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Watson, James D., 1928-

 Person

Biography

James Watson was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1928. He received a B.S. in 1947 from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in 1950 from Indiana University, both in zoology. Following a National Research Fellowship in Copenhagen, he conducted research on a National Foundation of Infantile Paralysis Fellowship at the University of Cambridge, England, where he discovered the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) with Francis Crick. Watson and Crick proposed that the DNA molecule takes the shape of a double helix, an elegantly simple structure that resembles a gently twisted ladder. This research emphasized a concept central to the emerging field of molecular biology: understanding the structure of a molecule can give clues about how it functions. Watson, Crick, and Maurice Wilkins at King's College in London, who confirmed the DNA structure using X-ray crystallography, shared the 1962 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for their discovery.

After his tenure at Cambridge, Watson spent two years at the California Institute of Technology. He joined the Harvard faculty in 1955 and became Professor in 1961. In 1968, while employed at Harvard, he became director of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Watson resigned from Harvard in 1976 to become full-time director of CSHL. Under his direction, the renowned but financially endangered institution was revitalized. Watson steered the laboratory into the field of tumor virology, from which emerged our present understanding of oncogenes (cancer genes) and the molecular basis of cancer. From 1994-2003 he was President of CSHL, and Chancellor from 2003-2007. He retired in 2007 and served as Chancellor Emeritus of CSHL from 2007-2018.

In 1988 Watson was appointed Associate Director for Human Genome Research of the National Institutes of Health and, in 1989, Director of the National Center for Human Genome Research at the NIH. In 1992, Watson resigned his position at NCHGR after successfully launching a worldwide effort to map and sequence the human genome.

James D. Watson has received many honors, including the John Collins Warren Prize of Massachusetts General Hospital (1959), the Eli Lilly Award in Biochemistry (1960), the Albert Lasker Prize, awarded by the American Public Health Association (1960), the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1962), the John J. Carty Gold Medal of the National Academy of Sciences (1971), the Presidential Medal of Freedom (1977), the Copley Medal of the British Royal Society (1993), the Charles A. Dana Distinguished Achievement Award in Health (1994), Lomonosov Medal, Russian Academy of Sciences (1995), the National Medal of Science awarded by the National Science Foundation (1997), the University of Chicago Medal (1998), the New York Academy of Medicine Award (1999), the University College London Prize (2000), the Liberty Medal Award from the City of Philadelphia (2000), the Benjamin Franklin Medal for Distinguished Achievement in the Sciences (2001), an Honorary Knighthood of the British Empire (2002), the Gairdner Foundation Award of Merit (2002), the Lotos Medal of Merit (2004), the Othmer Medal (2005), the Karl Landsteiner Memorial Award (2006), the Gregor Mendel Medal (2008), the Gold Medal of Lublin Medical University (2008), the Gold Medal of Jagiellonian University (2008), the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Award (2008), the Capo d’Orlando Prize (2009), and the Prizvanie (Vocation) Award (2010).

His memberships include the American Society of Biological Chemists (1958) and the American Association for Cancer Research (1972). He holds honorary affiliations with the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1958), the National Academy of Sciences (1962), the Danish Academy of Arts and Sciences (1963), Clare College, Cambridge University (1968), the American Philosophical Society (1977), Athenaeum, London (1980), the Royal Society, London (1981), the Academy of Sciences, Russia (1989), Oxford University (1994), National Academy of Sciences, Ukraine (1995), University College Galway, the Society of Saints and Scholars (1995), Institute of Biology, London (1995), the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (1996), the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1999), the National Academy of Sciences, India (2001), the International Academy of Humanism (2004), and the Royal Irish Academy (2005)

Dr. Watson has received honorary degrees from 35 universities and is the author of numerous books, including: The Molecular Biology of the Gene (1965, 1970, 1976, 1987), The Double Helix (1968), The DNA Story (1981), The Molecular Biology of the Cell (1983, 1989, 1994), Recombinant DNA: A Short Course (1983, 1992), A Passion for DNA (2000), Genes, Girls, and Gamow: After the Double Helix (2002), DNA: The Secret of Life (2003), Avoid Boring People: Lessons from a Life in Science (2007), and Father to Son: Truth, Reason, Decency (2014).

He is married to the former Elizabeth Lewis, with whom he has two sons, Rufus and Duncan.

Found in 227 Collections and/or Records:

40th Anniversary of DNA: James Watson, 1993-03-02

 File
Identifier: PO_089_Watson_James
Scope and Contents

James D. Watson speaks about the significane of the discovery of the structure of DNA at the 40th Anniversary of the discovery of the structure of DNA.

Dates: 1993-03-02

Aaron Klug, June 2005

 Item — Box AV02, miniDV: CSHL1091
Scope and Contents Aaron Klug, Nobel Prize winning chemist and biophysicist, is interviewed by Mila Pollock on June 17, 2005, at the Molecular Biology Laboratory of the Medical Research Council, in Cambridge, United Kingdom.Aaron Klug discusses the following in his interview: Scene 1. Becoming a scientist -- Scene 2. What it takes to be a scientist -- Scene 3. Zinc finger proteins: discovery and application -- Scene 4. Founding of the Sanger Centre and early involvement in genomics -- Scene 5. Gene...
Dates: June 2005

Alexander Rich, 2006-08-20

 Item — Multiple Containers
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The Oral History Collection contains interviews conducted with 200 scientists within the fields of molecular biology, genetics, and the life sciences between 1990 and 2024. The interviewees provide first-hand accounts of their experiences in the fields of modern biology, such as neuroscience, cancer, genetics, plant genetics, genomics, biotechnology and others, from the 1940s through the 2000s. The collection contains audio and video recordings, as well as transcripts of interviews....
Dates: 2006-08-20

Alfred Tissières, 2001-06-04

 Item — Multiple Containers
Scope and Contents Alfred Tissières, biologist, biochemist and geneticist, is interviewed by Mila Pollock and Jan Witkowski on June 4, 2001, at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, in Cold Spring Harbor, New York.Alfred Tissières discusses the following in his interview: Scene 1. Jim Watson -- Scene 2. The Molteno Institute, Cambridge, England -- Scene 3. Caltech -- Scene 4. Max Delbrück and Salvador Luria -- Scene 5. Return to Cambridge, England -- Scene 6. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts...
Dates: 2001-06-04

Amar Klar & Jeff Strathern, 2000-05-01

 Item — Multiple Containers
Scope and Contents Amar Klar and Jeff Strathern, leading yeast geneticists, are interviewed by Mila Pollock at the National Cancer Institute, in Frederick, Maryland.Amar Klar and Jeff Strathern discuss the following in their interview: Scene 1. Introduction -- Scene 2. Forming the Yeast Group at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory -- Scene 3. Amar Klar arriving at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory -- Scene 4. Experience working at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory -- Scene 5. Jeff Strathern arriving at Cold...
Dates: 2000-05-01

Ann Burgess, 2005-04-29

 Item — Box AV01, miniDV: CSHL1026
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The Oral History Collection contains interviews conducted with 200 scientists within the fields of molecular biology, genetics, and the life sciences between 1990 and 2024. The interviewees provide first-hand accounts of their experiences in the fields of modern biology, such as neuroscience, cancer, genetics, plant genetics, genomics, biotechnology and others, from the 1940s through the 2000s. The collection contains audio and video recordings, as well as transcripts of interviews....
Dates: 2005-04-29

Anna Marie Skalka, 2003-03-01

 Item — Box AV03, miniDV: CSHL1153
Scope and Contents Anna Marie Skalka, microbiologist, molecular biologist and geneticist, is interviewed by Mila Pollock on March 1, 2003 at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, in Cold Spring Harbor, New York.Scene 1. 2003 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory meeting: The biology of DNA -- Scene 2. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory: first visit -- Scene 3. Coming to work at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory -- Scene 4. Alfred Hershey -- Scene 5. Working with Alfred Hershey -- Scene 6. Alfred Hershey, mentor -- Scene...
Dates: 2003-03-01

Aravinda Chakravarti, 2003-05-31

 Item — Multiple Containers
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The Oral History Collection contains interviews conducted with 200 scientists within the fields of molecular biology, genetics, and the life sciences between 1990 and 2024. The interviewees provide first-hand accounts of their experiences in the fields of modern biology, such as neuroscience, cancer, genetics, plant genetics, genomics, biotechnology and others, from the 1940s through the 2000s. The collection contains audio and video recordings, as well as transcripts of interviews....
Dates: 2003-05-31

Aristides Patrinos, 2006-03-03

 Item — Multiple Containers
Scope and Contents Ari Patrinos, biologist and environmental scientist, is interviewed by Mila Pollock on March 3, 2006, at the J. Craig Venter Institute, in Rockville, Maryland.Ari Patrinos discusses the following in his interview: Scene 1. Synthetic Genomics, Inc. -- Scene 2. Becoming a scientist -- Scene 3. Road to the Department of Energy -- Scene 4. Switching fields in science -- Scene 5. Early involvement in the Human Genome Project -- Scene 6. Opposition to sequencing the human genome at the...
Dates: 2006-03-03

Additional filters:

Type
Archival Object 212
Collection 13
Unprocessed Material 2
 
Subject
Human Genome Project 34
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 28
Genomics 27
Human Genome--Patents 23
RNA 19
∨ more
DNA 15
Women in Science 15
Genetics 14
Religion and science 14
Science Study and teaching 14
Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology 12
RNA Tie Club 12
Travel 11
Congresses as Topic 10
Communication in science 9
Viruses 9
Correspondence 8
Molecular Biology 8
Bacteriophages 7
Biotechnology 7
Cold Spring Harbor (N.Y.) 6
DNA Replication 6
Manuscripts as Topic 6
Nobel Prizes 6
Caenorhabditis elegans 5
Cambridge (England) 5
Dinners and dining 5
Drosophila Genetics 5
Invitations 5
Membership 5
Speeches, addresses, etc. 5
Cancer 4
Cancer--Research 4
Celera Genomics 4
DNA, Recombinant 4
Genome 4
Grant Proposals 4
Human Genome Project--Moral and ethical aspects 4
Lectures and lecturing 4
Molecular biology--History. 4
Nobel Prize winners 4
Photographs 4
Proteins 4
Ribosomes 4
Sample requests 4
Amino Acids 3
Cancer Center Support Grant 3
Clippings (information artifacts) 3
DNA--Structure 3
Drosophila 3
Employment 3
Epigenetics 3
Experiments 3
Genetic Code 3
Genome Mapping and Sequencing 3
Genome, Human 3
Gift giving 3
Grants and funding 3
Housing 3
Nature and nurture 3
Personnel Selection 3
RNA interference 3
Retroviruses 3
Science Publishing 3
Transcription factors 3
X-ray crystallography 3
Advisory Committees 2
Annual Reports 2
Asilomar Conference on Recombinant DNA Molecules. 2
Australia 2
Bacterial genetics 2
Biochemistry 2
Biology--Education 2
California 2
California Institute of Technology 2
Cambridge (Mass.) 2
Carnegie Library, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (U.S.) 2
Cells 2
Centrifugation, Density gradient 2
Chicago (Ill.) 2
Cloning, Molecular 2
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Press 2
DNA Restriction Enzymes 2
Drosophila melanogaster 2
Escherichia coli 2
Financial Records 2
Fund raising 2
Galley Proofs 2
Genetics, Human. 2
Genetics--History. 2
Genetics--ethics. 2
Genome mapping -- Yeast 2
Genome sequencing and mapping 2
Government Regulation 2
Human genome 2
Immunology 2
Italy 2
Laurel Hollow (N.Y.) 2
Meetings 2
Messenger RNA. 2
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