Peter Mitchell
was born in Mitcham, in the County of Surrey, England, on September 29, 1920.
His parents, Christopher Gibbs Mitchell and Kate Beatrice Dorothy (née)
Taplin, were very different from each other temperamentally. His mother was a
shy and gentle person of very independent thought and action, with strong artistic
perceptiveness. Being a rationalist and an atheist, she taught him that he must
accept responsibility for his own destiny, and especially for his failings in
life. That early influence may well have led him to adopt the religious atheistic
personal philosophy to which he has adhered since the age of about fifteen. His
father was a much more conventional person than his mother, and was awarded the
O.B.E. for his success as a Civil Servant.
Peter Mitchell was educated
at Queens College, Taunton, and at Jesus college, Cambridge. At Queens he benefited
particularly from the influence of the Headmaster, C.L. Wiseman, who was an excellent
mathematics teacher and an accomplished amateur musician. The result of the scholarship
examination that he took to enter Jesus College Cambridge was so dismally bad
that he was only admitted to the University at all on the strength of a personal
letter written by C.L. Wiseman. He entered Jesus College just after the commencement
of war with Germany in 1939. In Part I of the Natural Sciences Tripos he studied
physics, chemistry, physiology, mathematics and biochemistry, and obtained a Class
III result. In part II, he studied biochemistry, and obtained a II-I result for
his Honours Degree.
He accepted a research post in the Department
of Biochemistry, Cambridge, in 1942 at the invitation of J.F. Danielli. He was
very fortunate to be Danielli's only Ph.D. student at that time, and greatly enjoyed
and benefited from Danielli's friendly and unauthoritarian style of research supervision.
Danielli introduced him to David Keilin, whom he came to love and respect more
than any other scientist of his acquaintance.
He received the degree
of Ph.D. in early 1951 for work on the mode of action of penicillin, and held
the post of Demonstrator at the Department of Biochemistry, Cambridge, from 1950
to 1955. In 1955 he was invited by Professor Michael Swann to set up and direct
a biochemical research unit, called the Chemical Biology Unit, in the Department
of Zoology, Edinburgh University, where he was appointed to a Senior Lectureship
in 1961, to a Readership in 1962, and where he remained until acute gastric ulcers
led to his resignation after a period of leave in 1963.
From 1963
to 1965, he withdrew completely from scientific research, and acted as architect
and master of works, directly supervising the restoration of an attractive Regency-fronted
Mansion, known as Glynn House, in the beautiful wooded Glynn Valley, near Bodmin,
Cornwall - adapting and furnishing a major part of it for use as a research labotatory.
In this, he was lucky to receive the enthusiastic support of his former research
colleague Jennifer Moyle. He and Jennifer Moyle founded a charitable company,
known as Glynn Research Ltd., to promote fundamental biological research and finance
the work of the Glynn Research Laboratories at Glynn House. The original endowment
of about £250,000 was donated about equally by Peter Mitchell and his elder
brother Christopher John Mitchell.
In 1965, Peter Mitchell and Jennifer
Moyle, with the practical help of one technician, Roy Mitchell (unrelated to Peter
Mitchell), and with the administrative help of their company secretary, embarked
on the programme of research on chemiosmotic reactions and reaction systems for
which the Glynn Research Institute has become known. Since its inception, the
Glynn Research Institute has not had sufficient financial resources to employ
more than three research workers, including the Research Director, on its permanent
staff. He has continued to act as Director of Research at the Glynn Research Institute
up to the present time. An acute lack of funds has recently led to the possibility
that the Glynn Research Institute may have to close.
Beside his interest
in communication between molecules, Peter Mitchell has become more and more interested
in the problems of communication between individual people in civilised societies,
especially in the context of the spread of violence in the increasingly collectivist
societies in most parts of the world. His own experience of small and large organisations
in the scientific world has led him to regard the small organisations as being,
not only more alive and congenial, but also more effective, for many (although
perhaps not all) purposes. He would therefore like to have the opportunity to
become more deeply involved in studies of the ways in which sympathetic communication
and cooperative activity between free and potentially independent people may be
improved. One of his specific interests in this field of knowledge is the use
of money as an instrument of personal responsibility and of choice in free societies,
and the flagrant abuse and basically dishonest manipulation of the system of monetary
units of value practised by the governments of most nations.
| Awards and affiliations |
| CIBA Medal and Prize, British Biochemical Society, 1973 |
| Member, European Molecular Biology Organisation, 1973 |
| Fellowship of the Royal Society, 1974 |
| Warren Triennial Prize, jointly with Efraim Racker, U.S.A., 1974 |
| Louis and Bert Freedman Foundation Award, New York Academy of Sciences, 1974 |
| Honorary Member, American Society of Biological Chemists, 1975 |
| Foreign Honorary Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1975 |
| Wilhelm Feldberg (Anglo/German) Foundation Prize, 1976 |
| Dr. rerum naturalium honoris cause of the Technische Universität, Berlin, 1976 |
| Lewis S. Rosenstiel Award, U.S.A., 1977 |
| Foreign Associate, National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A., 1977 |
| Honorary Degree of Doctor of Science, Exeter University, U.K., 1977 |
| Sir Hans Krebs Lecture and Medal of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies, 1978 |
| Honorary Degree of Doctor of Science, University of Chicago, 1978 |
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1978, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1979
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Peter Mitchell died on April 10, 1992.
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