Dr. Charles Sedgwick Minot, D.Sc, LL.D.

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Dr. Charles Sedgwick Minot, D.Sc, LL.D.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Roxbury, Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States
Death: November 19, 1914 (61)
Milton, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Wiiliam Minot and Catharine Maria Minot
Husband of Lucy Minot
Brother of Jane Sedgwick Minot; Alice Woodbourn Minot; William Minot; Robert Sedgwick Minot; Henry Davis Minot and 1 other

Occupation: Professor of Anatomy, Harvard Medical School, author, president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Dr. Charles Sedgwick Minot, D.Sc, LL.D.

Charles Sedgwick Minot

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Sedgwick Minot (December 23, 1852 – November 19, 1914) was an American anatomist and a founding member of the American Society for Psychical Research.

Life

Charles Sedgwick Minot was born December 23, 1852 in Roxbury, Massachusetts. His mother was Catharine "Kate" Maria Sedgwick (1820–1880) and father was William Minot II (1817–1894).[2] Through his mother, namesake of her aunt, novelist Catharine Sedgwick (1789–1867), he was twice connected to the New England Dwight family of academics.[3]

He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1872, studied biology at Leipzig, Paris, and Würzburg. At Harvard Medical School he taught from 1880 till his death as the James Stillman Professor of comparative anatomy in 1905 and director of the anatomical laboratories in 1912.

He was president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1901, and of the Association of American Anatomists from 1904 to 1905, and was corresponding member of various foreign societies.

Honorary degrees were conferred on him by Yale University, the University of Toronto, St. Andrews, and Oxford. From 1912 to 1913 he served as Harvard exchange professor at Berlin and Jena. He died on November 19, 1914 in Milton, Massachusetts.

His cousin once removed, George Richards Minot (1885–1950), named for his great-grandfather George Richards Minot (1758–1802),[4] shared the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1934.[5]

Minot was a founding member of the American Society for Psychical Research. He later resigned due to its unscientific outlook.[6][7] He was highly critical of Alfred Percy Sinnett's Esoteric Buddhism and the claims of Theosophy.[8]

Publications

In addition to many papers and monographs, his publications include:

  • Human Embryology (1897), also in German
  • A Laboratory Text-Book of Embryology (1903; second edition, 1910)
  • The Problem of Age, Growth, and Death (1908)
  • Die Methode der Wissenschaft (1913)
  • Modern Problems of Biology (1913), also in French

Bibliographic details for "Charles Sedgwick Minot"

  • Page name: Charles Sedgwick Minot
  • Author: Wikipedia contributors
  • Publisher: Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
  • Date of last revision: 24 March 2020 08:01 UTC
  • Date retrieved: 13 August 2020 20:38 UTC
  • Permanent link: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Charles_Sedgwick_Minot&o...
  • Primary contributors: Revision history statistics
  • Page Version ID: 947093901

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  • encyclopedia.com
  • Minot, Charles Sedgwick | Encyclopedia.com
  • Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography

(b. Roxbury, Massachusetts, 23 December 1852; d. Milton, Massachusetts, 19 November 1914)

anatomy, embryology,

Minot was the second of three sons of William Minot and Katharine Sedgwick. A paternal ancestor was Jonathan Edwards; and on both sides, there were several distinguished lawyers and public figures. Growing up on his wealthy father’s country estate, he early became interested in natural history and at the age of seventeen published articles on insect and bird life. He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1872 and then entered the graduate school of Harvard College, where he worked under Henry P. Bowditch. spending a summer with Louis Agassiz at Penikese, Massachusetts. In 1873 he went to Leipzig to work with Karl Ludwig and Rudolf Leuckart. He was also at Paris for a few months with Louis-Antoine Ranvier and at Würzburg.

After his return to America in 1876, Minot completed in 1878 the requirements for his Harvard doctorate in science. After two years of private biological research, in 1880 he joined the Harvard faculty, at first in the dental school and, after 1883, in the department of histology and embryology of the school of medicine. There he began what became an outstanding collection of vertebrate embryos. To facilitate the work of sectioning them, he invented in 1886 the automatic rotary microtome, ever since in worldwide use. In 1892 Minot published his chief work, Human Embryology, a masterly summation of an unwieldy literature and a highly original presentation of the major problems of that branch of science. Among his many research accomplishments were an account of the microscopic structure of the human placenta and a description of the blood channels in the liver since known by his term “sinusoids.”

Minot’s wide-ranging intellect led him into very broad fields of thought. For a few years he was active in the American Society for Psychical Research, from which he withdrew when finally convinced of its unscientific outlook. Deep reflection about the nature of life, its origin, course, and termination guided his protracted studies of the growth of animals and the progressive changes in cell structure from birth to death.

Minot exerted wide influence on American biology of his time in his books, numerous papers in scientific journals, and lectures, all presented with clarity and stylistic elegance. Reserved in professional manner and sometimes sharply critical of other workers in matters of scientific judgment, he was a genial participant in the professional societies of natural history, anatomy, and physiology. He was one of a small group of biologists and medical scientists who broadened the study and teaching of anatomy in the United States to include not only gross morphology but also embryology, histology, and physical anthropology, and transformed the American Association of Anatomists from a small society with limited interests to its present breadth and strength.

Minot was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1897 and served as president of the American Society of Naturalists, the American Association of Anatomists, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. His eminence in human and comparative embryology was recognized by honorary degrees from Yale, Toronto, St. Andrews, and Oxford universities and by a visiting professorship at Berlin.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

I. Original Works. Minot’s primary publications are Human Embryology (New York, 1892); “A Bibliography of Vertebrate Embryology,” in Memoirs of the Boston Society of Natural History, 4, no, 11 (1893), 487–614; Laboratory Textbook of Embryology (Philadelphia, 1903); and The Problem of Life, Growth, and Death (New York, 1908), in addition to about 180 scientific papers and lectures.

II. Secondary Literature. On Minot and his work, see (listed chronologically) Henry H. Donaldson, “Charles Sedgwick Minot,” in Science, n.s. 40 (1914), 926–927, a character study; Charles W. Eliot, “Charles Sedgwick Minot,” ibid., 41 (1915), 701–704: Frederic T. Lewis, “Charles Sedgwick Minot,” in Anatomical Record, 10 (1915–1916), 133–164, with portrait and bibliography; Edward S. Morse, “Charles Sedgwick Minot, 1852–1914,” in Biographical Memoirs. National Academy of Sciences, 14 (1920), 263–285, with portrait and complete bibliography.

George W. Corner

Citation:

"Minot, Charles Sedgwick ." Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. . Retrieved August 13, 2020 from Encyclopedia.com: https://www.encyclopedia.com/science/dictionaries-thesauruses-pictu...

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Dr. Charles Sedgwick Minot, D.Sc, LL.D.'s Timeline

1852
December 25, 1852
Roxbury, Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States
1914
November 19, 1914
Age 61
Milton, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States