 |
Heads
of the Department of Biology
| William
T. Sedgwick |
1889-1921 |
| Samuel
C. Prescott |
1921-1942 |
| Francis
O. Schmitt |
1942-1955 |
| Irwin
W. Sizer |
1957-1966 |
| Boris
Magasanik |
1966-1977 |
| Gene
M. Brown |
1977-1985 |
| Maurice
Fox |
1985-1989 |
| Richard
O. Hynes |
1989-1991 |
| Phillip
Sharp |
1991-1999 |
| Robert
T. Sauer |
1999-2004 |
| Chris
Kaiser |
2004- |
n
1871 a new course, Course VII, in natural history was established
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under Professors Samuel
Kneeland and Alpheus Watt. With the addition of William Thompson
Sedgwick in 1883, the program became known for its work in microbiology
and public health. At the same time, Sedgwick set up a curriculum,
Course VII-B, designed to train students planning to enter the medical
profession.
In
1889 a new Department of Biology replaced Course VII in natural
history; the new department not only included premedical training,
but also emphasized bacteriology and sanitary biology. Studies in
water supplies, food supplies, and bacteriology of foods led to
a change in the name of the department in 1911 to the Department
of Biology and Public Health. During this period Samuel Prescott's
collaboration with William L. Underwood led to the development of
procedures for the sterilization of canned foods which were basic
to the development of the canned foods industry.
In
1936 a committee composed of MIT President Karl T. Compton, Vice
President Vannevar Bush, and Professor John W. M. Bunker proposed
that MIT develop a new type of biology--biological engineering--which
would utilize basic knowledge of physics, mathematics, and chemistry,
as well as several fields of engineering. Training in public health
was abandoned in 1942 and the department name was changed to the
Department of Biology and Biological Engineering. As teaching and
research related to food continued to develop, a separate Department
of Food Technology was established in 1944, and the department's
name changed once again to the Department of Biology. The department
was reorganized in 1955 and molecular biology was further developed
with emphasis on biophysics, biochemistry, microbiology, and physiology-developmental
biology. A strong program for post-doctoral training of M.D.s as
well as Ph.D.s was developed.
In
1962 Francis O. Schmitt organized the Neurosciences Research Program,
which emphasized an understanding of brain function based on neurophysiology.
The program remained at MIT until 1982 when it moved to Rockefeller
University. As the research program continued to expand, a clinical
research center was established in 1964 to provide facilities for
faculty to conduct research with human patients and volunteers,
and in December 1965 a new center for life sciences was established
with the dedication of the Whitaker Building (building 56).
Periodic
reviews of the curriculum kept the programs current with new developments
in the discipline, and more classes in genetics and biochemistry
were added to the course in the late 1970s and 1980s. During the
1970s and the 1980s increased research in cell and molecular biology,
microbiology, and immunology resulted in the establishment of the
Center for Cancer Research (ca. 1972), first directed by Salvador
Luria, and in the late 1970s the Program in Health Sciences and
Technology, later the Whitaker College of Health Sciences and Technology.
In 1982 the Whitehead Institute of Biomedical Research was established
at MIT; first headed by David Baltimore, it greatly expanded the
number of faculty in the department and strengthened the research
program. In the late 1980s attention was focused on remedying the
department's space problems, and in 1994 a new biology building
opened (building 68), providing modern facilities for teaching and
research programs in human health and disease, cancer, and AIDS.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
December 1995
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