Frederick Parker Gay | |
Birth Date: | 22 July 1874 |
Birth Place: | Boston, Massachusetts |
Death Place: | New Hartford, Connecticut |
Resting Place: | Town Hill Cemetery, New Hartford |
Nationality: | American |
Workplaces: | University of Pennsylvania Danvers State Hospital Harvard Medical School University of California, Berkeley Columbia University |
Alma Mater: | Johns Hopkins Medical School |
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Thesis1 Url: | and |
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Thesis1 Year: | and |
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Known For: | The Open Mind(1938) |
Spouse: | Catherine Mills Jones |
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Children: | William, Louisa, Lucia, Parker[1] |
Frederick Parker Gay (July 22, 1874 - July 14, 1939) was an American bacteriologist[2] who combated typhoid fever and leprosy as well as studied the mechanism of immunity. He was a charter member of the Explorers Club.[3]
Frederick was born in Boston, Massachusetts, to George Frederick Gay and Louisa Maria Parker. In 1894 he was part of an Arctic expedition led by Frederick Cook.[3]
He graduated from Harvard University in 1897 after a trip around the world. He went to the Philippine Islands in the Spanish–American War fighting Emilio Aguinaldo. He graduated from Johns Hopkins Medical School in 1901. With funding from Rockefeller Institute of Medical Research, he became a demonstrator in pathology at University of Pennsylvania.
In 1906 he worked at the Danvers State Hospital in Massachusetts and began to collaborate with Elmer Ernest Southard in the study of anaphylaxis. They induced reactions in guinea pigs with horse serum and published their findings (see Works below).
Traveling in Europe in summers, Gay became acquainted with Jules Bordet in Brussels who was developing a theory of immunity through serology. The analysis studies "the series of events that accompany the struggle between host and infecting organism." Gay investigated the alexin (complement) fixation reaction. In 1907 he became Instructor in pathology at Harvard Medical School, and in 1909 translated Bordet’s Studies in Immunity.
In 1910 he became professor of pathology at the University of California, Berkeley. Gay was a faculty sponsor when biology students on campus formed a society called Beta Kappa Alpha.[4] He also provided a typhoid serum and supervised the inoculation of students.[5] He continued to research antibodies and antigens. In 1918 he published his book on typhoid fever, and in 1921 he became Head of the new Department of Bacteriology.
In 1923 Gay became professor of bacteriology at Columbia University; he introduced a graduate study program leading to a Ph.D. His research turned toward the reticulo endothelial system. In 1929 he returned to the Philippines to combat leprosy on the Leonard Wood Memorial Commission.[6] He contributed to Agents of Disease and Host Resistance(1935) concerned with bacteria, fungi, protozoa, rickettsiae and viruses.
He wrote, "The modern study of viruses, though largely in the hands of bacteriologists, has developed new biological, chemical, and physical approaches, and has brought us closer to an enlarged, though by no means final, interpretation of life itself."
Gay retired to a farm in New Hartford, Connecticut.
Papers on anaphylaxis, written in collaboration with Elmer Ernest Southard:The papers were published in the Journal of Medical Research (JMR) which was the publishing arm of the American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists: