FEATURE:

Fred Basolo Medal for Outstanding Research in Inorganic Chemistry

More About Fred BasoloFred Basolo

The Fred Basolo Medal was established by the former students of Fred Basolo in appreciation for his contributions to inorganic chemistry at Northwestern University. Since Fred's arrival at Northwestern in 1946, a tradition was started that made the department one of the very best in inorganic chemistry in the U.S., a position it still maintains today.

Fred Basolo was born in Coello, Illinois in 1920 and received a B.Ed, at Southern Illinois Normal University. He then went to the University of Illinois where he received a Ph.D. with John C. Bailar, Jr. in 1943. After working on a classified military research project during WWII, he joined the faculty at Northwestern in 1946. In 1980, the University honored him with the Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison Professorship of Chemistry.

Internationally recognized for his original contributions to the syntheses and reaction mechanisms of transition-metal Werner complexes, Basolo did some of the seminal work in the developing fields of organometallic and bioinorganic chemistry. He was also a truly gifted teacher. Many of his former students occupy prominent academic and industrial positions. Basolo influenced students worldwide to study inorganic chemistry, and received the 1992 ACS Pimentel Award in Chemical Education. He published 400 scientific publications and four books.

Basolo's contributions to the profession of Chemistry were equally outstanding. He served as President of the American Chemical Society in 1983 and as Chairman of the Chemistry Section of AAAS in 1979. He was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Gordon Research Conferences and its chairman in 1976. Some of the many honors received by Basolo include membership in the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, foreign membership in the Italian Academy of Sciences Lincei, as well as the ACS Awards for Research and for Service in Inorganic Chemistry. He received the first Joseph Chatt Medal, the 1996 Willard Gibbs Medal, and was the 2001 Priestley Medalist of the ACS. The Fred Basolo Papers are available through the Northwestern University Archives.

Past Basolo Medalists

 

2011 Gregory J. Kubas Los Alamos National Laboratory
2010 Roald Hoffmann Cornell University
2009 Peter J. Stang University of Utah
2008 Robert H. Grubbs California Institute of Technology, 2005 Nobel Laureate
2007 Richard R. Schrock Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2005 Nobel Laureate
2006 Ivano Bertini University of Florence, Italy
2005 John E. Bercaw California Institute of Technology
2004 Malcolm Chisholm Ohio State University
2003 Daryle Busch University of Kansas
2002 Stephen J. Lippard Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2001 M. Frederick Hawthorne University of California, Los Angeles
2000 James P. Collman Stanford University
1999 Thomas J. Meyer University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
1998 Malcolm Green University of Oxford, UK
1997 Kenneth N. Raymond University of California, Berkely
1996 Richard H. Holm Harvard University
1995 Lawrence Dahl University of Wisconsin, Madison
1994 Harry Gray California Institute of Technology
1993 Jack Halpern University of Chicago
1992 Henry Taube Stanford University
1991 Ralph G. Pearson University of California, Santa Barbara

 

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October 26, 2011