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Reginald Ruggles Gates

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Alma mater
  
McGill University

Name
  
Reginald Gates


Education
  
McGill University

Notable awards
  
Royal Society

Reginald Ruggles Gates

Born
  
May 1, 1882 (
1882-05-01
)

Fields
  
Spermatophytes, Oenothera

Author abbrev. (botany)
  
The standard author abbreviation R.R.Gates is used to indicate this individual as the author when citing a botanical name.

Spouse
  
Marie Stopes (1911-1914, annulled) Jennie Williams (1929, dissolved) Laura Greer (1955-)

Died
  
August 12, 1962, London, United Kingdom

People also search for
  
Marie Stopes, Harry Stopes-Roe

Books
  
The Melanesian Dwarf Tri, Human Ancestry from a Ge, Taxonomy and Genetics, The mutation factor in e

Reginald Ruggles Gates (May 1, 1882 – August 12, 1962), was a Canadian-born geneticist who published widely in the fields of botany and eugenics.

Contents

Reginald Ruggles Gates Reginald Ruggles Gates Wikipedia

Early life

Reginald Ruggles Gates was born on May 1, 1882 near Middleton, Nova Scotia. He had a twin sister named Charlotte.

Gates graduated with first class honours in science from Mount Allison University in 1903. Further studies toward a second B.Sc. from McGill University were interrupted by a year in which he returned to his childhood home in Middleton, Nova Scotia, where he served as vice-principal in a local school. He completed this second B.Sc. in 1905, focusing on botany, before accepting a Senior Fellowship at University of Chicago where he completed his Ph.D. on heredity in Oenothera lata (evening primrose) in 1908.

Career

Gates did botanical work in Missouri in 1910. Later, he was a Professor of Biology at King's College London. He was known for his studies of Oenothera and other plants.

Gates was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1931. His nomination reads

Additionally, Gates was a eugenicist. In 1923, he wrote Heredity and Eugenics. He maintained his ideas on race and eugenics long after World War II, into the era when these were deemed anachronistic. He was a founder of Mankind Quarterly and the International Association for the Advancement of Ethnology and Eugenics. He was a strong opponent of interracial marriage and, according to A.S. Winston, "argued that races were separate species."

Personal life

In 1911, Gates married Marie Stopes, but the marriage was annulled in 1914. In 1955, he married Laura Greer.

Death and legacy

Gates died on August 12, 1962 and was buried in Brookwood Cemetery in Surrey. He is memorialized by the Ruggles Gates Award at Mount Allison University.

Publications

  • Heredity and Eugenics. (1923). Constable & Co Limited. London, Sydney, Bombay.
  • Heredity in Man. (1929). Constable & Company.
  • A botanist in the Amazon Valley. (1927). H. F. & G. Witherby.
  • Human Genetics. (1946). The Macmillan company (2 volumes).
  • "Racial elements in the aborigines of Queensland, Australia". (Jan. 1960). Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Anthropologie. Bd. 50. H. 2. pp. 150–166.
  • References

    Reginald Ruggles Gates Wikipedia