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Howard Florey
'Howard Walter Florey, Baron Florey',
OM,
FRS, (
September 24,
1898 –
February 21,
1968) was a
pharmacologist who shared the
Nobel Prize for
Physiology or
Medicine in
1945 with
Ernst Boris Chain and Sir
Alexander Fleming for his role in the extraction of
penicillin.
Born the youngest of five children in
Adelaide,
South Australia, Florey was a brilliant student (and junior sportsman, although he did not excel at maths) who was educated at
St Peter's College, Adelaide. He went to study medicine at the
University of Adelaide from 1917 to
1921. At the university he met Ethel Reed, another medical student who was to become both his wife and his research colleague. A
Rhodes Scholar, he continued his studies at the
Magdalen College, Oxford, receiving the degrees of
BSc and
MA. In 1926 he was elected to a fellowship at
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and a year later he received the degree of
PhD from
Cambridge.
After periods in the
United States and at the
University of Cambridge, he was appointed to the Joseph Hunter Chair of Pathology at the
University of Sheffield in 1931. In 1935 he returned to Oxford, as Professor of Pathology and Fellow of
Lincoln College, leading a team of researchers. In
1938, working with Ernst Boris Chain and
Norman Heatley, he read
Alexander Fleming's paper discussing the antibacterial effects of ''
Penicillium notatum'' mould. His research team investigated the large-scale production of the mould and efficient extraction of the active ingredient, succeeding to the point where, by 1945, penicillin production was an industrial process for the Allies in
World War II. However, Florey held that its discovery came only as scientific merit, and that the medicinal discovery was only a bonus:
'People sometimes think that I and the others worked on penicillin because we were interested in suffering humanity. I don¹t think it ever crossed our minds about suffering humanity. This was an interesting scientific exercise, and because it was of some use in medicine is very gratifying, but this was not the reason that we started working on it.'[1]
He was also openly concerned about the population explosion resulting from improving healthcare, and was a staunch believer in contraception.
[2]
In 1962, Florey became Provost of
The Queen's College, Oxford. During his term as Provost, the college built a new accommodation block, named the Florey Building in his honour. The building was designed by the
British architect Sir
James Stirling.
Having been
knighted in 1944, Florey was made a
life peer in 1965 as 'Baron Florey', of Adelaide in the Commonwealth of
Australia and of Marston in the
County of Oxford. This was a higher honour than the knighthood awarded to penicillin's discoverer, Sir Alexander Fleming, and recognised the monumental work Florey did in making penicillin available in sufficient quantities to save millions of lives in the war, despite the doubts of Fleming that this was feasible.
Lord Florey was elected president of the
Royal Society in 1959. After the death of Ethel, he married his long-time colleague and research assistant Dr. Margaret Jennings in
1967. Florey was Chancellor of
The Australian National University 1965-68. He died of a
heart attack in 1968.
Florey is regarded by the Australian scientific and medical community as probably its greatest scientist.
Sir Robert Menzies, Australia's longest-serving
Prime Minister, said that 'in terms of world well-being, Florey was the most important man ever born in Australia'.
Florey's portrait appeared on the Australian $50 note for many years, and a suburb in the national capital
Canberra is named after him. The
Howard Florey Institute, located at the
University of Melbourne, and the largest lecture theatre in the University of Adelaide's medical school are also named after him.
External links
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Biography
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Biography
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Florey Papers at the Royal Society