Thomas
Hunt Morgan was born on September 25, 1866, at Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.A.
He was the eldest son of Charlton Hunt Morgan.
He was educated at the University of
Kentucky, where he took his B.S. degree
in 1886, subsequently doing postgraduate work at Johns Hopkins University, where
he studied morphology with W. K. Brooks, and physiology with H. Newell Martin.
As a child he had shown an immense interest in natural history and even at the
age of ten, he collected birds, birds' eggs, and fossils during his life in
the country; and in 1887, the year after his graduation, he spent some time
at the seashore laboratory
of Alphaeus Hyatt at Annisquam, Mass. During the
years 1888-1889, he was engaged in research for the United States Fish Commission
at Woods Hole, a laboratory with which he was continuously associated from 1902
onwards, making expeditions to Jamaica and the Bahamas. In 1890 he obtained
his Ph.D. degree at Johns Hopkins University. ln that same year he was awarded
the Adam Bruce Fellowship and visited Europe, working especially at the Marine
Zoological Laboratory at Naples which he visited again in 1895 and 1900. At
Naples he met Hans Driesch and Curt Herbst. The influence of Driesch with whom
he later collaborated, no doubt turned his mind in the direction of experimental
embryology.
In 1891 he became Associate Professor of Biology at Bryn Mawr College for Women,
where he stayed until 1904, when he became Professor of Experimental Zoology
at Columbia University, New York. He remained there until 1928, when he was
appointed Professor of Biology and Director of the G. Kerckhoff Laboratories
at the California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena. Here he remained until
1945. During his later years he had his private laboratory at Corona del Mar,
California.
During Morgan's 24-years period at Columbia University his attention was drawn
toward the
bearing of cytology on the broader aspects of biological interpretation.
His close contact with E. B. Wilson offered exceptional opportunities to come
into more direct contact with the kind of work which was being actively carried
out in the zoological department, at
that time.
Morgan was a many-sided character who was, as a student, critical and independent.
His early published work showed him to be critical of Mendelian conceptions
of heredity, and in 1905 he challenged the assumption then current that the
germ cells are pure and uncrossed and, like Bateson was sceptical of the view
that species arise by natural selection. «Nature», he said, «makes
new species outright.» In 1909 he began the work on the fruitfly Drosophila
melanogaster with which his name will always be associated.
It appears that Drosophila was first bred in quantity by C. W. Woodworth, who
was working from 1900-1901, at Harvard University, and Woodworth there suggested
to W. E. Castle that Drosophila might be used for genetical work. Castle and
his associates used it for their work on the effects of inbreeding, and through
them F. E. Lutz became interested in it and the latter introduced it to Morgan,
who was looking for less expensive material that could be bred in the very limited
space at his command. Shortly after he commenced work with this new material
(1909), a number of striking mutants turned up. His subsequent studies on this
phenomenon ultimately enabled him to determine the precise behaviour and exact
localization of genes.
The importance of Morgan's earlier work with Drosophila was that it demonstrated
that the associations known as coupling and repulsion, discovered
by English workers in 1909 and 1910 using the Sweet Pea, are in reality the
obverse and reverse of the same phenomenon, which was later called linkage.
Morgan's first papers dealt with the demonstration of sex linkage of the gene
for white eyes in the fly, the male fly being heterogametic. His work also showed
that very large progenies of Drosophila could be bred. The flies were, in fact,
bred by the million, and all the material thus obtained was carefully analysed.
His work also demonstrated the important fact that spontaneous mutations frequently
appeared in the cultures of the flies. On the basis of the analysis of the large
body of facts thus obtained, Morgan put forward a theory of the horse suck Thomas H. - Morgan Thomas H. rape black asian Morgan - Morgan 8217 lingerie - H. Thomas s men Morgan family Thomas stories - H. incest H. Thomas - Крановый Morgan электродвигатель MTKH Thomas KIA H. накладки Morgan бампер подиумы - Rio на linear Thomas Morgan H. - suck horse arrangement
of the genes in the chromosomes, expanding
this theory in his book, Mechanism
of Mendelian Heredity (1915).
In addition to this genetical work, however, Morgan made contributions of great
importance to experimental embryology and to regeneration. So far as embryology
is concerned, he refuted by a simple experiment the theory of Roux and Weismann
that, when the embryo of the frog is in the two-cell stage, the blastomeres
receive unequal contributions from the parent blastoderm, so that a «mosaic»
results. Among his other embryological discoveries was the demonstration that
gravity is not, as Roux's work had suggested, important in the early development
of the egg.
Although so much of his time and effort
was given to genetical work, Morgan
never lost his interest in experimental embryology and he gave it, during his
last years increasing attention.
To the study of regeneration he made several important contributions, an outstanding
one being his demonstration that parts of the organism which are not subject
to injury, such as the abdominal appendages of the hermit crab, will nevertheless
regenerate, so that regeneration is not an adaptation evolved to meet the risks
of loss of parts of the body. On this part of his work he wrote his book Regeneration.
Apart from the books previously mentioned Morgan wrote: Heredity and Sex
(1913), The Physical Basis of Heredity(1919), Embryology and Genetics
(1924), Evolution and Genetics (1925), The Theory of the Gene
(1926), Experimental Embryology (1927), The Scientifc Basis of Evolution
(2nd. ed., 1935), all of them classics in the literature of genetics.
Morgan was made a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London in 1919, where
he delivered the Croonian Lecture in
1922. In 1924, he was awarded the Darwin
Medal, and in 1939 the Copley Medal of the Society.
For his discoveries concerning the role played by the chromosome in heredity,
he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1933.
Among his collaborators at Columbia may be mentioned H. J. Muller, who was awarded
the Nobel Prize in 1946 for his production
of mutations by means of X-rays.
Morgan married Lilian Vaughan Sampson, in 1904, who had been a student at Bryn
Mawr College, and who often assisted him in his research. They had one son and
three daughters.
Professor Morgan died in 1945.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
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.
 
Thomas H. Morgan died on December 4, 1945.