Raymond Lemieux

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Raymond Urgel Lemieux CC (June 16, 1920July 22, 2000) was a Canadian biochemist, who pioneered a number of discoveries in the field of chemistry, his first and most famous being the synthesis of sucrose.

[edit] Biography

Dr. Raymond U. Lemieux was born on June 16, 1920 in Lac La Biche, Alberta, Canada. His family moved to Edmonton, Alberta in 1926. He studied chemistry at the University of Alberta and received a BSc with Honours in Chemistry in 1943. He went on to study at McGill University, where he received his PhD in Organic Chemistry in 1946. He won a post-doctoral scholarship at Ohio State University, where Bristol Laboratories Inc. sponsored his research on the structure of streptomycin. He met his future wife, a doctoral student, at Ohio State and they were married in 1948.

In following years, he returned to Canada where he spent two years as an assistant professor at the University of Saskatchewan. Next he served as Senior Research Officer at the National Research Council's Prairie Regional Laboratory in Saskatoon. In 1953 he and a fellow researcher, George Huber, were the first scientists to successfully synthesize sucrose. In 1954, he accepted the position of Dean in the Faculty of Pure and Applied Sciences at the University of Ottawa, where he established their Department of Chemistry. In 1961 he returned to the University of Alberta as a professor in the Chemistry Department and to serve as the Chairman of the Organic Chemistry Division. He developed a method to make synthetic versions of oligosaccharides, which led to improved treatments for leukemia and hemophilia and the development of new antibiotics, blood reagents, and organ anti-rejection drugs.

While at the University of Alberta, he established a number of biochemical companies, including R&L Molecular Research Ltd. in 1962, Raylo Chemicals Ltd.in 1966 (which purchased R&L) and Chembiomed in 1977 (which has since been taken over by Synsorb Biotech of Calgary, Alberta.

Dr. Raymond Lemieux died of cancer on July 22, 2000.

In 1999, the University of Alberta Faculty of Science and Strathcona County established the Strathcona Country/R.U. Lemieux Chair in Carbohydrate Chemistry. In 2001, the University of Alberta renamed the building(s) housing the Department of Chemistry the Gunning/Lemieux Chemistry Centre.

[edit] Awards

Dr. R.U. Lemieux received numerous awards and honours for his work in chemistry, many of them posthumous:

  • Induction into the Royal Society of Canada (1954)
  • C.S. Hudson Award of the American Chemical Society (1966
  • Became the first western Canadian to be elected a fellow of the Royal Society (England) (1967)
  • Appointed Officer of the Order of Canada (1968)
  • Hawarth Award and Medal (1983)
  • The Tishler Award, Harvard University (1983)
  • Gairdner Foundation International Award (1985)
  • Made Honorary Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Stockholm (1988)
  • Induction into the Alberta Order of Excellence (1990)
  • King Faisal International Award for Science (first Canadian) (1990)
  • NSERC Gold Medal in Science (1991)
  • Albert Einstein World Award in Science (1992)
  • Made Companion of the Order of Canada (1994)
  • Wolf Prize in Chemistry (1999)

[edit] References

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[Category:Canadian chemists]]

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