Record

Authorised form of nameHuxley; Hugh Esmor (1924 - 2013); physiologist
Dates1924 - 2013
NationalityBritish
Place of birth37 Grange Mount, Birkenhead, England, United Kingdom
Date of birth25 February 1924
Place of deathWoods Hole on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, United States of America
Date of death25 July 2013
DatesAndPlacesPlace of marraige: Wayland, Massachusetts, United States of America
Memorial meeting: Woods Hole, Massachusetts, United States of America (25 August 2013)
OccupationPhysiologist
Research fieldBiology
Physiology
ActivityEducation:
Park High School, Birkenhead; Christ's College, Cambridge 1948 (his studies were interrupted beween 1943 and 1947 by service as radar officerin RAF Bomber Command); PhD 1952; Cambridge ScD 1964
Career:
Research student at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Unit for Molecular Biology; Commonwealth Fund fellow, biology department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1952-1954); research associate, biophysics department, University College, London (1956); scientific staff of the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambrdige (1962-1987); later joint head (with Aaron Klug) of the structural studies division (1975); then director (1977); fellow of King's College (1962-1967); fellow of Churchill College (1967-1987); retired (1997); died of a heart attack.
Honours:
MBE 1948
Memberships:
Membership categoryFellow
Date of election24/03/1960
Age at election36
ProposerJohn Carew Eccles
John William Sutton Pringle
Archibald Vivian Hill
John Zachary Young
Dorothy Mary Moyle Needham
Max Ferdinand Perutz
Rothschild
William Albert Hugh Rushton
Alan Lloyd Hodgkin
Howard Katz
RSActivityRoyal Society roles:
Council: 1973-1975, 1984-1985
Medals and prizes:
Royal Medal 1977; Copley Medal 1997
Lectures:
Croonian 1970
RelationshipsParents: Thomas Hugh Huxley (1887–1968), sorting clerk and telegraphist, and Olwen, née Roberts (1890–1963)
Spouse: (m.1966) Frances Fripp
Children: Olwen (b. 1970).
Stepchildren: One daughter and two sons.
PublishedWorksRCN R79312
OtherInfoDistinguished for his work on the fine structure of muscle and the mechanism of contraction.
By combining X-ray diffraction, electron-microscopic and optical studies he obtained very important information on the ultra-structure of muscle fibrils and the localization of their chemical constituents.
Produced convincing evidence for a new theory of contraction, of which he is one of the originators, according to which muscular shortening is brought about by a sliding motion of two discrete arrays of protein filaments.
Prominent supporter of the British Humanist Association and outspoken against creationism, concerned to ensure it was was not taught in state-supported schools following the decentralizing education reforms of the Labour government after 1997.
SourceDNB
References:
R A Crowther, 'Viruses and the development of quantitative biological electron microscopy' in NR 2004 vol 58 pp 65-81
Virtual International Authority Filehttp://viaf.org/viaf/3878895
CodeNA4244
Archives associated with this Fellow
RefNoTitleDate
IM/002341Huxley, Hugh Esmor1997
GLB/65/47/180Brown to H E Huxley, Laboratory of Molecular Biology, University Postgraduate Medical School, Cambridge5 December 1963
EC/1960/14Huxley, Hugh Esmor: certificate of election to the Royal Society
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