
James Bryant Conant
'James Bryant Conant' (
March 26,
1893 -
February 11,
1978) was a
chemist, educational administrator, and government official. He was born in
Dorchester, Massachusetts in 1893 and graduated from the
Roxbury Latin School in
Roxbury in 1910. He went on to study
chemistry at
Harvard (
B.A., 1914;
Ph.D., 1917). At Harvard he studied under
Charles Loring Jackson, and became acquainted with
Roger Adams,
Farrington Daniels,
Frank C. Whitmore and
James B. Sumner. As a Harvard
professor, he worked on both
physical and
organic chemistry. The
American Chemical Society honored him with its highest prize, the
Priestley Medal, in
1944.
In
1933, Conant accepted an appointment as the
President of Harvard University, a post he held until
1953. Between
1941 and
1946, he also served as chairman of the
National Defense Research Committee; from that position he played a key role, along with his close friend
Vannevar Bush, in ramping up the
Manhattan Project which developed the first
nuclear weapons. After
World War II he was an advisor to both the
National Science Foundation and the
Atomic Energy Commission. He served as
U.S. High Commissioner and
United States Ambassador to Germany from
1953 to
1957.
As the university's president, Conant was instrumental in transforming
Harvard, until then widely perceived as a 'finishing school' for members of the
New England upper class, into a world-class research university. He introduced aptitude tests into the undergraduate admissions system so that students would be chosen for their intellectual promise and merit, rather than their social connections. Many American colleges followed Conant's lead, and this campaign led eventually to the adoption of the
SAT. Conant also did much to move general undergraduate curriculum away from its traditional emphasis on the
classics, and towards a more scientific and modern subject matter. He was active throughout his career on issues of education and scientific policy. For this work, he was awarded the prestigious
Sylvanus Thayer Award by the
United States Military Academy at West Point.
Conant also actively promoted the discipline of
history of science, instituting the
Harvard Case Histories in Experimental Science and including history of science in the General Education curriculum. For Conant, an approach to science history that emphasized the internal and intellectual dimensions of scientific development — as opposed to the so-called external factors of sociology, economics and politics — reinforced the American
Cold War ideology and would help Americans understand the importance of science since the
Second World War. During that time, American science (and especially the field of physics that Conant viewed as exemplary) was rapidly becoming dominated by
military funding, and Conant sought to defuse concerns about the possible corruption of science. Conant was instrumental in the early career of
Thomas Kuhn, whose ''
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions'' has been extremely influential for the various fields of
science studies.
Conant died in
Hanover, New Hampshire in 1978. James B. Conant Middle School is a former school named after the man in
Neenah, Wisconsin, though it has since become the "Conant" building of
Neenah High School, in addition to the
Neil Armstrong building and a large building connecting the two known simply as "The Link."
James B. Conant High School in
Hoffman Estates, Illinois was named after Conant, as was James B. Conant Elementary School in
Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
External links
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Annotated bibliography for James Conant from the Alsos Digital Library
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