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Arnold Thackray

Arnold Thackray (born 30 July 1939) is an emeritus professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Initially an English chemist, he became an entrepreneurial American. Thackray founded or extended a series of institutions, initially in Philadelphia (Penn’s pioneering Department of History and Sociology of Science, and the Chemical Heritage Foundation—now the Science History Institute), then on a wider scale within the History of Science Society (HSS) and through Science History Consultants, and the Life Sciences Foundation.[1][2]

Arnold Wilfrid Thackray
Arnold Thackray, 2005
Born (1939-07-30) July 30, 1939 (age 84)
northwest England
NationalityBritish
OccupationScience historian
Known forFounding President of the Chemical Heritage Foundation
TitleJoseph Priestley Professor Emeritus
AwardsDexter Award
Academic background
Alma materCambridge University
Thesis (1966)
Doctoral advisorMary Hesse
Academic work
DisciplineHistory of Science

Early life and education edit

Thackray was born in Manchester England on 30 July 1939, five weeks before WW II began.[3] At age 10 he became a Foundation Scholar at the Manchester Grammar School, itself the locus of the novel concept of meritocracy under the leadership of Eric James, Baron James of Rusholme.[4] In 1960, he completed a Bachelor of Science (1st Class Honors) degree in chemistry at Bristol University. He then began an industrial career in Yorkshire, before retreating into grammar-school teaching while also stumbling into the small coterie of individuals around Jerome Ravetz at Leeds University.

Ravetz, a native of Philadelphia, was himself exploring the new, inchoate discipline of history of science. He encouraged Thackray to apply to the fledging doctoral program in history of science at Cambridge University. In October 1963 Thackray duly entered recently established Churchill College, Cambridge University, within a cadre of thirty fresh graduate students from multiple countries seeking to pursue many, varied academic fields.[5] Under the direction of Mary Hesse, a leader in the field of philosophy of science.,[5][1] he earned his Doctorate of Philosophy degree in 1966. In 1965, Thackray had already become the first graduate student at Churchill College to be elected a Fellow of the college. Enjoying this new role, he pioneered the effort to secure the papers of leading British scientists including Sir James Chadwick, for what in 1973 would become the Churchill College Archive.[1][6]

Academic and professional career edit

In the 1960s the United States was locus of and the leader in science, as well as the leader in the fledging field of science history. It is not surprising then that, PhD in hand, Thackray decided to seek his BTA—his 'been to America' degree. In September 1967 he intermitted his Fellowship to accept a one-year visiting lectureship at Harvard University, fully intending to return to the original Cambridge.[6] Enjoying the competitive nature of American academe, he then chose to join the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania. When invited him to its regular faculty, Thackray chose instead to establish a novel Department of the History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania (the first university department to concentrate on modern science, technology, and medicine in their social context.) [1] He joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania, in 1968.[6]

As chairman of the brand-new HSS Department, Thackray drew on faculty members from such disciplinary areas of the university as history, philosophy, anthropology, sociology, chemistry, physics, biology, engineering, English, and American civilization.[7] His aim was to create the first university department to concentrate on ‘’modern science’’, technology, and medicine in their social context. Rather than embracing the prevailing orthodoxy of a focus on science as theoria, a search for the truth, and on a supposed "seventeenth century scientific revolution," Penn would focus on science, technology, and medicine over the 250 years of the more immediate past, with one obvious theme being American contributions.[8]

Thackray was a member of the Penn faculty for 28 years, retiring in 1996 as Joseph Priestley Professor emeritus. His academic research has focused on the rise of modern science since the death of Isaac Newton, and on the interactions between the scientific community and society as a whole. He has mentored twenty PhD students and authored or edited a wide variety of scholarly books and articles. Additionally, he has been a member of the History of Science Society Executive Committee and editor of Isis and the HSS Newsletter (1978-1985), while also relaunching and editing Osiris (1984-1994). Additionally, Thackray has held visiting professorships at Bryn Mawr College (1968 through 1973), the London School of Economics (1971-1972), the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1978),[1] in addition to the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ (1980), and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Palo Alto, CA (1974 and 1984).[6]

He also served as an Executive Committee member and Treasurer of the American Council of Learned Societies (1985-1995). He was one of the four co-founders of, and the 1982-83 President of, the Society for Social Studies of Science. He also participated on many review committees and advisory boards, such as those of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the National Science Foundation. In his years at Penn, Arnold Thackray additionally served as curator of The Edgar Fahs Smith Memorial Collection in the History of Chemistry.[9]

Chemical Heritage Foundation edit

A 1979-1980 task force led by historian John H. Wotiz[10] resulted in a recommendation to the American Chemical Society that it create a center for the history of chemistry.[11] In 1981, the American Chemical Society solicited proposals to develop such a center from interested parties.[11] Thackray suggested that the center be at the University of Pennsylvania. To that end, he enlisted the help of Penn chemist Charles C. Price, who introduced Thackray to chemical industry executive and philanthropist John C. Haas. Haas elicited the interest of other influential figures in the chemical industry, especially DuPont Co. CEO Edward G. Jefferson and Dow Chemical Company CEO Paul Oreffice. By January 1982, ACS's positive response to Thackray's proposal had translated into $150,000 in funding, to be distributed over three years. The University of Pennsylvania agreed to a matching $150,000, composed in large measure of forgiven graduate-student tuition fees, plus a 25% decrease in Thackray's teaching load, without a reduction in salary.[12][11] Thus was born the Center for the History of Chemistry (CHOC), initially housed in a scattering of offices across the Penn campus. CHOC's stated objective was "to discover and disseminate information about historical resources, and to encourage research, scholarship, and popular writing in the history of the chemical sciences and industries."[13] Late in 1983, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) became a co-sponsor.[14]

In 1987 CHOC was promised its first endowment.[13] by eighty-seven year old Californian entrepreneur and chemist Arnold Beckman, in the form of a US $2 million gift, subject to matching 1:1 within 12 months. To hold this money ACS and AIChE incorporated a new non-profit, the National Foundation for the History of Chemistry. Then, almost immediately, a fresh challenge arose as eighty-three year old New York chemical engineer, Donald Othmer, made a rival pledge of $5 million, to be matched 1:1 within six months, to create an Othmer Library of Chemical History. In 1992, ‘’’both’’’ the Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry (BCHOC) and the Othmer Library of Chemical History (OLOCH) became components in what was renamed the Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF).[15] Faced by these rapidly multiplying realities, Professor Thackray sought to move CHF to a home of its own somewhere in the greater Philadelphia (Wilmington, DE to Princeton, NJ) area. The answer was found in a location rich in scientific history. The structure that had been built in 1865 as the First National Bank, which stood in the backyard of Benjamin Franklin's home, within what by the 1980s had become Philadelphia's Independence National Park. The 1993 purchase of the property was rapid. However, its build-out into a modern 120,000 sq. ft. facility took over a decade of planning and fundraising. The repurposed complex eventually included offices, archives, and space for the Othmer Library (itself steadily growing in size and stature as an internationally-acclaimed resource). Also deemed essential was a capacious public museum designed by Ralph Appelbaum to appeal to those curious about science and its changing social and historical contexts.[16][17] The overall project was complete in 2008.[18] Under Thackray's leadership, CHF steadily expanded its scope, its sponsoring organizations, its repertoire of visiting academic scholars, and its activities around the country and overseas.[19] An annual Othmer Gold Medal was inaugurated in 1997, to honor individuals contributing to science through innovation, entrepreneurship, research, legislation, and philanthropy. The Award’s four sponsors were the ACS, the AIChE, The Chemists' Club, and the Société de Chimie Industrielle (American Section). A growing series of other medals and prizes followed, in partnership with relevant organizations in the USA and abroad, to honor pioneers in fields ranging from materials science to biotechnology.[20][21][22]

Thackray served as president of CHF until 2009, after which time he served a seven-year term as Chancellor. Over the 28 years of his active leadership of a growing organization, and from a standing start, he raised a permanent endowment of $130 million, while investing almost $50 million to create CHF’s home.[23][24]

Life Sciences Foundation edit

After stepping down as president of CHF, Thackray relocated to Silicon Valley. There he founded the Life Sciences Foundation .[2] The foundation was conceived at a 2009 meeting with four biotechnology industry leaders. The group reasoned that biotech, by then 40 years old, had a poorly understood history. The time had come to document the heritage of biotechnology before it was lost.[25] The Life Sciences Foundation was formed in 2011 to capture the stories of the industry’s founders, while increasing awareness of the field’s significance through oral histories, public events, and a variety of publications, including a free magazine.[26]

An immediate success, within five years LSF had achieved substantial financial reserves, a growing public outreach and strong industry enthusiasm. The Life Sciences Foundation merged with the Chemical Heritage Foundation in 2015.[27] In 2018 the combined organization was renamed the Science History Institute, to reflect its wider range of historical interests, from chemical sciences and engineering to the life sciences and biotechnology.[28][29] In 2018 the combined organization was renamed the Science History Institute, to reflect its wider range of historical interests, from chemical sciences and engineering to the life sciences and biotechnology.[28]

As early as 1986, through his meetings with industry leaders, Dr. Thackray had perceived the need for focused, confidential studies telling the stories of particular individuals and industrial companies. Thus was born Science History Consultants (SHC), as a minor component of his work. Building on an extensive knowledge of modern American technoscience, and its leaders and key events, Dr. Thackray has focused the last stages of his career to help key entrepreneurs tell their stories.

A series of books that he created through SHC runs from Journey: Seventy Five Years of Kodak Research (1986) and Out of Thin Air ( Air Products and Chemicals 1990) to varied studies of key individuals, as in George and Edith Rosenkranz (Syntex and the Birth Control Pill 2011), Building a Petrochemical Industry in Saudi Arabia: the Life of Abdulaziz Abdullah Al-Zamil (2017), to Fred Kavil (Kavilco and the Kavli Prizes 2019)

Awards and honors edit

Thackray was the 1983 recipient of the Dexter Award of the American Chemical Society for his work on the history of chemistry.[30] In 1984, Thackray received the George Sarton Memorial Lecturer Award at the American Association for the Advancement of Science with a presentation entitled "The Historian's Calling in the Age of Science".[31] He was twice awarded fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (1971 and 1985).[1] Thackray is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Royal Historical Society and the Royal Society of Chemistry Sigma XI, and the American Chemical Society, which sponsored a symposium in his honor in 2009.[32]

Personal life edit

Thackray became a citizen of the United States in 1981.[1] His first marriage to his English high school sweetheart lasted 25 years: Barbara (née Hughes) Thackray, is a physicist, who became a teacher at the Shipley School in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.[33] Their three children include Helen Thackray MD, a leading executive in biotechnology, Gillian, a prominent intellectual property lawyer and Timothy, who is autistic and differently abled.[33][34] Thackray's wife since 1994 is Diana (née Schueler) Thackray, a sweet and wise Indiana farm-girl.[35] Walking, gardening, reading, and raising roses have been his hobbies.[11]

Selected publications edit

  • Thackray, Arnold (24 August 2022). Sturchio, Jeffrey L.; Lewenstein, Bruce V. (eds.). Science: Has its Present Past a Future?: Selected Essays. Seasons Associates Publishing. pp. 112–133. ISBN 979-8551167730.
  • Thackray, Arnold; Ulrych, Richard (2017). Building a Petrochemical Industry in Saudi Arabia: A Vision Becomes a Reality : the Life of Abdulaziz Abdullah Al-Zamil Former Minister of Industry & Electricity. Obeikan. Also in Arabic. ISBN 978-603-02-4331-0.[36]
  • Thackray, Arnold; Brock, David C.; Jones, Rachel; Brock, Davd C. (2015). Moore's law: the life of Gordon Moore, Silicon Valley's quiet revolutionary. New York, NY: Basic Books. ISBN 0465055648. Chinese translation Moore's law: the life of Gordon Moore, Silicon Valley's quiet revolutionary (2017) Renmin University of China Press ISBN 978-7300239231[37]
  • Thackray, Arnold, ed. (1998). Private science: biotechnology and the rise of the molecular sciences. Philadelphia, Pa: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0812234286.[38][39]
  • Thackray, Arnold; Sturchio, Jeffrey L.; Carroll, P. Thomas; Bud, Robert (1985). Chemistry in America 1876–1976 Historical Indicators. Springer Dordrecht. ISBN 978-9027726629.[40]
  • Morrell, Jack; Thackray, Arnold (1981). Gentlemen of science: early years of the British Association for the Advancement of Science (1st ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Pr.[41]
  • Thackray, Arnold (1974). "Natural Knowledge in Cultural Context: The Manchester Mode". The American Historical Review. 79 (3): 672–709. doi:10.2307/1867893. ISSN 0002-8762.
  • Thackray, Arnold (1972). John Dalton. Critical Assessments of his life and science. Cambridge Mass: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674475259.[42]
  • Thackray, Arnold (1970). Atoms and Power. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674052574. Italian translation Atomi e force (1981) Bologna

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Arnold Thackray (1939–)" (PDF). American Chemical Society Division of the History of Chemistry. 2006. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  2. ^ a b "The Life Sciences Foundation – Telling the Story of Biotechnology | BIO". www.bio.org. 12 April 2012. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  3. ^ Confirmed in a conversation with Arnold Thackray 30 May 2023
  4. ^ "Spotlight on Old Mancunians: Arnold Thackray | Manchester Grammar School". Manchester Grammar School. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  5. ^ a b Baykoucheva, Svetia (Fall 2008). . Chemical Information Bulletin. 60 (2): 10–13. Archived from the original on 24 March 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d Thackray, Arnold (1972). "About the author". John Dalton Critical Assessments of his life and science. Cambridge Mass: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674475259.
  7. ^ "Department History". hss.sas.upenn.edu. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  8. ^ "Arnold Thackray | History and Sociology of Science". History and Sociology of Science. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  9. ^ Manning, Kenneth. . Pennsylvania Center for the Book. Archived from the original on 27 May 2018. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  10. ^ "John H. Wotiz (1919–2001)" (PDF). American Chemical Society, Division of the History of Chemistry. American Chemical Society Dexter Awards. Retrieved 27 May 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d "Center for History of Chemistry Inaugural". CHOC News. 1 (3): 1–5. Summer 1983.
  12. ^ Gussman, Neil. . Chemical Heritage Foundation. Archived from the original on 12 July 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  13. ^ a b Carpenter, Ernest (16 November 1987). "Chemistry History Center Receives Large Grant". Chemical & Engineering News. 65 (46): 6.
  14. ^ "American Institute of Chemical Engineers Joins CHOC Endeavor". CHOC News. 2 (1): 1–3. Spring 1984.
  15. ^ "History". Science History Institute. 31 May 2016.
  16. ^ "Philadelphia's Chemical Heritage Foundation Features Digital Signage Media Column". Digital Signage Universe. 24 April 2012.
  17. ^ "Making Modernity: A Gallery Preview". 23 March 2008.
  18. ^ Arnaud, Celia Henry (27 October 2008). "The Art of Science". Chemical and Engineering News. 86 (43): 34–36. doi:10.1021/cen-v086n043.p034.
  19. ^ bArnaud, Celia Henry (27 October 2008). "The Art of Science". Chemical and Engineering News. 86 (43): 34–36. doi:10.1021/cen-v086n043.p034
  20. ^ REISCH, MARC (5 August 2002). "CHF HOSTS MULTIPLE CELEBRATIONS". Chemical & Engineering News. 80 (31): 49.
  21. ^ "Othmer Gold Medal". Science History Institute. 31 May 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
  22. ^ "Affiliate Partnership Awards". 31 May 2016.
  23. ^ Reisch, Marc S. (25 June 2007). . Chemical & Engineering News. 85 (26): 11. doi:10.1021/cen-v085n026.p011a. Archived from the original on 12 July 2016.
  24. ^ "Arnold Wilfrid Thackray". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. 25 April 2023. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  25. ^ "Life Sciences Foundation Appoints Carl Feldbaum as New Board Chair", Life Sciences Foundation via Globe Newswire, San Francisco, 2 July 2014, retrieved 19 July 2015
  26. ^ Morrison, Trista (2 February 2012). "Life Sciences Foundation Looks to Capture History of Biotech". BioWorld Today. 23 (22): 1.
  27. ^ Brubaker, Harold (15 October 2015). "Chemical Heritage and Life Sciences foundations merging". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  28. ^ a b Salisbury, Stephan (3 January 2018). "Chemical Heritage Foundation is morphing into the Science History Institute".
  29. ^ "Chemical Heritage and Life Sciences foundations merging". Philadelphia Inquirer. 15 October 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  30. ^ "Dexter Award for Outstanding Achievement in the History of Chemistry". scs.illinois.edu. American Chemical Society. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  31. ^ "George Sarton Memorial Lecture". hssonline.org. History of Science Society. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  32. ^ American Chemical Society Division of the History of Chemistry Program and Abstracts 238th ACS National Meeting Washington, DC (PDF). American Chemical Society. 2009. p. 13.
  33. ^ a b "Weddings; Helen Thackray, Lawrence Kessner". The New York Times. New York Times. 19 May 2002. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  34. ^ Jenkins, Kristina M. (30 November 2015). "Helen Thackray '86: Developing Treatments through Biotechnology". Shipley News. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  35. ^ "Obituary OSCAR J. SCHUELER". Fort Wayne newspaper. 20 April 2004. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  36. ^ Dowling, G.J.H. (March 2019). "Building a Petrochemical Industry in Saudi Arabia: The Life of Abdulaziz Abdullah Al‐Zamil". Middle East Policy. 26 (1): 155–157. doi:10.1111/mepo.12409.
  37. ^ Devanathan, Ram (1 May 2016). "Moore's Law: The Life of Gordon Moore, Silicon Valley's Quiet Revolutionary Arnold Thackray, David C. Brock, and Rachel Jones". MRS Bulletin. 41 (5): 412–413. doi:10.1557/mrs.2016.107. ISSN 1938-1425.
  38. ^ Rader, Karen A. (Karen Ann) (2000). "Private Science: Biotechnology and the Rise of the Molecular Sciences (review)". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 74 (3): 648–649. doi:10.1353/bhm.2000.0117. ISSN 1086-3176.
  39. ^ Rasmussen, Nicolas (1999). "Review of Private Science: Biotechnology and the Rise of the Molecular Sciences; Molecularizing Biology and Medicine: New Practices and Alliances, 1910s-1970s". Journal of the History of Biology. 32 (2): 399–402. ISSN 0022-5010.
  40. ^ Servos, John W. (15 November 1985). "Trends of Chemistry: Chemistry in America, 1876-1976. Historical Indicators . Arnold Thackray, Jeffrey L. Sturchio, P. Thomas Carroll, and Robert Bud. Reidel, Boston, 1985 (distributor, Kluwer, Hingham, Mass.). xxiv, 564 pp., illus. $79.50. Chemists and Chemistry". Science. 230 (4727): 800–800. doi:10.1126/science.230.4727.800.a. ISSN 0036-8075.
  41. ^ Sheets-Pyenson, Susan (4 December 1981). "The British Association in Retrospect: Gentlemen of Science . Early Years of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. Jack Morrell and Arnold Thackray. Clarendon (Oxford University Press), New York, 1981. xxiv, 592 pp., illus. $49.95.; The Parliament of Science . The British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1831- 1981. Roy MacLeod and Peter Collins, Eds. Science Reviews, Northwood, Middlesex, England, 1981. viii, 308 pp., illus. Paper, $25". Science. 214 (4525): 1120–1121. doi:10.1126/science.214.4525.1120. ISSN 0036-8075.
  42. ^ Neville, Roy G. (January 1974). "John Dalton. Critical assessments of his life and science (Thackray, Arnold)". Journal of Chemical Education. 51 (1): A48. doi:10.1021/ed051pA48.2. ISSN 0021-9584.

External links edit

  • Science History Institute (formerly the Chemical Heritage Foundation)
  • Department of History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania
  • Edgar Fahs Smith Memorial Collection

arnold, thackray, born, july, 1939, emeritus, professor, university, pennsylvania, initially, english, chemist, became, entrepreneurial, american, thackray, founded, extended, series, institutions, initially, philadelphia, penn, pioneering, department, history. Arnold Thackray born 30 July 1939 is an emeritus professor at the University of Pennsylvania Initially an English chemist he became an entrepreneurial American Thackray founded or extended a series of institutions initially in Philadelphia Penn s pioneering Department of History and Sociology of Science and the Chemical Heritage Foundation now the Science History Institute then on a wider scale within the History of Science Society HSS and through Science History Consultants and the Life Sciences Foundation 1 2 Arnold Wilfrid ThackrayArnold Thackray 2005Born 1939 07 30 July 30 1939 age 84 northwest EnglandNationalityBritishOccupationScience historianKnown forFounding President of the Chemical Heritage FoundationTitleJoseph Priestley Professor EmeritusAwardsDexter AwardAcademic backgroundAlma materCambridge UniversityThesis 1966 Doctoral advisorMary HesseAcademic workDisciplineHistory of Science Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Academic and professional career 3 Chemical Heritage Foundation 4 Life Sciences Foundation 5 Awards and honors 6 Personal life 7 Selected publications 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education editThackray was born in Manchester England on 30 July 1939 five weeks before WW II began 3 At age 10 he became a Foundation Scholar at the Manchester Grammar School itself the locus of the novel concept of meritocracy under the leadership of Eric James Baron James of Rusholme 4 In 1960 he completed a Bachelor of Science 1st Class Honors degree in chemistry at Bristol University He then began an industrial career in Yorkshire before retreating into grammar school teaching while also stumbling into the small coterie of individuals around Jerome Ravetz at Leeds University Ravetz a native of Philadelphia was himself exploring the new inchoate discipline of history of science He encouraged Thackray to apply to the fledging doctoral program in history of science at Cambridge University In October 1963 Thackray duly entered recently established Churchill College Cambridge University within a cadre of thirty fresh graduate students from multiple countries seeking to pursue many varied academic fields 5 Under the direction of Mary Hesse a leader in the field of philosophy of science 5 1 he earned his Doctorate of Philosophy degree in 1966 In 1965 Thackray had already become the first graduate student at Churchill College to be elected a Fellow of the college Enjoying this new role he pioneered the effort to secure the papers of leading British scientists including Sir James Chadwick for what in 1973 would become the Churchill College Archive 1 6 Academic and professional career editIn the 1960s the United States was locus of and the leader in science as well as the leader in the fledging field of science history It is not surprising then that PhD in hand Thackray decided to seek his BTA his been to America degree In September 1967 he intermitted his Fellowship to accept a one year visiting lectureship at Harvard University fully intending to return to the original Cambridge 6 Enjoying the competitive nature of American academe he then chose to join the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania When invited him to its regular faculty Thackray chose instead to establish a novel Department of the History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania the first university department to concentrate on modern science technology and medicine in their social context 1 He joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania in 1968 6 As chairman of the brand new HSS Department Thackray drew on faculty members from such disciplinary areas of the university as history philosophy anthropology sociology chemistry physics biology engineering English and American civilization 7 His aim was to create the first university department to concentrate on modern science technology and medicine in their social context Rather than embracing the prevailing orthodoxy of a focus on science as theoria a search for the truth and on a supposed seventeenth century scientific revolution Penn would focus on science technology and medicine over the 250 years of the more immediate past with one obvious theme being American contributions 8 Thackray was a member of the Penn faculty for 28 years retiring in 1996 as Joseph Priestley Professor emeritus His academic research has focused on the rise of modern science since the death of Isaac Newton and on the interactions between the scientific community and society as a whole He has mentored twenty PhD students and authored or edited a wide variety of scholarly books and articles Additionally he has been a member of the History of Science Society Executive Committee and editor of Isis and the HSS Newsletter 1978 1985 while also relaunching and editing Osiris 1984 1994 Additionally Thackray has held visiting professorships at Bryn Mawr College 1968 through 1973 the London School of Economics 1971 1972 the Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1978 1 in addition to the Institute for Advanced Study Princeton NJ 1980 and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences Palo Alto CA 1974 and 1984 6 He also served as an Executive Committee member and Treasurer of the American Council of Learned Societies 1985 1995 He was one of the four co founders of and the 1982 83 President of the Society for Social Studies of Science He also participated on many review committees and advisory boards such as those of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the National Science Foundation In his years at Penn Arnold Thackray additionally served as curator of The Edgar Fahs Smith Memorial Collection in the History of Chemistry 9 Chemical Heritage Foundation editA 1979 1980 task force led by historian John H Wotiz 10 resulted in a recommendation to the American Chemical Society that it create a center for the history of chemistry 11 In 1981 the American Chemical Society solicited proposals to develop such a center from interested parties 11 Thackray suggested that the center be at the University of Pennsylvania To that end he enlisted the help of Penn chemist Charles C Price who introduced Thackray to chemical industry executive and philanthropist John C Haas Haas elicited the interest of other influential figures in the chemical industry especially DuPont Co CEO Edward G Jefferson and Dow Chemical Company CEO Paul Oreffice By January 1982 ACS s positive response to Thackray s proposal had translated into 150 000 in funding to be distributed over three years The University of Pennsylvania agreed to a matching 150 000 composed in large measure of forgiven graduate student tuition fees plus a 25 decrease in Thackray s teaching load without a reduction in salary 12 11 Thus was born the Center for the History of Chemistry CHOC initially housed in a scattering of offices across the Penn campus CHOC s stated objective was to discover and disseminate information about historical resources and to encourage research scholarship and popular writing in the history of the chemical sciences and industries 13 Late in 1983 the American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE became a co sponsor 14 In 1987 CHOC was promised its first endowment 13 by eighty seven year old Californian entrepreneur and chemist Arnold Beckman in the form of a US 2 million gift subject to matching 1 1 within 12 months To hold this money ACS and AIChE incorporated a new non profit the National Foundation for the History of Chemistry Then almost immediately a fresh challenge arose as eighty three year old New York chemical engineer Donald Othmer made a rival pledge of 5 million to be matched 1 1 within six months to create an Othmer Library of Chemical History In 1992 both the Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry BCHOC and the Othmer Library of Chemical History OLOCH became components in what was renamed the Chemical Heritage Foundation CHF 15 Faced by these rapidly multiplying realities Professor Thackray sought to move CHF to a home of its own somewhere in the greater Philadelphia Wilmington DE to Princeton NJ area The answer was found in a location rich in scientific history The structure that had been built in 1865 as the First National Bank which stood in the backyard of Benjamin Franklin s home within what by the 1980s had become Philadelphia s Independence National Park The 1993 purchase of the property was rapid However its build out into a modern 120 000 sq ft facility took over a decade of planning and fundraising The repurposed complex eventually included offices archives and space for the Othmer Library itself steadily growing in size and stature as an internationally acclaimed resource Also deemed essential was a capacious public museum designed by Ralph Appelbaum to appeal to those curious about science and its changing social and historical contexts 16 17 The overall project was complete in 2008 18 Under Thackray s leadership CHF steadily expanded its scope its sponsoring organizations its repertoire of visiting academic scholars and its activities around the country and overseas 19 An annual Othmer Gold Medal was inaugurated in 1997 to honor individuals contributing to science through innovation entrepreneurship research legislation and philanthropy The Award s four sponsors were the ACS the AIChE The Chemists Club and the Societe de Chimie Industrielle American Section A growing series of other medals and prizes followed in partnership with relevant organizations in the USA and abroad to honor pioneers in fields ranging from materials science to biotechnology 20 21 22 Thackray served as president of CHF until 2009 after which time he served a seven year term as Chancellor Over the 28 years of his active leadership of a growing organization and from a standing start he raised a permanent endowment of 130 million while investing almost 50 million to create CHF s home 23 24 Life Sciences Foundation editAfter stepping down as president of CHF Thackray relocated to Silicon Valley There he founded the Life Sciences Foundation 2 The foundation was conceived at a 2009 meeting with four biotechnology industry leaders The group reasoned that biotech by then 40 years old had a poorly understood history The time had come to document the heritage of biotechnology before it was lost 25 The Life Sciences Foundation was formed in 2011 to capture the stories of the industry s founders while increasing awareness of the field s significance through oral histories public events and a variety of publications including a free magazine 26 An immediate success within five years LSF had achieved substantial financial reserves a growing public outreach and strong industry enthusiasm The Life Sciences Foundation merged with the Chemical Heritage Foundation in 2015 27 In 2018 the combined organization was renamed the Science History Institute to reflect its wider range of historical interests from chemical sciences and engineering to the life sciences and biotechnology 28 29 In 2018 the combined organization was renamed the Science History Institute to reflect its wider range of historical interests from chemical sciences and engineering to the life sciences and biotechnology 28 As early as 1986 through his meetings with industry leaders Dr Thackray had perceived the need for focused confidential studies telling the stories of particular individuals and industrial companies Thus was born Science History Consultants SHC as a minor component of his work Building on an extensive knowledge of modern American technoscience and its leaders and key events Dr Thackray has focused the last stages of his career to help key entrepreneurs tell their stories A series of books that he created through SHC runs from Journey Seventy Five Years of Kodak Research 1986 and Out of Thin Air Air Products and Chemicals 1990 to varied studies of key individuals as in George and Edith Rosenkranz Syntex and the Birth Control Pill 2011 Building a Petrochemical Industry in Saudi Arabia the Life of Abdulaziz Abdullah Al Zamil 2017 to Fred Kavil Kavilco and the Kavli Prizes 2019 Awards and honors editThackray was the 1983 recipient of the Dexter Award of the American Chemical Society for his work on the history of chemistry 30 In 1984 Thackray received the George Sarton Memorial Lecturer Award at the American Association for the Advancement of Science with a presentation entitled The Historian s Calling in the Age of Science 31 He was twice awarded fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation 1971 and 1985 1 Thackray is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the American Association for the Advancement of Science the Royal Historical Society and the Royal Society of Chemistry Sigma XI and the American Chemical Society which sponsored a symposium in his honor in 2009 32 Personal life editThackray became a citizen of the United States in 1981 1 His first marriage to his English high school sweetheart lasted 25 years Barbara nee Hughes Thackray is a physicist who became a teacher at the Shipley School in Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania 33 Their three children include Helen Thackray MD a leading executive in biotechnology Gillian a prominent intellectual property lawyer and Timothy who is autistic and differently abled 33 34 Thackray s wife since 1994 is Diana nee Schueler Thackray a sweet and wise Indiana farm girl 35 Walking gardening reading and raising roses have been his hobbies 11 Selected publications editThackray Arnold 24 August 2022 Sturchio Jeffrey L Lewenstein Bruce V eds Science Has its Present Past a Future Selected Essays Seasons Associates Publishing pp 112 133 ISBN 979 8551167730 Thackray Arnold Ulrych Richard 2017 Building a Petrochemical Industry in Saudi Arabia A Vision Becomes a Reality the Life of Abdulaziz Abdullah Al Zamil Former Minister of Industry amp Electricity Obeikan Also in Arabic ISBN 978 603 02 4331 0 36 Thackray Arnold Brock David C Jones Rachel Brock Davd C 2015 Moore s law the life of Gordon Moore Silicon Valley s quiet revolutionary New York NY Basic Books ISBN 0465055648 Chinese translation Moore s law the life of Gordon Moore Silicon Valley s quiet revolutionary 2017 Renmin University of China Press ISBN 978 7300239231 37 Thackray Arnold ed 1998 Private science biotechnology and the rise of the molecular sciences Philadelphia Pa Univ of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0812234286 38 39 Thackray Arnold Sturchio Jeffrey L Carroll P Thomas Bud Robert 1985 Chemistry in America 1876 1976 Historical Indicators Springer Dordrecht ISBN 978 9027726629 40 Morrell Jack Thackray Arnold 1981 Gentlemen of science early years of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 1st ed Oxford Clarendon Pr 41 Thackray Arnold 1974 Natural Knowledge in Cultural Context The Manchester Mode The American Historical Review 79 3 672 709 doi 10 2307 1867893 ISSN 0002 8762 Thackray Arnold 1972 John Dalton Critical Assessments of his life and science Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 0674475259 42 Thackray Arnold 1970 Atoms and Power Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674052574 Italian translation Atomi e force 1981 BolognaReferences edit a b c d e f g Arnold Thackray 1939 PDF American Chemical Society Division of the History of Chemistry 2006 Retrieved 31 May 2023 a b The Life Sciences Foundation Telling the Story of Biotechnology BIO www bio org 12 April 2012 Retrieved 31 May 2023 Confirmed in a conversation with Arnold Thackray 30 May 2023 Spotlight on Old Mancunians Arnold Thackray Manchester Grammar School Manchester Grammar School Retrieved 31 May 2023 a b Baykoucheva Svetia Fall 2008 The Chemical Heritage Foundation Past Present and Future Chemical Information Bulletin 60 2 10 13 Archived from the original on 24 March 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2017 a b c d Thackray Arnold 1972 About the author John Dalton Critical Assessments of his life and science Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 0674475259 Department History hss sas upenn edu University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 6 May 2017 Arnold Thackray History and Sociology of Science History and Sociology of Science Retrieved 31 May 2023 Manning Kenneth A History of Chemistry Pennsylvania Center for the Book Archived from the original on 27 May 2018 Retrieved 7 May 2017 John H Wotiz 1919 2001 PDF American Chemical Society Division of the History of Chemistry American Chemical Society Dexter Awards Retrieved 27 May 2017 a b c d Center for History of Chemistry Inaugural CHOC News 1 3 1 5 Summer 1983 Gussman Neil The Power of John C Haas s Good Name Chemical Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on 12 July 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Carpenter Ernest 16 November 1987 Chemistry History Center Receives Large Grant Chemical amp Engineering News 65 46 6 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Joins CHOC Endeavor CHOC News 2 1 1 3 Spring 1984 History Science History Institute 31 May 2016 Philadelphia s Chemical Heritage Foundation Features Digital Signage Media Column Digital Signage Universe 24 April 2012 Making Modernity A Gallery Preview 23 March 2008 Arnaud Celia Henry 27 October 2008 The Art of Science Chemical and Engineering News 86 43 34 36 doi 10 1021 cen v086n043 p034 bArnaud Celia Henry 27 October 2008 The Art of Science Chemical and Engineering News 86 43 34 36 doi 10 1021 cen v086n043 p034 REISCH MARC 5 August 2002 CHF HOSTS MULTIPLE CELEBRATIONS Chemical amp Engineering News 80 31 49 Othmer Gold Medal Science History Institute 31 May 2016 Retrieved 22 March 2018 Affiliate Partnership Awards 31 May 2016 Reisch Marc S 25 June 2007 Haverford College President Thomas Tritton Will Take CHF Helm in January Chemical amp Engineering News 85 26 11 doi 10 1021 cen v085n026 p011a Archived from the original on 12 July 2016 Arnold Wilfrid Thackray American Academy of Arts amp Sciences 25 April 2023 Retrieved 31 May 2023 Life Sciences Foundation Appoints Carl Feldbaum as New Board Chair Life Sciences Foundation via Globe Newswire San Francisco 2 July 2014 retrieved 19 July 2015 Morrison Trista 2 February 2012 Life Sciences Foundation Looks to Capture History of Biotech BioWorld Today 23 22 1 Brubaker Harold 15 October 2015 Chemical Heritage and Life Sciences foundations merging Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 2 May 2017 a b Salisbury Stephan 3 January 2018 Chemical Heritage Foundation is morphing into the Science History Institute Chemical Heritage and Life Sciences foundations merging Philadelphia Inquirer 15 October 2015 Retrieved 2 May 2017 Dexter Award for Outstanding Achievement in the History of Chemistry scs illinois edu American Chemical Society Retrieved 30 April 2017 George Sarton Memorial Lecture hssonline org History of Science Society Retrieved 4 May 2017 American Chemical Society Division of the History of Chemistry Program and Abstracts 238th ACS National Meeting Washington DC PDF American Chemical Society 2009 p 13 a b Weddings Helen Thackray Lawrence Kessner The New York Times New York Times 19 May 2002 Retrieved 30 April 2017 Jenkins Kristina M 30 November 2015 Helen Thackray 86 Developing Treatments through Biotechnology Shipley News Retrieved 26 June 2019 Obituary OSCAR J SCHUELER Fort Wayne newspaper 20 April 2004 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Dowling G J H March 2019 Building a Petrochemical Industry in Saudi Arabia The Life of Abdulaziz Abdullah Al Zamil Middle East Policy 26 1 155 157 doi 10 1111 mepo 12409 Devanathan Ram 1 May 2016 Moore s Law The Life of Gordon Moore Silicon Valley s Quiet Revolutionary Arnold Thackray David C Brock and Rachel Jones MRS Bulletin 41 5 412 413 doi 10 1557 mrs 2016 107 ISSN 1938 1425 Rader Karen A Karen Ann 2000 Private Science Biotechnology and the Rise of the Molecular Sciences review Bulletin of the History of Medicine 74 3 648 649 doi 10 1353 bhm 2000 0117 ISSN 1086 3176 Rasmussen Nicolas 1999 Review of Private Science Biotechnology and the Rise of the Molecular Sciences Molecularizing Biology and Medicine New Practices and Alliances 1910s 1970s Journal of the History of Biology 32 2 399 402 ISSN 0022 5010 Servos John W 15 November 1985 Trends of Chemistry Chemistry in America 1876 1976 Historical Indicators Arnold Thackray Jeffrey L Sturchio P Thomas Carroll and Robert Bud Reidel Boston 1985 distributor Kluwer Hingham Mass xxiv 564 pp illus 79 50 Chemists and Chemistry Science 230 4727 800 800 doi 10 1126 science 230 4727 800 a ISSN 0036 8075 Sheets Pyenson Susan 4 December 1981 The British Association in Retrospect Gentlemen of Science Early Years of the British Association for the Advancement of Science Jack Morrell and Arnold Thackray Clarendon Oxford University Press New York 1981 xxiv 592 pp illus 49 95 The Parliament of Science The British Association for the Advancement of Science 1831 1981 Roy MacLeod and Peter Collins Eds Science Reviews Northwood Middlesex England 1981 viii 308 pp illus Paper 25 Science 214 4525 1120 1121 doi 10 1126 science 214 4525 1120 ISSN 0036 8075 Neville Roy G January 1974 John Dalton Critical assessments of his life and science Thackray Arnold Journal of Chemical Education 51 1 A48 doi 10 1021 ed051pA48 2 ISSN 0021 9584 External links editScience History Institute formerly the Chemical Heritage Foundation Department of History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania Edgar Fahs Smith Memorial Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arnold Thackray amp oldid 1217502365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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