Sir Robert Robinson, a renowned British scientist, made significant contributions to the field of organic chemistry. His groundbreaking research on the structure and synthesis of natural elements, particularly plant pigments and alkaloids, earned him both the Nobel Prize and Knighthood. By studying plant pigments, he successfully synthesized numerous flavones and anthocyanins. However, his primary focus was on alkaloids, complex compounds with biological and chemical effects on living organisms. Through his investigations into the chemical reactions occurring in plants, Robinson unveiled the structures of morphine and strychnine in 1925 and 1946, respectively. These discoveries paved the way for the synthesis of essential drugs like penicillin, crucial in combating diseases such as malaria. Additionally, Robinson played a pivotal role in the development of the theory of electrons in organic chemistry, which shed light on the structure of organic molecules. Not only was he a brilliant scientist, but he also contributed to the textile industry by inventing new dyes and even created an automatic lint cutting machine. In recognition of his remarkable research in organic chemistry, Robinson was honored with the prestigious Order of Merit.
Quick Facts
- British Celebrities Born In September
- Also Known As: Sir Robert Robinson
- Died At Age: 88
- Family:
- Spouse/Ex-: Gertrude Maud Walsh, Stearn Sylvia Hillstrom
- Father: William Bradbury Robinson
- Mother: Jane Davenport
- Chemists
- Organic Chemists
- Died on: February 8, 1975
- Place of death: Great Missenden, England
- Grouping of People: Nobel Laureates in Chemistry
- More Facts
- Education: University Of Manchester
- Awards:
- Davy Medal (1930)
- Royal Medal (1932)
- Copley Medal (1942)
- Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1947)
- Franklin Medal (1947)
- Albert Medal (1947)
Childhood & Early Life
Sir Robert Robinson was born on September 13, 1886 on the Rufford Farm near Chesterfield, Derbyshire, United Kingdom. His father was William Bradbury Robinson and his mother was Jane Davenport who was the second wife of William. His father had ten children from his first marriage while Robert was the eldest of the five children from his father’s second marriage.
He first attended a kindergarten school in a town near Chesterfield. After kindergarten, he attended the ‘Chesterfield Grammar School’ as a weekly boarder where his interest in mathematics was first aroused. When he was twelve years old, he attended the ‘Fulneck School’ near Leeds in West Yorkshire as a boarder. In 1902, Robert was sent by his father to the ‘Manchester University’ to study chemistry as chemists were in great demand in the textile industry. In 1905, he graduated at the top of his class (BSc) with honors in chemistry from ‘Manchester University’. After graduation, he joined Professor William H. Perkin’s organic chemistry. He was able to earn his DSc degree from the ‘Victoria University of Manchester’ in 1910.
Career
In 1912, Sir Robert Robinson travelled to Australia to fill the chair in the ‘Department of Pure and Applied Chemistry’ at the ‘University of Sydney’. Here he did research on the synthesis of various ‘catechol’ derivatives, on C-alkylations of enolates, and on ‘eudesmin’, a component of the oil derived from Australian Eucalyptus trees. In 1914, he was invited by the ‘British Association for the Advancement of Science’ to visit them where he met famous British chemists such as H. E. Armstrong, Nevil V. Sidgwick and others.
At the age of twenty-nine, he was appointed to the chair of Organic Chemistry in the University of Liverpool, UK, and was the youngest candidate. He and his wife returned to England while the First World War was going on and resumed his duties at the university in January 1916. Soon, like all other chemists, he was asked to contribute to the war effort and help in the manufacture of picric acid, TNT, Tropinone, morphine and odeine. In 1917, he joined the ‘Advisory Board’ with other famous chemists to develop natural resources where he developed a new method for producing synthetic ‘octanol’. Once he was asked by the Liverpool Harbor authorities to help them put out a fire caused by burning oil. Instead of taking a personal fee, he asked the authorities to donate the money to the university library.
In 1920, he resigned from the chair at the University of Liverpool and became the Director of Research for the ‘British Dyestuffs Corporation’. In 1921, he decided to return to his academic life and applied for the just vacated chair at St. Andrews in Scotland and was selected. The chair for the professorship of organic chemistry at the University of Manchester fell vacant in 1922 and he left St. Andrews after one year to fill this chair.
He collaborated with many young researchers there and worked on pigments which were derived from plants. From 1925, he started working with his wife Gertrude on the process of synthesizing fatty acids. In 1928, he accepted a professor’s post at the University of London. In 1930, he was appointed to the ‘Waynflete Professor’ of chemistry of the Oxford University and held the post till 1955. In 1947, he was sent as the UK delegate to the UNESCO conference and was asked to present the presidential address to the Royal Society the same year. In 1955, he was appointed as the ‘Emeritus Professor and Honorary Fellow’ of the ‘Magdalen College’. He was a Director of the ‘Shell Chemical Company’ from 1955.
Awards & Achievements
He was elected as a ‘Fellow of the Royal Society’ in 1920. In 1921, he became a member of the council in the ‘Chemical Society’. He received his knighthood in 1939. The Nobel Prize for chemistry was awarded to him in 1947 for his research on alkaloids. He received an Order of Merit in 1949.
Personal Life & Legacy
He married Gertrude Maud Walsh, a fellow student in Manchester, on August 7, 1912. His first daughter was born in 1914 but died after one day. Their second daughter Marion was born in 1921 and a son later. He married Stearn Sylvia Hillstrom in 1957 after Gertrude’s death in 1954. Sir Robert Robinson died on February 8, 1975 in London, United Kingdom.
Trivia
Sir Robert Robinson was an enthusiastic chess player and a mountaineer at heart. He had climbed many mountains in Europe and New Zealand.