Difference between revisions of "Oliver Wolcott Gibbs"
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{wp-also}} | {{wp-also}} | ||
− | '''Oliver Wolcott Gibbs''' [[Columbia College|CC]] [[1841]] was one of the most famous early American chemists. In what came to be known as the [[Gibbs Affair]], he was denied a position at Columbia by the [[trustees]] due to his Unitarian faith. He went on to be very successful at [[Harvard]]. | + | '''Oliver Wolcott Gibbs''' [[Columbia College|CC]] [[1841]] [[P&S]] [[1845]] was one of the most famous early American chemists. In what came to be known as the [[Gibbs Affair]], he was denied a position at Columbia by the [[trustees]] due to his Unitarian faith. He went on to be very successful at [[Harvard]]. |
While he was a student at Columbia, Gibbs was a member of [[Philo]]. | While he was a student at Columbia, Gibbs was a member of [[Philo]]. | ||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Gibbs, Oliver Wolcott]] | [[Category:Columbia College alumni|Gibbs, Oliver Wolcott]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Class of 1841|Gibbs, Oliver Wolcott]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Medical school alumni|Gibbs, Oliver Wolcott]] |
Latest revision as of 17:18, 31 May 2013
Oliver Wolcott Gibbs CC 1841 P&S 1845 was one of the most famous early American chemists. In what came to be known as the Gibbs Affair, he was denied a position at Columbia by the trustees due to his Unitarian faith. He went on to be very successful at Harvard.
While he was a student at Columbia, Gibbs was a member of Philo.
See also
- James Russell, a Columbia alumnus and noted Armenian scholar whose denial of tenure and job at Harvard makes him a contemporary parallel