Stanford
Moore was born in 1913 in Chicago, Illinois, and grew up in Nashville, Tennessee,
where his father was a member of the faculty of the School of Law of Vanderbilt
University. His developmental years were in a home environment which made the
pursuit of knowledge an eagerly adopted undertaking. He had the opportunity
to attend a high school administered by the George Peabody College for Teachers
in Nashville. A skilled teacher of science, R.O. Beauchamp, kindled an interest
in chemistry. Moore entered Vanderbilt University undecided between a career
in chemistry or aeronautical engineering. The courses which he took in the engineering
school presaged a concern for instrumentation. But a gifted professor of organic
chemistry, Arthur Ingersoll, succeeded in presenting the study of molecular
architecture as an even more appealing discipline. Moore graduated from Vanderbilt
(B.A. 1935, summa cum laude ) with a major in chemistry. The faculty
recommended him for a Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation Fellowship which
took him to the University of Wisconsin where he received his Ph.D. in organic
chemistry in 1938.
His thesis research was in biochemistry in the laboratory of Karl Paul Link.
The first lessons that the young graduate student received from the skilled
hands of his professor were in the microanalytical methods of Pregl for the
determination of C, H, and N; Link had recently returned from Europe where he
had studied in the laboratory of Fritz Pregl in Graz. This training from Link
in microchemistry was especially valuable for a student who was later to be
concerned with the quantitative analysis of proteins. Moore's thesis was on
the characterization of carbohydrates as benzimidazole derivatives. The experience
of bringing that work from the bench to the printed page under Link's guidance
marked Moore's transition from a student to a productive scholar.
Karl Paul Link was a friend of Max Bergmann, who had recently arrived from Germany
to lead a laboratory at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New
York. Through that friendship, Moore was encouraged to join the Bergmann Laboratory
in 1939, which was an internationally renowned center of research on the chemistry
of proteins and enzymes. During Emil Fischer's last years Max Bergmann had been
his senior research associate, and Bergmann had attracted to Rockefeller a group
of versatile chemists who maintained a tradition of innovative research and
high productivity. After nearly three valuable years in such company, which
included William H. Stein, the advent of World War II drew Moore out of the
laboratory to serve as a junior administrative officer in Washington for academic
and industrial chemical projects administered by the Office of Scientific Research
Development. At the close of the war, he was on duty with the Operational Research
Section attached to the Headquarters of the United States Armed Forces in the
Pacific Ocean Area, Hawaii.
During the war years, the situation at the Rockefeller Institute had changed.
The untimely death of Max Bergmann pics Biography Moore animals with Stanford - xxx in teen Moore - pre Biography underwear boy Stanford Stanford Moore - Трансформатор ТМ Biography Hyundai Подиумы GetZ - Moore Stanford Renault Accent универсальные Biography Logan 1944 Moore family Stanford stories incest - Biography had - Biography Moore rape gun Stanford fantasy brought to a with Stanford animals Moore - xxx pics Biography close the major
chapter in biochemistry which the contributions of his laboratory comprised.
Moore's decision to return to Rockefeller was influenced by Herbert Gasser,
then the Director of The Rockefeller Institute, who offered to give modest space
to Moore and Stein to pursue the theme of research which they had begun with
Bergmann or any new lines of investigation that appealed to them. Thus began
the collaboration that led to the development of quantitative chromatographic
methods for amino acid analysis, their automation, and the utilization of such
techniques, in cooperation with younger associates, in the researches in protein
chemistry summarized in the Nobel Lecture by Moore and Stein.
The investigations were conducted in an atmosphere at Rockefeller that encouraged
interdepartmental cooperation and international consultation that would expedite
research. Interludes included Moore's tenure of the Francqui Chair at the University
of Brussels in 1950, where, at the generous invitation of E.J. Bigwood, a laboratory
of amino acid analysis was organized in the School of Medicine. Moore had the
opportunity to round out the year in Europe with six months in England at the
University of Cambridge where he shared part of a laboratory with Frederick
Sanger during the time of the pioneering studies on insulin. In 1968, Moore
was a Visiting Professor of Health Sciences at the Vanderbilt University School
of Medicine.
Memberships and Activities
American Society of Biological Chemists (Treasurer, 1956-59; Editorial
Board, 1950-60; President, 1966), American Chemical Society, hon. member Belgian
Biochemical Society, foreign correspondent Belgian Royal Academy of Medicine,
Biochemical Society (Great Britain), U.S. National Academy of Sciences (Chairman,
Section of Biochemistry, 1970), American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Harvey
Society, Chairman of Panel on Proteins of the Committee on Growth of the National
Research Council (1947-49), Secretary of the Commission on Proteins of the International
Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (1953-57), Chairman of the Organizing Committee
for the Sixth International Congress of Biochemistry (1964), President of the
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (1970).
Honors
Docteur honoris causa from the Faculty of Medicine of the University
of Brussels (1954) and from the University of Paris (1964). Award shared with
William H. Stein: American Chemical Society Award in Chromatography and Electrophoresis,
1964; Richards Medal of the American Chemical Society, 1972; Linderstrom-Lang
Medal, Copenhagen, 1972.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1972, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1973
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
 
Stanford Moore died on August 23, 1982.