Francis Harry Compton Crick – Biography
Francis Harry Compton Crick was born on
June 8th, 1916, at Northampton, England, being the elder child of
Harry Crick and Annie Elizabeth Wilkins. He has one brother, A. F.
Crick, who is a doctor in New Zealand.
Crick was educated at
Northampton Grammar School and Mill Hill School, London. He studied
physics at University
College, London, obtained a B.Sc. in 1937, and started research
for a Ph.D. under Prof E. N. da C. Andrade, but this was interrupted
by the outbreak of war in 1939. During the war he worked as a
scientist for the British Admiralty, mainly in connection with
magnetic and acoustic mines. He left the Admiralty in 1947 to study
biology.
Supported by a studentship from the Medical Research
Council and with some financial help from his family, Crick went
to Cambridge and worked at the Strangeways Research Laboratory. In
1949 he joined the Medical Research Council Unit headed by M. F.
Perutz of which he has been a member ever since. This Unit was
for many years housed in the Cavendish Laboratory Cambridge, but in 1962 moved
into a large new building - the Medical Research
Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology - on the New Hospital
site. He became a research student for the second time in 1950,
being accepted as a member of Caius College, Cambridge, and obtained a Ph.D. in
1954 on a thesis entitled «X-ray diffraction: polypeptides and
proteins».
During the academic year 1953-1954 Crick was on
leave of absence at the Protein Structure Project of the Brooklyn
Polytechnic in Brooklyn, New York. He has also lectured at Harvard, as a
Visiting Professor, on two occasions, and has visited other
laboratories in the States for short periods.
In 1947 Crick
knew no biology and practically no organic chemistry or
crystallography, so that much of the next few years was spent in
learning the elements of these subjects. During this period,
together with W. Cochran and V. Vand he worked out the general
theory of X-ray diffraction by a helix, and at the same time as L.
Pauling and R. B. Corey, suggested that the alpha-keratin
pattern was due to alpha-helices coiled round each other.
A
critical influence in Crick's career was his friendship, beginning
in 1951, with J. D.
Watson, then a young man of 23, leading in 1953 to the proposal
of the double-helical structure for DNA and the replication scheme.
Crick and Watson subsequently suggested a general theory for the
structure of small viruses.
Crick in collaboration with A.
Rich has proposed structures for polyglycine II and collagen and
(with A. Rich, D. R. Davies, and J. D.Watson) a structure for
polyadenylic acid.
In recent years Crick, in collaboration
with S. Brenner, has concentrated more on biochemistry and genetics
leading to ideas about protein synthesis (the «adaptor hypothesis»),
and the genetic code, and in particular to work on acridine-type
mutants.
Crick was made an F.R.S. in 1959. He was awarded
the Prix Charles Leopold Meyer of the French Academy of Sciences in
1961, and the Award of Merit of the Gairdner Foundation in 1962.
Together with J. D. Watson he was a Warren Triennial Prize Lecturer
in 1959 and received a Research Corporation Award in 1962. With J.
D. Watson and M. H.
F. Wilkins he was presented with a Lasker Foundation Award in
1960. In 1962 he was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences, and a Fellow of University College, London. He was
a Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge, in 1960-1961, and is
now a non-resident Fellow of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, San Diego,
California.
In 1940 Crick married Ruth Doreen Dodd. Their
son, Michael F. C. Crick is a scientist. They were divorced in 1947.
In 1949 Crick married Odile Speed. They have two daughters,
Gabrielle A. Crick and Jacqueline M. T. Crick. The family lives in a
house appropriately called «The Golden Helix», in which Crick likes
to find his recreation in conversation with his friends.
From
Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962.
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