Samuel Philip Sadtler Explained

Samuel Phillip Sadtler
Birth Date:1847 7, mf=yes
Birth Place:Pine Grove, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, US
Death Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
Nationality:American
Field:Chemical engineering
Work Institutions:Pennsylvania College, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia College of Pharmacy
Signature:Signature of Samuel Philip Sadtler (1847–1923).png

Samuel Philip Sadtler, Ph.D., LL.D. (July 18, 1847  - December 20, 1923) was an American chemist, and the first president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers in 1908.[1]

Life

Sadtler was born at Pine Grove, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, the son of a Lutheran minister, and educated at Pennsylvania College (class of 1867), at Lehigh University (one year), at Lawrence Scientific School (BSc 1870), and in Europe at the University of Göttingen (PhD 1871).[2] As well as his professional activities, he was active in the Lutheran church.[2]

His son, Samuel Schmucker Sadtler, also became a chemist. In 1901 they founded Samuel P. Sadtler & Son, a chemical consulting firm in Philadelphia. It was later managed by his grandson, also named Samuel Philip Sadtler.[3]

Sadtler died December 20, 1923, in Philadelphia.[2] [4]

Career

Sadtler was first a professor at Pennsylvania College (1871–74) and then the University of Pennsylvania (1874–91).[2] He then moved to the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, where he was professor of chemistry until 1916 when he retired (and Emeritus professor afterwards).[2] He was author of: Hand-Book of Chemical Experimentation (1877); Industrial Organic Chemistry (1901; fourth edition, 1912); and Pharmaceutical Chemistry (1895; fourth edition, 1912), with Virgil Coblentz.

In 1874, he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society.[5]

In 1907 to 1908 Sadtler was part of a discussion as to the formation of a society separate from the American Chemical Society for the newly recognized profession of chemical engineering. He was initially opposed to the proliferation of societies but said he would join a chemical engineering one if it was formed. On June 22, 1908, he welcomed interested people to a meeting at the Engineers Club, Philadelphia. The forty men present became Charter Members of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, electing Sadtler as the President, a post he held till the end of 1909. He made his Presidential address at the first Annual Meeting on December 28, 1908, and also established the Transactions of the AIChE in the same year.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Reynolds . Terry S. . Forman . J. Charles . Resen . Larry . 75 years of progress: a history of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, 1908-1983 . 1983 . New York . The Institute . 9780816902316 .
  2. Lawall . C. H. . Samuel Philip Sadtler . Science . 22 February 1924 . 59 . 1521 . 183–184 . 10.1126/science.59.1521.183 . 17792474 . 1924Sci....59..183L .
  3. Wang. Linda. Preserving A Legacy. Chemical & Engineering News. August 4, 2008. 86. 31. 43–47. 5 December 2016. 10.1021/cen-v086n031.p043.
  4. Obituary . Chemical & Metallurgical Engineering . December 31, 1923 . 28 . 27 . 1197–1198 . 25 June 2019. Roeber . Eugene Franz . Parmelee . Howard Coon .
  5. Web site: Library of Congress Authorities. 2021-05-05. authorities.loc.gov.