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Theodore William Richards

Theodore William Richards (January 31, 1868 – April 2, 1928) was an American physical chemist and the first American scientist to receive the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, earning the award "in recognition of his exact determinations of the atomic weights of a large number of the chemical elements."[1]

Theodore William Richards

(1868-01-31)January 31, 1868

April 2, 1928(1928-04-02) (aged 60)

American

Josiah Parsons Cooke(see Kopperl: "Theodore W. Richards: America's First Nobel Laureate Chemist", in Profiles in Chemistry, in Journal of Chemical Education, 1983, Vol. 60, Issue 9, page 738.

Biography[edit]

Theodore Richards was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania, to William Trost Richards, a land- and seascape painter, and Anna Matlack Richards, a poet. Richards received most of his pre-college education from his mother. During one summer's stay at Newport, Rhode Island, Richards met Professor Josiah Parsons Cooke of Harvard, who showed the young boy Saturn's rings through a small telescope. Years later Cooke and Richards would work together in Cooke's laboratory.


Beginning in 1878, the Richards family spent two years in Europe, largely in England, where Theodore Richards' scientific interests grew stronger. After the family's return to the United States, he entered Haverford College, Pennsylvania in 1883 at the age of 14, earning a Bachelor of Science degree in 1885. He then enrolled at Harvard University and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1886, as further preparation for graduate studies.


Richards continued on at Harvard, taking as his dissertation topic the determination of the atomic weight of oxygen relative to hydrogen. His doctoral advisor was Josiah Parsons Cooke. Following a year of post-doctoral work in Germany, where he studied under Victor Meyer at the University of Göttingen and others, Richards returned to Harvard as an assistant in chemistry, then instructor, assistant professor, and finally full professor in 1901. In 1903 he became chairman of the department of chemistry at Harvard, and in 1912 he was appointed Erving Professor of Chemistry and director of the new Wolcott Gibbs Memorial Laboratory.


In 1896, Richards married Miriam Stuart Thayer. The couple had one daughter, Grace Thayer (who married James Bryant Conant), and two sons, Greenough Thayer and William Theodore. Both sons died by suicide.[2]


Richards maintained interests in both art and music. Among his recreations were sketching, golf, and sailing. He died at Cambridge, Massachusetts, on April 2, 1928, at the age of 60. According to one of his descendants, Richards suffered from "chronic respiratory problems and a prolonged depression."[3]


He was a Quaker.[4]

Member of the (1902)[12]

American Philosophical Society

Lowell Lectures (1908)

(1910)

Davy Medal

(1911)

Faraday Lectureship

(1912)

Willard Gibbs Medal

President of the (1914)

American Chemical Society

(1914)

Nobel Prize in Chemistry

(1916)

Franklin Medal

President of the (1917)

American Association for the Advancement of Science

Honorary Member of the (1918)

Royal Irish Academy

Foreign Member of the (1919)

Royal Society of London

President of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences President (1919 – 1921)

(1922)

Lavoisier Medal

Le Blanc Medal (1922)

Honorary Fellow of the (1923)

Royal Society of Edinburgh

Member of the

International Atomic Weights Committee

Theodore Richards Medal (1932, awarded posthumously)

Richards, Theodore W.; Forbes, George Shannon (1906). . Carnegie Institution Report. Carnegie Institution of Washington: 1–68. theodore richards atomic.

"Energy Changes Involved in the Dilution of Zinc and Cadmium Amalgams"

. Washington: Carnagie Institution of Washington. 1910.

Determinations of atomic weights

Richards, Theodore W. (1913). . Harvard University Press. theodore richards.

The Scientific Work of Morris Loeb

Richards, Theodore W. (1915). . Journal of the American Chemical Society. 37 (7). American Chemical Society: 1643–1656. doi:10.1021/ja02172a001. PMC 1090843. PMID 16576032.

"Concerning the Compressibilities of the Elements, and Their Relations to Other Properties"

Mass spectrometry

Jöns Jakob Berzelius

Farrington Daniels

Gilbert Newton Lewis

Jean Stas

Theodore W. Richards House

Conant, James Bryant (1974). . Biographical Memoirs. National Academy of Sciences (U.S.). Vol. 44. pp. 251–286.

"Theodore William Richards"

Huddleston, John Henry (1907). . New York. pp. 132–133.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Secretary's Report: Harvard Class of 1886

on Nobelprize.org including the Nobel Lecture, December 6, 1919 Atomic Weights

Theodore William Richards

Theodore Richards Medal