My
parents were both New Englanders, though my father was born in Minnesota where
his father had moved from Massachusetts to join a frontier community. My father
moved east as a young man, and for a number of years was YMCA secretary in Haverhill,
Massachusetts. Subsequently he invented and worked in the application of a device
for winding induction coils used in ignitors for the motorboat engines of that
day. I was born in Bradford, Massachusetts, a suburb of Haverhill, in December
1903, the youngest of three children. My parents moved when I was four to the
home built by my great grandfather in Brookline, Massachusetts, and it was in
the excellent Brookline public schools that I received my pre-college education.Science
and mathematics were my favorite subjects. In spare time I read books on astronomy
and physics as well as the usual boyhood classics. But I also enjoyed sports,
and a group of five or six youngsters used to gather at our house to play touch
football or scrub baseball in our yard or a neighboring vacant lot. Imaginative
stories and games also were very much a part of my childhood.In 1900, three
years before I was born, my mother's parents had purchased a run-down farmhouse
and 70 acres of land in South Woodstock, Vermont. The house was gradually restored
and furnished, and the summers I spent at "the farm" were among the delights
of my childhood and youth. An interest in gardening, farming, and forestry have
been a permanent legacy of the experience this home provided.Music was a major
interest of the whole family. My mother played the piano, and we did a great
deal of family singing in which friends often joined. It has been a source of
great pleasure that my wife is also a pianist.
I entered Darmouth College in 1922 and again found science and mathematics my
favorite subjects. A course in genetics taught by Professor John Gerould proved
particularly fascinating, and it was that course that led me to the choice of
a career. When the decision was finally made to enter graduate school, it was
on Professor Gerould's advice that I enrolled as a graduate student with Harvard's
Professor Castle, the first American biologist to look for Mendelian inheritance
in mammals.
My thesis work on linkage in mice largely determined my future work. Two years
spent teaching and two years as a postdoctoral fellow under Herman Muller studying
the genetic effect of x-rays on mice served to convince me that research was
my real love. If it was to be research, mouse genetics was the clear choice
and the Jackson Laboratory, founded in 1929 by Dr. Clarence Cook Little, one
of Castle's earlier students, almost the inevitable selection as a place to
work. The Laboratory was a small institution when I joined the staff of seven
in 1935, but under the talented leadership of Dr. Little and his successor,
Earl Green, it has grown into the world center for studies in mammalian genetics.
I owe a great deal to it for providing the ideal home for my subsequent research.
It was in Bar Harbor that I met and married Rhoda Carson, and where we raised
our three sons, Thomas, Roy and Peter.
I have always enjoyed sports, with skiing, which I learned at Dartmouth, and
tennis perhaps being my two favorites.
While for 25 years I concentrated almost exclusively on studies of histocompatibility
genes and especially of the stories D. Snell beastiality - sex George stories beastiality D. George Snell sex - George Snell preview rape D. - clip discount Snell underwear D. - George vhs incest video D. - George Snell George D. КТП Snell - Трансформаторная подстанция ВАЗ проставки - стойки опора George ВАЗ Priora 2108 2170 D. Snell на H-2 complex, and for 35 years have pursued
these subjects to some degree, I also have become involved in other areas. While
working under Dr. Castle, I spent parts of two summers at Woods Hole with Dr.
Phineas Whiting, an earlier student of Castle, studying the genetics of the
parasitic wasp, Habrobracon. An outcome of this work was a paper on The
Role of Male Parthenogenesis in the Evolution of the Social Hymenoptera. The
problems of social evolution have remained a continuing interest, to which I
am now returning in a more active way in retirement. The two years with Muller
at the University of Texas resulted in the first demonstration of the induction
by x-rays of chromosomal changes in mammals. My first several years at the Jackson
Laboratory were spent in continuation of this work, and especially in the detailed
genetic analysis of two of the induced reciprocal translocations. In the late
1930s, I became involved in problems of gene nomenclature in mice, and this,
together with problems of strain nomenclature, remained a concern for many years.
The efforts of the Committee on Standardized Nomenclature for mice have led
to the universal acceptance of a well organized and convenient nomenclature
system for this species. Some experiments, which I carried out at about the
same time that I was becoming interested in histocompatibility genetics, led
to the discovery of immunological enhancement, the curious inversion of the
expected growth inhibition seen with certain tumors when transplanted to pre-injected
mice. I soon found that I was not the first person to have seen this phenomenon,
but the mouse system proved very amenable to further exploitation. I had to
drop this topic in favor of the genetic studies, but it has been interesting
to see it grow through the work of Dr. Nathan Kaliss and many others into a
major area of research with possible implications for organ transplantation
in man. A final interest, developed jointly with Dr. Marianna Cherry during
my last few years at the Jackson Laboratory, concerned serologically demonstrable
alloantigens of lymphocytes.
Much of the work sketched above was carried out on a collaborative basis. I
cannot here give names, but I owe a great debt to the many wonderful people
with whom it has been my privilege to work in these studies.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.
 
George D. Snell died on June 6, 1996.
 
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