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Russell Henry Chittenden

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Doctoral advisor
  
Wilhelm Kuhne

Fields
  
Role
  
Chemist

Name
  
Russell Chittenden


Russell Henry Chittenden

Born
  
February 18, 1856New Haven, Connecticut (
1856-02-18
)

Institutions
  
Yale UniversityColumbia UniversityUnited States National Research Council

Died
  
December 26, 1943, New Haven, Connecticut, United States

Education
  
Books
  
The First Twenty‑five Years of t, The development of physiol, On Digestive Proteolysis

Similar People
  
Lafayette Mendel, Wilhelm Kuhne, George II of Great Britain, Simeon Eben Baldwin

Doctoral students
  
Lafayette Mendel

Russell Henry Chittenden (18 February 1856 – 26 December 1943) was an American physiological chemist. He conducted pioneering research in the biochemistry of digestion and nutrition.

Contents

Early life and education

He was born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1856, graduated from the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale in 1875, studied in Heidelberg in 1878-79, and received his doctorate at Yale in physiological chemistry in 1880. He was of English ancestry, his first ancestor in America being Major William Chittenden, an officer in the English army, who, having resigned, came to America from Cranbrook, Kent, with his wife, Joanne Sheaffe, in 1639, and settled in Guilford Connecticut. Ancestors of the professor on both his father's and his mother's side fought in the Revolutionary War.

Career

He was professor of physiological chemistry at Yale from 1882 to 1922. He was director of the Sheffield Scientific School from 1898-1922. He was also professor of physiology at the Yale School of Medicine starting in 1900. From 1898 to 1903 he was also a lecturer on physiological chemistry at Columbia University, New York. He was a founding member of the American Physiological Society in 1887 and served as its president from 1895 to 1904. He was a member of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences.

He was the author of Digestive Proteolysis and Physiological Economy in Nutrition (New York, 1905). During World War I, Professor Chittenden was a member of the Advisory Committee on Food Utilization and also a member of the Executive Committee of the National Research Council. He is often called the "father of American biochemistry." His home in New Haven is a National Historic Landmark.

References

Russell Henry Chittenden Wikipedia


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