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Papers of Rosalind Franklin Added to "Profiles in Science"


  • Date:   7 Feb 2007 22:28:04 -0800
  • To:  sthc-l@lists.ucla.edu
  • From:   Russell A. Johnson   < rjohnson AT library.ucla.edu >
  • Subject:   Papers of Rosalind Franklin Added to "Profiles in Science"
  • Message-ID:   E541E3451B5BE94A9AFB04153A3484B903F29BA4@EM2.ad.ucla.edu

Forwarded to STHC-L (Science, Technology and Health Care Archives Internet Forum) 
and ALHHS-L (Archivists and Librarians in the History of the Health Sciences) 
from ARCHIVES. 

Russell Johnson 
STHC-L administrator 

rjohnson@library.ucla.edu 


From: Gregory Pike [mailto:pikeg@mail.nlm.nih.gov]
Sent: Tue 2/6/2007 12:37 PM
To: The Archives & Archivists (A&A) List
Subject: [archives] Papers of Rosalind Franklin Added to "Profiles in Science" 
Papers of Rosalind Franklin Added to the National Library of Medicine's Profiles 
in Science Web site: 
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/news/press_releases/profiles_franklin_added07.html


National Institutes of Health
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 6, 2007
National Library of Medicine

The National Library of Medicine, a part of the National Institutes of 
Health, announces the release of an extensive selection from the papers 
of Rosalind Franklin, a chemist and crystallographer who did ground 
breaking work in shedding light on the structure of DNA, on its 
Profiles in Science website at http://www.profiles.nlm.nih.gov.

The online exhibit features correspondence, published articles, photos, 
lab notebooks, and reports from Franklin's files. An introductory exhibit 
section places Franklin's achievements in historical context. 
The Library, in collaboration with the Churchill Archives Center at 
Cambridge University, has digitized and made available over the World Wide 
Web a selection of the Franklin Papers for use by educators, researchers, 
and the public. This brings to 21 the number of notable researchers and 
public health officials whose personal and professional records are 
featured on the site.

Franklin began her scientific career analyzing the structure of coal and 
carbon during World War II, and became an internationally recognized 
expert in that field. For five years before her premature death, she 
did path-breaking research that elucidated the structure of plant viruses. 
Yet chemist and crystallographer Rosalind Franklin (1920-1958) is now best 
known for the research that occupied her briefly in between: the structure 
of DNA.

Early in 1953, when Francis Crick and James Watson were struggling to build 
an accurate theoretical model of the DNA molecule, it was Franklin's meticulous 
X-ray diffraction photos and analysis that gave them crucial clues to DNA's 
structure, and allowed them to win the race for the double helix. Franklin 
didn't know that there was a race going on, and she never knew that Crick 
and Watson had access to her then-unpublished data.

Soon after the discovery, Franklin finished her DNA work and moved on to 
another institution to study viruses. In 1962, four years after her untimely 
death from ovarian cancer, Crick and Watson received the Nobel Prize for 
their DNA model, still silent about Franklin's contributions. Watson's 
1968 memoir, The Double Helix, featured an unkind caricature of Franklin, 
and provoked outraged protests from her friends, family, and colleagues. 
Since then she has been recognized and celebrated for her DNA research, 
even becoming a feminist icon for some. Yet the DNA story often obscures 
her other brilliant work.

"Rosalind Franklin was a gifted experimental scientist who greatly expanded 
the application of X-ray crystallography to molecular biology. Her X-ray 
diffraction studies were essential to modeling complex biological molecules 
such as DNA and virus proteins," said Donald A. B. Lindberg, M.D., director 
of the National Library of Medicine.

Rosalind Elsie Franklin was born in London in 1920. She showed an early 
aptitude for math and science, and chose to pursue a scientific career 
while still in high school. She majored in physical chemistry at Cambridge 
University, graduating in 1941. After a one-year research fellowship at 
Cambridge, she became an assistant research officer at the British Coal 
Utilization Research Association. There she conducted original research 
into the micro-structure of different types of coals, to better account 
for variations in their permeability and other properties. In 1946 she 
took a research position at the Central Laboratory of the National 
Chemical Department in Paris, where she mastered X-ray crystallography, 
a technique for imaging molecular structures.

Franklin returned to England in 1951 to take a job at the now famous 
Randall Biophysics Unit at King's College, University of London. There 
she used X-ray diffraction to look at the structure of DNA, discovering 
that it could take two different forms, and coming close to determining 
its helical configuration. Misunderstandings and personality clashes 
kept her relatively isolated from her colleagues there. One colleague, 
Maurice Wilkins, was in regular contact with Watson and Crick at 
Cambridge, and showed them one of Franklin's X-ray diffraction photos, 
thus providing them crucial information about DNA structure.

In early 1953 Franklin left King's College for a more congenial post at 
Birkbeck College, University of London. At Birkbeck she assembled a 
talented research team and carried out X-ray diffraction studies of plant 
viruses, notably tobacco mosaic virus. Using samples contributed by virus 
laboratories in England, America, and Europe, Franklin discovered how the 
virus protein shells are structured and where the genetic material is 
located.

Profiles in Science was launched in September 1998 by the National Library 
of Medicine. Located in Bethesda, Maryland, the NLM is the world's 
largest library of the health sciences. For more information, visit 
the website at www.nlm.nih.gov.

###

Located in Bethesda, Maryland, the National Library of Medicine is the 
world's largest library of the health sciences. For more information, 
visit the Web site at http://www.nlm.nih.gov/.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's Medical Research 
Agency — includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the 
U. S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal 
agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational 
medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures 
for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and 
its programs, visit http://www.nlm.nih.gov/.

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