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Sir
Alexander Fleming
1881-1955
Sir
Alexander Fleming was born at Lochfield near Darvel in Ayrshire,
Scotland on August 6th, 1881. He attended Louden Moor School,
Darvel School, and Kilmarnock Academy before moving to London
where he attended the Polytechnic. He spent four years in a
shipping office before entering St. Mary's Medical School, London
University. He qualified with distinction in 1906 and began
research at St. Mary's under Sir Almroth Wright, a pioneer in
vaccine therapy. He gained M.B., B.S., (London), with Gold Medal
in 1908, and became a lecturer at St. Mary's until 1914. He
served throughout World War I as a captain in the Army Medical
Corps, being mentioned in dispatches, and in 1918 he returned
to St.Mary's. He was elected Professor of the School in 1928
and Emeritus Professor of Bacteriology, University of London
in 1948. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1943
and knighted in 1944.
Early
in his medical life, Fleming became interested in the natural
bacterial action of the blood and in antiseptics. He was able
to continue his studies throughout his military career and on
demobilization he settled to work on antibacterial substances
which would not be toxic to animal tissues. In 1921, he discovered
in «tissues and secretions» an important bacteriolytic
substance which he named Lysozyme. About this time, he devised
sensitivity titration methods and assays in human blood and
other body fluids, which he subsequently used for the titration
of penicillin. In 1928, while working on influenza virus, he
observed that mould had developed accidently on a staphylococcus
culture plate and that the mould had created a bacteria-free
circle around itself. He was inspired to further experiment
and he found that a mould culture prevented growth of staphylococci,
even when diluted 800 times. He named the active substance penicillin.
Sir
Alexander wrote numerous papers on bacteriology, immunology
and chemotherapy, including original descriptions of lysozyme
and penicillin. They have been published in medical and scientific
journals.
Fleming,
a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons (England), 1909, and
a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians (London), 1944,
has gained many awards. They include Hunterian Professor (1919),
Arris and Gale Lecturer (1929) and Honorary Gold Medal (1946)
of the Royal College of Surgeons; Williams Julius Mickle Fellowship,
University of London (1942); Charles Mickle Fellowship, University
of Toronto (1944); John Scott Medal, City Guild of Philadelphia
(1944); Cameron Prize, University of Edinburgh (1945); Moxon
Medal, Royal College of Physicians (1945); Cutter Lecturer,
Harvard University (1945); Albert Gold Medal, Royal Society
of Arts (1946); Gold Medal, Royal Society of Medicine (1947);
Medal for Merit, U.S.A. (1947); and the Grand Cross of Alphonse
X the Wise, Spain (1948).
He
served as President of the Society for General Microbiology,
he was a Member of the Pontifical Academy of Science and Honorary
Member of almost all the medical and scientific societies of
the world. He was Rector of Edinburgh University during 1951-1954,
Freeman of many boroughs and cities and Honorary Chief Doy-gei-tau
of the Kiowa tribe. He was also awarded doctorate, honoris causa,
degrees of almost thirty European and American Universities.
In
1915, Fleming married Sarah Marion McElroy of Killala, Ireland,
who died in 1949. Their son is a general medical practitioner.
Fleming
married again in 1953, his bride was Dr. Amalia Koutsouri-Voureka,
a Greek colleague at St. Mary's.
In
his younger days he was a keen member of the Territorial Army
and he served from 1900 to 1914 as a private in the London Scottish
Regiment.
Dr
Fleming died on March 11th in 1955 and is buried in St. Paul's
Cathedral.
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