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Dr. Francis Owen Rice - 1935
Dr. Francis Owen Rice, Professor of Chemistry at Johns Hopkins University,
was born in Liverpool, England, May 20, 1890. He was educated at the University
of Liverpool where he received his degree of Doctor of Science in 1916. From
1916 to the close of the World War he held important positions in His Majesty's
Chemical Plants in England. At the end of the war, Doctor Rice returned to
academic life and came to Princeton University on an 1851 Exhibition Fellowship.
He was Assistant Professor of Chemistry at New York University from 1919 - 1926,
and has since been at Johns Hopkins University.
Professor Rice's scientific work lies mainly in the borderland between physical
and organic chemistry. Four years ago he was the first chemist to see the
implication which experiments of Paneth on the production of free radicals would
have on our understanding of reaction velocities. During the past few years his
researches have led him to the conclusion that a great many organic reactions
proceed through the intermediate formation of free-radicals and he has proposed
mechanisms which permit quantitative calculations of the products formed in the
pyrogenic decomposition of organic compounds.
A distinguished colleague in another University says of Dr. Rice: "For two
years he was voice crying in the wilderness. No one treated his ideas with
seriousness. Within the past year there has been a complete change of opinion
and it is now recognized that his ideas are substantially correct, and, as a
consequence, a whole chapter in modern chemistry is of necessity to be
re-examined and re-formulated in terms of his concepts."
A half-hundred research articles of Doctor Rice have been published in
scientific journals here and abroad. He is the author of one of the American
Chemical Society's Monographs on the Mechanism of Homogeneous Organic reactions.
His latest book "The Aliphatic Free Radicals" recently published by the Johns
Hopkins Press, embodies the ideas that he has developed.
Mendel Medal Presentation Program, May 7,
1935. Villanova College. Villanova, Pennsylvania.
Rice, Francis Owen, professor of chemistry; born Liverpool, England, May 20,
1890; son of James and Mary (Bryne) Rice; B.Sc., Liverpool (England) University,
1914, M.Sc., 1912, D.Sc., 1916; Married Katherine Kempner, May 23, 1930;
children-Monica Ellen, Cecilia Joan. Came to U.S., 1919. Instructor in
chemistry, New York University, 1919-1920, assistant professor, 1920-1924;
associate in chemistry, Johns Hopkins University, 1924-1926, associate
professor, 1926-1938; professor and head of chemistry department, Catholic
University, Washington, D.C., 1938-1959; research professor Georgetown
University, 1959, professor, chairman of the chemistry department, 1959-1962;
principal research scientist radiation laboratory, chemistry department
University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana, from 1962. Recipient Mendel
Medal, 1935. Author: Mechanism of Organic Reactions, 1928; Aliphatic Free
Radicals, 1935; Structure of Matter (with Edward Teller), 1949. Home: South
Bend, Indiana.
Who Was Who in America. Volume VIII,
1982-1985. Chicago, Marquis Who's Who, 1985, p.337.
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