Howard Florey

@Pharmacologists, Family and Life

Howard Florey was an eminent Australian pathologist who is credited for making penicillin available to the world

Sep 24, 1898

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 24, 1898
  • Died on: February 21, 1968
  • Nationality: Australian
  • Famous: Pathologists, Pharmacologists, Physicians, Pathologists, Pharmacologists
  • Spouses: Dr Margaret Jennings (1967–1968), Ethel (1926–1966)
  • Discoveries / Inventions:
    • Discovery Of Penicillin's Properties
  • Birth Place: Adelaide, Australia

Howard Florey born at

Adelaide, Australia

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Birth Place

He first met Ethel while the two were studying at the University of Adelaide. The two eventually married in 1926. Ethel studied medicine and went on to become a surgeon and scientist. She assisted her husband in the latter’s penicillin research team. The couple was blessed with a daughter and a son.

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Personal Life

Following his first wife’s death in 1966, he tied the nuptials for a second time with lab assistant Dr Margaret Jennings. Their marital life did not last long as Florey died seven months later.

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Personal Life

He breathed his last on February 21, 1968 at Oxford, United Kingdom due to heart attack. He was honoured with a memorial service at Westminster Abbey, London.

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Personal Life

Howard Walter Florey was born on September 24, 1898 at Adelaide, South Australia to Joseph and Bertha Mary Florey. He was the youngest of the eight children born to the couple.

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Childhood & Early Life

Academically brilliant, he completed his preliminary education from Kyre College Preparatory School before enrolling at the St. Peter's Collegiate School, Adelaide for higher studies.

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Childhood & Early Life

Following this, he gained admission at the Adelaide University in 1917. After four years of studies, he graduated with a degree in MBBS in 1921. His academic brilliance and strong aptitude for learning earned him a Rhodes scholarship to Magdalen College, Oxford. In 1924, he graduated with a degree in BA and MA.

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Childhood & Early Life

Upon completing his course from Magdalen College, Oxford, he moved to Cambridge enrolling therein as a John Lucas Walker Student. In 1925, he shifted to United States upon gaining a Rockefeller Travelling Fellowship.

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Childhood & Early Life

Returning to Cambridge in 1926, he studied under Fellowship at Gonville and Caius College and subsequently in 1927, gained his PhD from the University of Cambridge. Meanwhile, he also was bestowed with the Freedom Research Fellowship at the London Hospital.

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Childhood & Early Life

Immediately after completing his Doctorate degree, he gained appointment as Huddersfield Lecturer in Special Pathology at Cambridge. He continued in the profile for four years before taking up the Joseph Hunter Chair of Pathology at the University of Sheffield in 1931.

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Career

In 1935, he gave up his chair at Sheffield to return to Oxford wherein he filled in the position of the Professor of Pathology and Fellow of Lincoln College.

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Career

It was while working with Ernst Boris Chain and Norman Heatley in 1938 that he first read about Alexander Fleming’s paper, which gave details about the antibacterial effects of Penicillium notatum mould, which the latter had fortuitously discovered in 1928 when it developed on some germ culture plates.

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Career

Working along with Chain and Heatley, he conducted a series of research, investigating the properties of the naturally occurring antibacterial substances.

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Career

Initially the duo was interested in Lysozome, an antibacterial substance found in human tears and saliva, but this did not remain for long as they moved to finding out in details about antibiotics.

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Career

In his lifetime, he became honorary member of many learned societies and academies in the field of medicine and biology. In 1941, he was elected as the member of the Royal Society. Seventeen years later, in 1958, he became its president. He was appointed as Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, and later Royal Australian College of Physicians.

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Awards & Achievements

In 1944, he was bestowed with the honor of being appointed as Knight Bachelor.

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Awards & Achievements

In 1945, he shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine along with Ernst Boris Chain and Alexander Fleming for jointly discovering and developing the antibiotic properties of the mould that makes Penicillin.

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Awards & Achievements

In 1962, he took up the position of the Provost of The Queen’s College, Oxford. It was during his term as the Provost that the college inaugurated a new residential building in his name.

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Awards & Achievements

In 1965, he was appointed as life peer. Subsequently, he became Baron Florey of Adelaide in the State of South Australia and Commonwealth of Australia and of Marston in the County of Oxford. Same year, he was appointed as the Companion of The Order of Merit.

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Awards & Achievements