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Letters of William Thomas Astbury to Professor Albert Charles Chibnall

Archive File: MS 620

Details

Type of record: Archive

Title: Letters of William Thomas Astbury to Professor Albert Charles Chibnall

Level: File

Classmark: MS 620

Creator(s): Astbury, William Thomas (1898-1961)

Date(s): 1933-1942

Language: English

Size and medium: 147 ff. (photocopy) in one envelope

Persistent link: https://explore.library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections-explore/5177

Description

The correspondence comprises approximately 90 letters.

Biography or history

William Thomas Astbury was born at Longton, Stoke-on-Trent and educated at Longton High School and Jesus College, Cambridge, 1917, 1919-1921. He became a Demonstrator in Physics at University College, London, and worked there as assistant to Sir William Bragg, 1921-1923, and at the Royal Institution, London, 1923-1928. In 1922 he married Frances Gould. He was appointed Lecturer, 1928-1937, and then Reader, 1937-1945, in Textile Physics at Leeds University, where he became the first Professor of Biomolecular Structure at Leeds, 1945-1961. His work, mainly supported by the Rockefeller Foundation, was primarily on the structure of biological tissues and proteins, using X-ray diffraction analysis and electron microscopy. At one time Astbury's laboratory at Leeds was at the forefront of electron microscopy studies in Britain, and he was credited with the invention of the term 'molecular biology'. Astbury served on the editorial boards of many journals (including, from its inception,
'Biochimica et Biophysica Acta') and was a founder member of the Electron Microscopy Group of the Institute of Physics. He was a consultant to several industrial firms, such as British Celanese, Courtaulds and Imperial Chemical Industries. He was elected FRS in 1940 (Croonian Lecture 1945)

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