamental
understanding of the mechanisms that underlie all chemical and biological
transformations," said Michael McBride, a former student and
a professor of chemistry at Yale University. "He played a central
role in moving organic chemistry from a subject requiring brutal
memorization to a discipline organized by fundamental principles."
Bartlett's work led to many practical applications. He held 17
patents in areas such as insect repellents, petroleum refining,
detoxification of chemical weapons, and reaction of natural and
synthetic materials with oxygen.
Bartlett also was widely admired as a teacher. "There may
never have been a time when I didn't anticipate being a teacher,"
he said in 1985.
"Paul was as renowned for his kindness, subtle wit, broad
grin, and hearty laugh as he was for his scientific insight and
insistence on high standards," McBride recalls.
Bartlett was frequently honored for his achievements in both research
and teaching, including winning the National Medal of Science, presented
to him by President Lyndon Johnson in 1968. He also received the
Linus Pauling Medal (1975), the Robert A. Welch Award in Chemistry
(1971), the Fulbright Award (1957), and two Guggenheim Fellowships
(1957, 1971). He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences,
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and received numerous
other scientific honor societies worldwide.
Born on Aug. 14, 1907, in Ann Arbor, Mich., Bartlett went to public
schools in Indianapolis, where he became fascinated with chemistry.
He earned a B.A. from Amherst College in 1928 and a Ph.D. from Harvard
in 1931.
Bartlett returned to Harvard in 1934 as a faculty instructor, rising
quickly to become one of the University's youngest professors in
1946. He was named Erving Professor of Chemistry two years later.
Students and postdoctoral fellows who worked with him formed the
"Bartlett Group" to discuss problems and solutions in
organic chemistry. In 1975, the group, which then numbered more
than 150, presented him with a compilation of letters and essays
they had written called "P.D. and the Bartlett Group at Harvard,
1934-1974."
Reporting on the event, the Journal of the American Chemistry Society
wrote: "Bartlett has not only been an outstanding scientist
in his own right, but he has had the unique ability to transmit
his outlook and dedication to those who worked with him. Since these
include an impressive number of the present leaders in the area
of physical organic chemistry, it is easy to see why his influences
has been so enormous."
After retiring from Harvard in 1974, Bartlett moved to Texas Christian
University and took up a second career as Robert A. Welsh Research
Professor. By the time he had retired again, in 1985, the Bartlett
Group numbered more than 270.
Internet: http://stills.nap.edu/html/biomems/pbartlett.html
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