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Dr. Eugene M.K. Geiling - 1941
Eugene M.K. Geiling Ph.D., M.D. was born on May 13, 1891, in the Orange Free
State of South Africa, the son of Alexander W.H. and Theresa (Keller) Geiling.
He was educated at the Marist Brothers' College in Uitenhage, Cape
Province, and
received his B.A. degree from the University of South Africa in 1911. As a
fellow of the Union of South African Government he attended the University of
Illinois, receiving the M.Sc. (1915) and Ph.D. (1917) degrees in animal
nutrition and chemistry. Returning to South Africa, he served his government
during the first World War as a member of the Food Commission, and later became
lecturer in agricultural chemistry at the Agricultural College in Potchefstroom,
Transvaal. In 1918-1919 Dr. Geiling was a lecturer in physiological chemistry at
the College of Medicine, University of Cape Town. He returned to the United
States in 1920 as Seessel fellow at Yale University. In 1921 he became assistant
in Pharmacology at the Johns Hopkins Medical School, from which he received the
M.D. degree in 1923.
During the following years at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Geiling rose in rank to
associate professor and began the scientific investigations which have made him
an outstanding member of his profession. In association with his beloved chief,
Dr. John Jacob Abel, he collaborated in such major contributions to scientific
knowledge as the crystallization of insulin, purification of albumoses,
secretine, and the posterior pituitary hormones. During the same period his
independent investigations embraced studies of the physiological effects of
insulin and an especially important and fundamental contribution concerned with
the relationship between the hormones of the pancreas and pituitary glands. His
more recent work has centered around investigation of the pituitary gland and
especially its comparative pharmacology and anatomy. These investigations have
carried him and his co-workers from whaling expeditions in northwest Canada and
the St. Lawrence to marine studies in Florida and the sub-tropics.
In 1936 Dr. Geiling was called to the University of Chicago as the first
Professor and Chairman of the newly established Department of Pharmacology.
Dr. Geiling was naturalized as an American citizen on June 15, 1939. For several
years he has served as consultant to the United States Food and Drug
Administration, and also as a member of the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry of
the American Medical Association. Since 1939 he has been President of the
American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. He has
contributed numerous articles to scientific journals, and is a member of the
editorial board of Physiological Reviews, the Journal of Pharmacology and
Experimental Therapeutics, and Proceedings of the Society for Experimental
Biology and Medicine. he was Foster Lecturer at the University of Buffalo in
1938, and Paul Reed Rockwood Lecturer at the State University of Iowa in 1940.
Mendel Medal Presentation Program, May 13,
1941. Villanova College, Villanova, Pennsylvania.
Geiling, Eugene Maximillian Karl, pharmacologist; born Orange Free State,
Republic of South Africa, May 13, 1891; son of Alexander W.H. and Theresa
(Keller) Geiling. AB University of South Africa, 1911; MSc, University of Ill.,
1917; PhD, 1917; student, University of Capetown, 1919-1920, Yale University,
1920-1921; MD, Johns Hopkins University, 1923; DSc (hon), St. John's University,
1958. Lecturer in Chemistry College of Agriculture, Republic of South Africa,
1918. Lecturer in physiological chemistry College of Medicine, University of
Cape Town, 1918-1919; Sessel fellow Yale University, 1920; Government Union of
South Africa fellow 1921; assistant in pharmacology Johns Hopkins Medical
School, 1921-1923, associate in pharmacology Johns Hopkins Medical School,
1921-1923, associate, 1923-1925, associate professor, 1925-1935; professor of
pharmacology and chairman of department of pharmacology University of Chicago,
1936-1956, Frank P. Hixon distinguishing svc. professor of pharmacology, 1941;
chief pharmacodynamics br., division of pharmacology FDA, Washington. Member
editorial board Archeological Institute of Pharmacodynamics; contributor to
magazines and textbooks. Recipient Mendel medal Villanova College, 1942, Oscar
B. Hunter award American Theraputic Society, 1956. Member AAAS, American Society
for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (president 1939-1940), Society
for Experimental Biology and Medicine (president 1948-1949), American
Physiological Society, American Soceity of Biological Chemists, AMA, Medical and
Chirurg. Society of Maryland, German Pharmacological Society, Association of
American Physicians, Sigma Xi. Roman Catholic. Home: Washington D.C.
Who Was Who in America. Volume IX,
1985-1989. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1989, p.130-131.
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