'Lloyd Augustus Hall' (
June 20,
1894 -
January 2,
1971) was an
African American chemist who contributed to the science of
food preservation. By the end of his career, Hall had amassed 59
United States patents, and a number of his inventions were also patented in foreign countries.
Early life
Lloyd Hall was born in
Elgin, Illinois. His father was a Baptist minister, Lloyd's grandfather was one of the first black preachers at the church his father ministered. After attending high school in
Aurora, Illinois, he earned a bachelors degree in chemistry from
Northwestern University.
Early career
With the onset of the United States' involvement in
World War I, he was commissioned as a lieutenant and explosives inspector in the
Ordnance Department. However, he found himself at the receiving end of a variety of discriminatory practices in the military and requested transfer. Over the next nine years, he worked for several chemical laboratories, frequently as a consultant, until in 1925 he was hired by
Griffith Laboratories, where he would do most of his work in food science.
Major Contributions
Hall devoted much of his efforts to the technologies behind
curing meat, particularly to improving a curing salt marketed by Griffith Laboratories known as
flash-drying. This product originated with
German chemist
Karl Max Seifert, developer of a process whereby solutions of
sodium chloride and one or more secondary salts were sprayed onto hot metal and rapidly dried, producing crystals of the secondary salts encased inside a shell of sodium chloride. Seifert patented the process in
1934 and sold the rights to Griffith Laboratories.
[1]
The adaptation of this process specifically for meat curing was then patented by company owner Enoch L. Griffith, who proposed
nitrates and
nitrites, well-known curing agents, as the secondary salts.
[2] Although Lloyd Hall did not "invent" this product as is commonly thought, and never claimed to have done so, he took the lead role in its further development, adding
hygroscopic agents such as corn sugar and
glycerine to inhibit caking of the powder. Most of his patents in meat curing dealt with either preventing caking of the curing composition, or remedying undesired effects caused by the anticaking agents.
Hall also investigated the role of
spices in food preservation. It was common knowledge that certain seasonings had anti-microbial properties, but Hall and co-worker Carroll L. Griffith found that some spices carried many
bacteria, as well as
yeast and
mold spores. To counter these problems, they patented in
1938 a means to sterilize spices through exposure to
ethylene oxide gas, a fumigant. Ethylene oxide is still used for spice sterilization in some countries, but health concerns led to its being banned for this purpose in the
European Union and
Japan. Hall and Griffith later promoted the use of ethylene oxide for the sterilization of medical equipment,
[3] helping to advance an idea that had been around for several years.
[4]
Hall also invented new uses of
antioxidants to prevent food spoilage, especially the onset of
rancidity in
fats and
oils. Aware that unprocessed
vegetable oils frequently contained natural antioxidants such as
lecithin that slowed their spoilage, he developed means of combining these compounds with salts and other materials so that they could be readily introduced to other foods.
Other Activities
After retiring from Griffith in 1959, Hall consulted for the
Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations. From 1962 to 1964, he sat on the
American Food for Peace Council. He died in 1971 in
Pasadena, California.
[5]
He was a member of
Alpha Phi Alpha, the first intercollegiate
Greek-letter fraternity established for African Americans.
External links
★ http://www.griffithlaboratories.com/United_States/en-US/people/Profiles+In+Excellence/Dr+Lloyd+A+Hall.htm