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Encyclopedia > Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins

Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins (December 15, 1916October 5, 2004) was a physicist who mainly worked in the field of X-rays.


Wilkins was born in Pongaroa, north Wairarapa, New Zealand, but his family moved to England when he was six. He studied physics at St. John's College, Cambridge, then in 1940 received his Ph.D. in physics at the University of Birmingham. During World War II he worked on the Manhattan Project at the University of California, Berkeley for 2 years before returning to King's College, London. "After the war I wondered what I would do, as I was very disgusted with the dropping of two bombs on civilian centres in Japan," he told Britain's Encounter radio programme in 1999.


At King's College he pursued, among other things X-ray diffraction work. It was his work, along with that of his colleague Rosalind Franklin that led James D. Watson and Francis Crick to deduce the structure of DNA in 1953; he went on to prove that the double-helical structure they proposed was indeed correct.


He married Patricia Ann Chidgey in 1959. They had two children, Sarah and George.


In 1960 he was presented with the American Public Health Association's Albert Lasker Award, and in 1962 he was made a Companion of the British Empire. Also in 1962 he shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Watson and Crick. Wilkins' reputation was untarnished although it was he who obtained Rosalind Franklin's x-ray images without permission to help deduce the structure of DNA. Franklin's name was excluded from the authors of the famous paper in the esteemed science journal Nature. Many in the molecular biology community have long felt that since Franklin died early, and Wilkins was much less of a publicity-seeker, that Watson and Crick have in the popular mind overshadowed Wilkins and Franklin to an undeserved degree. For instance, while most textbooks describe the double helix as the "W-C" (for "Watson-Crick") model of DNA, there is a longstanding tradition at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory of referring to it as the "W-C-M-F" model with the M for "Maurice" and the F for "Franklin."


He published his autobiography, "The Third Man of the Double Helix," in 2003. He died a year later. At the time of his death, he was still a member of King's College London staff and remained an ardent campaigner against nuclear weapons.


External links

  • Biography (from Nobel) (http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1962/wilkins-bio.html)
  • Biography (from the New Zealand Edge) (http://www.nzedge.com/heroes/wilkins.html)
  • Obituary from King's College London (http://www.kcl.ac.uk/phpnews/wmview.php?ArtID=690)
  • Biography (from University of Canterbury) (http://www.phil.canterbury.ac.nz/HPS/halloffame/wilkins.html)
  • Story of Watson, Crick, Wilkins and Franklin (from Chemical Heritage Foundation) (http://www.chemheritage.org/EducationalServices/chemach/ppb/cwwf.html)
  • List of classic papers in Nature on DNA structure (http://www.nature.com/nature/dna50/archive.html)
  • DNA: The King's Story detailing Wilkins' involvement in elucidating the structure of DNA (http://www.kcl.ac.uk/depsta/iss/archives//dna/)
  • Death of Maurice Wilkins (http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3057553a11,00.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Wilkins (1629 words)
Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins CBE FRS (December 15, 1916 – October 5, 2004) was a New Zealand-born British physicist and Nobel Laureate who contributed research in the fields of phosphorescence, radar, isotope separation, and X-ray diffraction.
Wilkins returned to the laboratory expecting that Franklin would be his collaborator and that they would work together on the DNA project that he had started.
Wilkins got new DNA, but it was not as good as the original sample he had used in 1950 and which Franklin continued to use.
Maurice Wilkins - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1996 words)
Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins (December 15, 1916 – October 5, 2004) was a New Zealand born physicist and Nobel Laureate who contributed research in the fields of phosphorescence, radar, isotope separation, and X-ray diffraction.
Wilkins returned to the laboratory expecting that Franklin would be his collaborator and that they would work together on the DNA project that he had started.
Wilkins and others went on to repeat and extend much of Franklin's work to prove that the double-helical structure was indeed correct, a process that took many years.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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