Dorothy Hodgkin

{{Short description|English chemist (1910–1994)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2017}}

{{Use British English|date=May 2012}}

{{Infobox scientist

| name = Dorothy Hodgkin

| honorific_suffix = {{postnominals|country=GBR|size=100%|OM|FRS|HonFRSC}}

| image = Dorothy Hodgkin Nobel.jpg

| birth_name = Dorothy Mary Crowfoot

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1910|05|12|df=y}}

| birth_place = Cairo, Egypt

| death_date = {{death date and age|1994|07|29|1910|05|12|df=y}}

| death_place = Ilmington, Warwickshire, England

| nationality = British

| education = {{Plainlist|

| doctoral_advisor = John Desmond Bernal

| doctoral_students = {{Plainlist|

  • Judith Howard{{cite thesis|degree=DPhil|publisher=University of Oxford|title=The study of some organic crystal structures by neutron diffraction|first=Judith Ann Kathleen|last=Howard|date=1971|url=http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/OXVU1:LSCOP_OX:oxfaleph020590675|id={{EThOS|uk.bl.ethos.459789}}|website=solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk|oclc=500477155|access-date=24 November 2017|archive-date=6 May 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220506091404/https://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo-explore/fulldisplay?vid=SOLO&docid=oxfaleph020590675&context=L&search_scope=LSCOP_OX|url-status=live}}{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/education/2006/sep/26/academicexperts.highereducationprofile|first=John|last=Crace | author-link = John Crace (writer) |title=Judith Howard, Crystal gazing: The first woman to head a five-star chemistry department tells John Crace what attracted her to science|newspaper=The Guardian|date=2006-09-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170817205623/https://www.theguardian.com/education/2006/sep/26/academicexperts.highereducationprofile|archive-date=2017-08-17}}
  • Michael N. G. James{{cite thesis|degree=DPhil|publisher=University of Oxford|url=http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/OXVU1:LSCOP_OX:oxfaleph020506626|title=X-ray crystallographic studies of some antibiotic peptides|first=Michael Norman George|last=James|author-link=Michael N. G. James|date=1966|id={{EThOS|uk.bl.ethos.710775}}|website=bodleian.ox.ac.uk|oclc=944386483|access-date=27 March 2018|archive-date=14 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191214235553/http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo-explore/fulldisplay?vid=SOLO&docid=oxfaleph020506626&context=L&search_scope=LSCOP_OX|url-status=live}}}}

| thesis_title = X-ray crystallography and the chemistry of the sterols

| thesis_year = 1937

| thesis_url = http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.727110

| notable_students = {{Plainlist|

  • Jack D. Dunitz (postdoc){{cite web|url=https://academictree.org/chemistry/peopleinfo.php?pid=52032|title=Chemistry Tree – Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin|website=academictree.org|access-date=16 August 2017|archive-date=16 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170816193415/https://academictree.org/chemistry/peopleinfo.php?pid=52032|url-status=live}}
  • Margaret Thatcher (undergraduate)John Blundell, Margaret Thatcher, A Portrait of The Iron Lady, 2008, pp. 25–27. Degree student, 1943–1947.
  • Tom Blundell (postdoc){{cite journal | last1 = Blundell | first1 = T.| author-link1 = Tom Blundell | last2 = Cutfield | first2 = J. | last3 = Cutfield | first3 = S. | last4 = Dodson | first4 = E. | last5 = Dodson | first5 = G. | last6 = Hodgkin | first6 = D. | last7 = Mercola | first7 = D. | last8 = Vijayan | first8 = M. | title = Atomic positions in rhombohedral 2-zinc insulin crystals | journal = Nature | volume = 231 | issue = 5304 | pages = 506–11 | year = 1971 | pmid = 4932997|bibcode = 1971Natur.231..506B |doi = 10.1038/231506a0 | s2cid = 4158731}}
  • Guy Dodson (postdoc)
  • June Lindsey (postdoc)}}

| known_for = {{Plainlist|

| spouse = {{marriage|Thomas Lionel Hodgkin|1937|1982|end=his death}}

| children = 3

| parents = John Winter Crowfoot
Grace Mary Hood

| field = Biochemistry
X-ray crystallography

| prizes = {{Plainlist|

}}

Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin {{postnominals|country=GBR|size=100%|OM|FRS|HonFRSC}}{{Who's Who | title=Hodgkin, Prof. Dorothy Mary Crowfoot |type=was| id = U173161 | volume = 2017 | edition = online Oxford University Press|location=Oxford}} {{doi|10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U173161}} {{subscription required}} (née Crowfoot; 12 May 1910 – 29 July 1994) was a Nobel Prize-winning English chemist who advanced the technique of X-ray crystallography to determine the structure of biomolecules, which became essential for structural biology.{{cite journal|last1=Dodson|first1=Guy|author-link=Guy Dodson|title=Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin, O.M. 12 May 1910 – 29 July 1994|journal=Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society|volume=48|year=2002|pages=179–219|issn=0080-4606|doi=10.1098/rsbm.2002.0011|pmid=13678070|s2cid=61764553}} {{free access}}{{cite journal | last1 = Glusker | first1 = J. P. | author-link = Jenny Glusker| title = Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910–1994) | doi = 10.1002/pro.5560031233 | journal = Protein Science | volume = 3

| issue = 12 | pages = 2465–69 | year = 1994 | pmid = 7757003 | pmc =2142778 }}

Among her most influential discoveries are the confirmation of the structure of penicillin as previously surmised by Edward Abraham and Ernst Boris Chain; and mapping the structure of vitamin B12, for which in 1964 she became the third woman to win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Hodgkin also elucidated the structure of insulin in 1969 after 35 years of work.

Hodgkin used the name "Dorothy Crowfoot" until twelve years after marrying Thomas Lionel Hodgkin, when she began using "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin". Hodgkin is referred to as "Dorothy Hodgkin" by the Royal Society (when referring to its sponsorship of the Dorothy Hodgkin fellowship), and by Somerville College. The National Archives of the United Kingdom refer to her as "Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin".

Early life

Dorothy Mary Crowfoot was born in Cairo, Egypt,{{Who's Who|title=Hodgkin, Prof. Dorothy Mary Crowfoot|type=was|id=U173161|volume=2017|edition=online Oxford University Press|location=Oxford}} {{doi|10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U173161}} {{subscription required}} the oldest of the four daughters whose parents worked in North Africa and the middle East in the colonial administration and later as archaeologists. Dorothy came from a distinguished family of archaeologists.{{cite web |date=September 11, 2014 |title=Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin |website=Trowelblazers |url=https://trowelblazers.com/2014/09/11/dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin/ |access-date=2023-01-23 |language=en-GB}} Her parents were John Winter Crowfoot (1873–1959), working for the country's Ministry of Education, and his wife Grace Mary (née Hood) (1877–1957), known to friends and family as Molly."Calm Genius Of Laboratory And Home." Times [London, England] 30 Oct. 1964: 8. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 12 June 2017. The family lived in Cairo during the winter months, returning to England each year to avoid the hotter part of the season in Egypt.[http://www.brown.edu/Research/Breaking_Ground/results.php?d=1&first=Grace&last=Crowfoot "Grace Crowfoot", Breaking Ground: Women in Old-World Archaeology, 1994–2004] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170823121537/http://www.brown.edu/Research/Breaking_Ground/results.php?d=1&first=Grace&last=Crowfoot|date=23 August 2017}}.

In 1914, Hodgkin's mother left her (age 4) and her two younger sisters Joan (age 2) and Elisabeth (age 7 months) with their Crowfoot grandparents near Worthing, and returned to her husband in Egypt. They spent much of their childhood apart from their parents, yet they were supportive from afar. Her mother would encourage Dorothy to pursue the interest in crystals first displayed at the age of 10. In 1923, Dorothy and her sister would study pebbles that they had found in nearby streams using portable mineral analysis kit. Their parents then moved south to Sudan where, until 1926, her father was in charge of education and archaeology. Her mother's four brothers were killed in World War I and as a result she became an ardent supporter of the new League of Nations.{{cite journal |last1=Dodson |first1=Guy |author-link=Guy Dodson |year=2002 |title=Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin, O.M. 12 May 1910 – 29 July 1994 |journal=Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society |volume=48 |pages=179–219 |doi=10.1098/rsbm.2002.0011 |issn=0080-4606 |pmid=13678070 |s2cid=61764553}} {{free access}}{{cite web |title=Dorothy Hodgkin 1910–1994 |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/bmhodg.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170724040227/http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/bmhodg.html |archive-date=24 July 2017 |access-date=26 August 2017 |work="A Science Odyssey: People and Discoveries" a 1997 PBS documentary and accompanying book}}

In 1921 Hodgkin's father entered her in the Sir John Leman Grammar School in Beccles, England, where she was one of two girls allowed to study chemistry.Georgina Ferry, Dorothy Hodgkin: A Life, Granta Books: London, 1998, p. 20. Only once, when she was 13, did she make an extended visit to her parents, then living in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, where her father was Principal of Gordon College. When she was 14, her distant cousin, the chemist Charles Harington (later Sir Charles), recommended D. S. Parsons' Fundamentals of Biochemistry.{{cite book|author=Thiel, Kristin|title=Dorothy Hodgkin: Biochemist and Developer of Protein Crystallography|publisher=Cavendish Square Publishing, LLC|year=2016|pages=40–41|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FHdmDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA40|isbn=9781502623133|access-date=23 May 2019|archive-date=24 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210324064412/https://books.google.com/books?id=FHdmDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA40|url-status=live}} Resuming the pre-war pattern, her parents lived and worked abroad for part of the year, returning to England and their children for several months every summer. In 1926, on his retirement from the Sudan Civil Service, her father took the post of Director of the British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, where he and her mother remained until 1935.S.G. Rosenberg, "British Groundbreakers in the Archaeology of the Holy Land", Minerva, January/February 2008.

In 1928, Hodgkin joined her parents at the archaeological site of Jerash, in present-day Jordan, where she documented the patterns of mosaics from multiple Byzantine-era Churches dated to the 5th–6th centuries. She spent more than a year finishing the drawings as she started her studies in Oxford, while also conducting chemical analyses of glass tesserae from the same site.{{cite web|url=https://trowelblazers.com/dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin/|title=Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin {{!}} TrowelBlazers|date=11 September 2014 |access-date=2019-10-07|archive-date=7 October 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191007084619/https://trowelblazers.com/dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin/|url-status=live}} Her attention to detail through the creation of precise scale drawings of these mosaics mirrors her subsequent work in recognising and documenting patterns in chemistry. Hodgkin enjoyed the experience of field archaeology so much that she considered giving up chemistry in favour of archaeology.{{cite web |title=The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1964 |url=https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/chemistry/1964/hodgkin/biographical/ |access-date=2023-01-23 |website=NobelPrize.org |language=en-US}} Her drawings are archived by Yale University.

Hodgkin developed a passion for chemistry from a young age, and her mother, a proficient botanist, fostered her interest in the sciences. On her 16th birthday her mother gave her a book by W. H. Bragg on X-ray crystallography, "Concerning the Nature of Things", which helped her decide her future.{{cite book|title=International Encyclopedia Of Women Scientists|last=Oakes|first=Elizabeth H.|publisher=Facts On File, Inc|year=2002|isbn=978-0-8160-4381-1|location=New York, NY|pages=[https://archive.org/details/internationalenc00oake/page/163 163]|url=https://archive.org/details/internationalenc00oake/page/163}} She was further encouraged by the chemist A.F. Joseph, a family friend who also worked in Sudan.{{cite book |last=Ferry |first=Georgina |title=Dorothy Hodgkin : a life |publisher=Granta Books |year=1999 |isbn=978-1862072855 |location=London}}

Her state school education did not include Latin, then required for entrance to Oxbridge. Her Leman School headmaster, George Watson, gave her personal tuition in the subject, enabling her to pass the University of Oxford entrance examination.

When Hodgkin was asked in later life to name her childhood heroes, she named three women: first and foremost, her mother, Molly; the medical missionary Mary Slessor; and Margery Fry, the Principal of Somerville College.Lisa Tuttle, Heroines: Women inspired by Women, 1988.

Higher education

In 1928 at age 18 Hodgkin entered Somerville College, Oxford, where she studied chemistry. She graduated in 1932 with a first-class honours degree, the third woman at this institution to achieve this distinction.{{cite web |title=Hodgkin, Dorothy Mary Crowfoot |url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Dorothy_Mary_Crowfoot_Hodgkin.aspx |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151014115213/http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Dorothy_Mary_Crowfoot_Hodgkin.aspx |archive-date=14 October 2015 |access-date=3 November 2015 |website=Encyclopedia.com |publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons}}

File:Professor Dorothy Hodgkin.jpg

In the autumn of that year, she began studying for a PhD at Newnham College, Cambridge, under the supervision of John Desmond Bernal.{{cite journal |last1=Hodgkin |first1=Dorothy Mary Crowfoot |author-link=Dorothy Hodgkin |year=1980 |title=John Desmond Bernal. 10 May 1901 – 15 September 1971 |journal=Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society |volume=26 |pages=16–84 |doi=10.1098/rsbm.1980.0002 |doi-access= |title-link=John Desmond Bernal|s2cid=72287250 }} It was then that she became aware of the potential of X-ray crystallography to determine the structure of proteins. She was working with Bernal on the technique's first application to the analysis of a biological substance, pepsin.{{cite web |title=Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, OM |url=http://www.sdsc.edu/ScienceWomen/hodgkin.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120112214431/http://www.sdsc.edu/ScienceWomen/hodgkin.html |archive-date=12 January 2012 |access-date=2012-01-13}} The pepsin experiment is largely credited to Hodgkin, however she always made it clear that it was Bernal who initially took the photographs and gave her additional key insights.{{cite journal |last1=Dodson |first1=Guy |author-link=Guy Dodson |year=2002 |title=Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin, O.M. 12 May 1910 – 29 July 1994 |journal=Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society |volume=48 |pages=179–219 |doi=10.1098/rsbm.2002.0011 |issn=0080-4606 |pmid=13678070 |s2cid=61764553}} {{free access}} Her PhD was awarded in 1937 for research on X-ray crystallography and the chemistry of sterols.{{cite thesis |degree=PhD |url=http://ulmss-newton.lib.cam.ac.uk/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=35884 |title=X-ray crystallography and the chemistry of the sterols |first=Dorothy Mary Crowfoot |last=Hodgkin |website=lib.cam.ac.uk |publisher=University of Cambridge |year=1937 |id={{EThOS|uk.bl.ethos.727110}} |access-date=24 November 2017 |archive-date=13 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180613085029/https://ulmss-newton.lib.cam.ac.uk/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=35884 |url-status=live}}

Career and discoveries

File:Model of the Structure of Penicillin, by Dorothy Hodgkin, Oxford, c.1945.jpeg. The points of highest density show the positions of individual atoms in the penicillin. This device was used by Hodgkin to deduce the structure.]]

File:Molecular model of Penicillin by Dorothy Hodgkin (9663803982).jpg

File:Cobalamin.svg, as established by Hodgkin]]

In 1933 Hodgkin was awarded a research fellowship by Somerville College, and in 1934, she moved back to Oxford. She started teaching chemistry with her own lab equipment. The college appointed her its first fellow and tutor in chemistry in 1936, a post which she held until 1977. In the 1940s, one of her students was Margaret Roberts (later Margaret Thatcher){{cite book |last=Young |first=Hugo |title=One of us: a biography of Margaret Thatcher |publisher=Macmillan |year=1989 |isbn=978-0-333-34439-2 |location=London |author-link=Hugo Young}} who, while Prime Minister, hung a portrait of Hodgkin in her office at Downing Street out of respect for her former teacher. Hodgkin was, however a life-long Labour Party supporter.{{cite news |author=BBC UK Politics |date=19 August 2014 |title=Thatcher and Hodgkin: How chemistry overcame politics |work=BBC News |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-28801302 |url-status=live |access-date=20 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201182356/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-28801302 |archive-date=1 December 2017 |via=bbc.co.uk}}

In April 1953, together with Sydney Brenner, Jack Dunitz, Leslie Orgel, and Beryl M. Oughton, Hodgkin was one of the first people to travel from Oxford to Cambridge to see the model of the double helix structure of DNA, constructed by Francis Crick and James Watson, which was based on data and technique acquired by Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin. According to the late Dr Beryl Oughton (married name, Rimmer), they drove to Cambridge in two cars after Hodgkin announced that they were off to see the model of the structure of DNA.

Hodgkin became a reader at Oxford in 1957 and she was given a fully modern laboratory the following year.{{cite book |last=Yount |first=Lisa |url=https://archive.org/details/tozofwomeninscie00youn/page/91 |title=A Biographical Dictionary A to Z of Women In Science and Math |publisher=Facts On File, Inc |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-8160-3797-1 |location=New York, NY |pages=[https://archive.org/details/tozofwomeninscie00youn/page/91 91]}} In 1960, Hodgkin was appointed the Royal Society's Wolfson Research Professor, a position she held until 1970.{{cite web |author=Anon |year=2014 |title=The Biography of Dorothy Mary Hodgkin |url=http://news.biharprabha.com/2014/04/the-biography-of-dorothy-mary-hodgkin/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170506002326/http://news.biharprabha.com/2014/04/the-biography-of-dorothy-mary-hodgkin/ |archive-date=6 May 2017 |access-date=11 May 2014 |website=news.biharprabha.com }} This provided her salary, research expenses and research assistance to continue her work at the University of Oxford. She was a fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford, from 1977 to 1983.{{cite web |title=Award winners |url=http://www.ox.ac.uk/about/oxford-people/award-winners |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140701211221/http://www.ox.ac.uk/about/oxford-people/award-winners |archive-date=1 July 2014 |access-date=21 June 2017 |publisher=University of Oxford}}

=Steroid structure=

Hodgkin was particularly noted for discovering three-dimensional biomolecular structures. In 1945, working with C.H. (Harry) Carlisle, she published the first such structure of a steroid, cholesteryl iodide (having worked with cholesteryls since the days of her doctoral studies).{{cite journal | doi = 10.1098/rspa.1943.0040| title = The Crystal Structure of Cholesteryl Iodide| journal = Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences| volume = 184| issue = 996| page = 64| year = 1945| last1 = Carlisle | first1 = C.H.| last2 = Crowfoot | first2 = D.|bibcode = 1945RSPSA.184...64C | doi-access = | s2cid = 38958402}}

=Penicillin structure=

In 1945, Hodgkin and her colleagues, including biochemist Barbara Low, solved the structure of penicillin, demonstrating, contrary to scientific opinion at the time, that it contains a β-lactam ring. The work was not published until 1949.{{cite book |last1=Crowfoot |first1=D. |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781400874910-012/html |title=Chemistry of Penicillin |last2=Bunn |first2=Charles W. |last3=Low |first3=Barabara W. |last4=Turner-Jones |first4=Annette |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1949 |editor1=Clarke, H.T. |pages=310–67 |chapter=X-ray crystallographic investigation of the structure of penicillin |doi=10.1515/9781400874910-012 |isbn=9781400874910 |author-link3=Barbara Low (biochemist) |editor2=Johnson, J.R. |editor3=Robinson, R. |access-date=6 May 2022 |archive-date=6 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220506093351/https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781400874910-012/html |url-status=live }}{{refn|group=nb|First author as D. Crowfoot.}}

=Vitamin B<sub>12</sub> structure=

In 1948, Hodgkin first encountered vitamin B12,{{cite web|last1=Hodgkin|first1=Dorothy|title=Beginning to work on vitamin B12|url=http://www.webofstories.com/play/dorothy.hodgkin/31|website=Web of Stories|access-date=14 October 2014|archive-date=4 September 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150904103007/http://www.webofstories.com/play/dorothy.hodgkin/31|url-status=live}} one of the most structurally complex vitamins known, and created new crystals. Vitamin B12 had first been discovered at Merck earlier that year. It had a structure at the time that was almost completely unknown, and when Hodgkin discovered it contained cobalt, she realized the structure actualization could be determined by X-ray crystallography analysis. The large size of the molecule, and the fact that the atoms were largely unaccounted for—aside from cobalt—posed a challenge in structure analysis that had not been previously explored.{{cite web|title=Hodgkin, Dorothy Mary Crowfoot|url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Dorothy_Mary_Crowfoot_Hodgkin.aspx|website=Encyclopedia.com|publisher=Cengage Learning|access-date=3 November 2015|archive-date=14 October 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151014115213/http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Dorothy_Mary_Crowfoot_Hodgkin.aspx|url-status=live}}

From these crystals, she deduced the presence of a ring structure because the crystals were pleochroic, a finding which she later confirmed using X-ray crystallography. The B12 study published by Hodgkin was described by Lawrence Bragg as being as significant "as breaking the sound barrier".{{cite journal | doi = 10.1038/1741169a0| pmid = 13223773| title = Structure of Vitamin B12: X-ray Crystallographic Evidence on the Structure of Vitamin B12| journal = Nature| volume = 174| issue = 4443| pages = 1169–71| year = 1954| last1 = Brink | first1 = C. | last2 = Hodgkin | first2 = D.C. | last3 = Lindsey | first3 = J. | last4 = Pickworth | first4 = J. | last5 = Robertson | first5 = J.H. | last6 = White | first6 = J.G. |bibcode = 1954Natur.174.1169B | s2cid = 4207158}} Scientists from Merck had previously crystallised B12, but had published only refractive indices of the substance.{{cite journal|last1=Rickes|first1=E. L.|last2=Brink|first2=N.G.|last3=Koniuszy|first3=F.R.|last4=Wood|first4=T.R.|last5=Folkers|first5=K.|title=Crystalline Vitamin B12|journal=Science|date=16 April 1948|volume=107|issue=2781|pages=396–97|doi=10.1126/science.107.2781.396|pmid=17783930|bibcode=1948Sci...107..396R}} The final structure of B12, for which Hodgkin was later awarded the Nobel Prize, was published in 1955{{cite journal|doi=10.1038/176325a0|pmid=13253565|title=Structure of Vitamin B12: The Crystal Structure of the Hexacarboxylic Acid derived from B12 and the Molecular Structure of the Vitamin|journal=Nature|volume=176|issue=4477|pages=325–28|year=1955|last1=Hodgkin|first1=Dorothy Crowfoot|last2=Pickworth|first2=Jenny|last3=Robertson|first3=John H.|last4=Trueblood|first4=Kenneth N.|last5=Prosen|first5=Richard J.|last6=White|first6=John G.|bibcode=1955Natur.176..325H|s2cid=4220926}} and 1956.{{cite journal |author1=Hodgkin, Dorothy Crowfoot |author2=Kamper, Jennifer |author3=Mackay, Maureen |author4=Pickworth, Jenny |author5=Trueblood, Kenneth N |author6=White, John G.|s2cid=4210164|title=Structure of vitamin B12|journal=Nature|volume=178|issue=4524|pages=64–66|date=July 1956|doi=10.1038/178064a0|pmid=13348621|bibcode=1956Natur.178...64H}}

=Insulin structure=

Insulin was one of Hodgkin's most extraordinary research projects. It began in 1934 when she was offered a small sample of crystalline insulin by Robert Robinson. The hormone captured her imagination because of the intricate and wide-ranging effect it has in the body. However, at this stage X-ray crystallography had not been developed far enough to cope with the complexity of the insulin molecule. She and others spent many years improving the technique.

It took 35 years after taking her first photograph of an insulin crystal for X-ray crystallography and computing techniques to be able to tackle larger and more complex molecules like insulin. Hodgkin's dream of unlocking the structure of insulin was put on hold until 1969 when she was finally able to work with her team of young, international scientists to uncover the structure for the first time. Hodgkin's work with insulin was instrumental in paving the way for insulin to be mass-produced and used on a large scale for treatment of both type one and type two diabetes.{{cite web |last1=Weidman |first1=Chelsea |title=Meet Dorothy Hodgkin, the biochemist who pieced together penicillin, insulin, and vitamin B12 |url=https://massivesci.com/articles/dorothy-hodgkin-facts-penicillin-insulin-vitamin-b12-folate-cobalamin-antibiotic/ |website=Massive Science |date=12 May 2019 |access-date=9 June 2020 |archive-date=10 August 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200810082716/https://massivesci.com/articles/dorothy-hodgkin-facts-penicillin-insulin-vitamin-b12-folate-cobalamin-antibiotic/ |url-status=live }} She went on to cooperate with other laboratories active in insulin research, giving advice, and traveling the world giving talks about insulin and its importance for the future of diabetes. Solving the structure of insulin had two important implications for the treatment of diabetes, both making mass production of insulin possible and allowing scientists to alter the structure of insulin to create even better drug options for patients going forward.

Personal life

= Personality =

Hodgkin's soft-spoken, gentle and modest demeanor hid a steely determination to achieve her ends, whatever obstacles might stand in her way. She inspired devotion in her students and colleagues, even the most junior of whom knew her simply as Dorothy. Her structural studies of biologically important molecules set standards for a field that was very much in development during her work life. She made fundamental contributions to the understanding of how these molecules carry out their tasks in living system.

=Mentor=

Hodgkin's mentor Professor John Desmond Bernal greatly influenced her life: scientifically, politically, and personally. Bernal was a key scientific adviser to the UK government during the Second World War. He was also an open and vocal member of the Communist Party and a faithful supporter of the Soviet regime until its invasion of Hungary in 1956. He was a chemist who believed in equal opportunity for women. In his laboratory, Hodgkin extended work that he began on biological molecules including sterols. She helped him to make the first X-ray diffraction studies of pepsin and crystalline protein. Hodgkin always referred to him as "Sage". They were lovers before she met Thomas Hodgkin.{{cite book |last1=Brown |first1=Andrew |title=J.D. Bernal – the Sage of Science |date=2005 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-920565-3 |pages=137–40}} The marriages of both Dorothy and Bernal were unconventional by the standards of the present and of those days.{{cite book |last=Ferry |first=Georgina |title=Dorothy Hodgkin: A Life |publisher=Granta Books |year=1998 |isbn=978-1-86207-167-4 |location=London |pages=94–101}}

=Health=

In 1934, at the age of 24, Dorothy began experiencing pain in her hands causing them to become swollen and distorted. She was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, and went to a clinic in Buxton for thermal baths and gold treatments.{{cite book |last=Grinstein |first=Louise S. |title=Women in Chemistry and Physics: A Biobibliographic Sourcebook. |publisher=Greenwood Press |year=1993 |isbn=9780253209078 |pages=255}} After some treatment, Hodgkin returned to the lab, where she struggled to use the main switch on the x-ray equipment due to the condition of her hands. She had to create a lever on her own in order to utilize the switch.{{cite web |title=Dorothy Hodgkin FRS – Scientists with disabilities {{!}} Royal Society |url=https://royalsociety.org/topics-policy/diversity-in-science/scientists-with-disabilities/dorothy-hodgkin/ |access-date=2023-04-07 |website=royalsociety.org}} Her condition would become progressively worse and debilitating over time, with deformities in both her hands and feet, and prolonged periods of pain. While Hodgkin spent a great deal of time in a wheelchair in her later years, she remained scientifically active in her career.{{cite web |last=Walters |first=Grayson |title=Not Standing Still's Disease |url=https://www.notstandingstillsdisease.com/2010/01/14/dorothy-hodgkin/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511151129/https://www.notstandingstillsdisease.com/2010/01/14/dorothy-hodgkin/ |archive-date=11 May 2021 |access-date=2011-12-03}}

=Marriage and family=

In 1937, Dorothy Crowfoot married Thomas Lionel Hodgkin, an historian's son, who was then teaching an adult-education class in mining and industrial communities in the north of England after he resigned from the Colonial Office.{{cite news |date=26 March 1982 |title=Mr Thomas Hodgkin |newspaper=The Times}} He was an intermittent member of the Communist Party and later wrote several major works on African politics and history, becoming a well-known lecturer at Balliol College in Oxford.Michael Wolfers, [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/51860 'Hodgkin, Thomas Lionel (1910–1982)'] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924160002/http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/51860|date=24 September 2015}}, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004; online edn, January 2008, accessed 15 January 2010 As his health was too poor for active military service, he continued working throughout World War II, returning to Oxford on the weekends, where his wife remained working on penicillin. The couple had three children: Luke[http://www.kcl.ac.uk/nms/depts/mathematics/people/atoz/hodgkinl.aspx "Dr Luke Hodgkin"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160923161215/http://www.kcl.ac.uk/nms/depts/mathematics/people/atoz/hodgkinl.aspx|date=23 September 2016}}, Academic Staff, King's College London. (b. 1938. d. Oct. 2020), Elizabeth{{cite web |title=Fellows and governance of the Rift Valley Institute |url=http://riftvalley.net/directors-governance |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180419102400/http://riftvalley.net/directors-governance |archive-date=19 April 2018 |access-date=31 July 2016 |website=riftvalley.net |publisher=Rift Valley Institute}} (b. 1941) and Toby[http://agrobiodiversityplatform.org/database/expert/toby-hodgkin/ "Toby Hodgkin"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190624100951/http://agrobiodiversityplatform.org/database/expert/toby-hodgkin/|date=24 June 2019}}, PAR Researcher Database. (b. 1946). The oldest son, Luke, became a mathematics instructor at the new University of Warwick. Their daughter, Elizabeth, followed her father's career as a historian. Their younger son, Toby, studied botany and agriculture. Overall, Thomas Hodgkin spent extended periods of time in West Africa, where he was an enthusiastic supporter and chronicler of the emerging postcolonial states.

=Aliases=

Hodgkin published as "Dorothy Crowfoot" until 1949, when she was persuaded by Hans Clarke's secretary to use her married name on a chapter she contributed to The Chemistry of Penicillin. By then she had been married for 12 years, given birth to three children and been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS).

Thereafter she would publish as "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin", and this was the name used by the Nobel Foundation in its award to her and the biography it included among other Nobel Prize recipients;{{cite web |url=https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1964/hodgkin-bio.html |title=Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin – Biographical |publisher=The Nobel Foundation |access-date=2019-03-10 |archive-date=10 June 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170610155355/http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1964/hodgkin-bio.html |url-status=live }} it is also what the Science History Institute calls her.{{cite web |url=https://www.sciencehistory.org/historical-profile/dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin |title=Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin |publisher=Science History Institute |date=June 2016 |access-date=20 March 2018 |archive-date=21 March 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180321192715/https://www.sciencehistory.org/historical-profile/dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin |url-status=live }}{{cite journal|last1=Meyer|first1=Michal|title=Sketch of a Scientist|url=https://www.sciencehistory.org/distillations/magazine/sketch-of-a-scientist|journal=Distillations|date=2018|volume=4|issue=1|pages=10–11|access-date=27 June 2018|archive-date=14 April 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210414230654/https://www.sciencehistory.org/distillations/magazine/sketch-of-a-scientist|url-status=live}} For simplicity's sake, Hodgkin is referred to as "Dorothy Hodgkin" by the Royal Society, when referring to its sponsorship of the Dorothy Hodgkin fellowship, and by Somerville College, after it inaugurated the annual lectures in her honour.

The National Archives of the United Kingdom refer to her as "Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin"; on a variety of plaques commemorating places where she worked or lived, e.g. 94 Woodstock Road, Oxford, she is "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin". In 2022, the Department of Biochemistry in Oxford renamed its much expanded building after Hodgkin, calling it the "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Building".[https://www.bioch.ox.ac.uk/article/new-biochemistry-building-renamed-the-dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin-building "New biochemistry building renamed the Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Building", University of Oxford, Department of Biochemistry website, May 2022].

=Contacts with scientists abroad=

Between the 1950s and the 1970s, Hodgkin established and maintained lasting contacts with scientists in her field abroad—at the Institute of Crystallography in Moscow; in India; and with the Chinese group working in Beijing and Shanghai on the structure of insulin.

Her first visit to China was in 1959. Over the next quarter century, she travelled there seven more times, the last visit a year before her death.Georgina Ferry, Dorothy Hodgkin – a life, Granta: London, 1998, pp. 335–42. Particularly memorable was the visit in 1971 after the Chinese group themselves independently solved the structure of insulin, later than Hodgkin's team but to a higher resolution. During the subsequent three years, 1972–1975, when she was President of the International Union of Crystallography she was unable to persuade the Chinese authorities, however, to permit the country's scientists to become members of the Union and attend its meetings.

Her relations with a supposed scientist in another "People's Democracy" had less happy results. At the age of 73, Hodgkin wrote a foreword to the English edition of Stereospecific Polymerization of Isoprene, published by Robert Maxwell as the work of Elena Ceaușescu, wife of Romania's communist dictator. Hodgkin wrote of the author's "outstanding achievements" and "impressive" career.{{cite book|title=Stereospecific Polymerization of Isoprene|first=Elena|last=Ceausescu|publisher=Pergamon|year=1983|isbn=978-0-08-029987-7}} Following the overthrow of Ceausescu during the Romanian Revolution of 1989, it was revealed that Elena Ceausescu had neither finished secondary school nor attended university. Her scientific credentials were a hoax, and the publication in question was written for her by a team of scientists to obtain a fraudulent doctorate.{{cite book|title=Kiss the Hand You Cannot Bite|first=Edward|last=Behr|year=1991|isbn=978-0-679-40128-5|url=https://archive.org/details/kisshandyoucanno00behr|publisher=Villard Books}}

=Political views and activities=

Because of Hodgkin's political activities, and her husband's association with the Communist Party, she was banned from entering the US in 1953 and subsequently not allowed to visit the country except by CIA waiver.{{cite book|last1=Rose|first1=Hilary|title=Love, Power, and Knowledge: Towards a Feminist Transformation of the Sciences|url=https://archive.org/details/lovepowerknowled00rose|url-access=registration|date=1994|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=9780253209078|page=[https://archive.org/details/lovepowerknowled00rose/page/139 139]|language=en}}

In 1961 Thomas became an advisor to Kwame Nkrumah, President of Ghana, a country he visited for extended periods before Nkrumah's ouster in 1966. Hodgkin was in Ghana with her husband when they received the news that she had been awarded the Nobel Prize.

She acquired from her mother, Molly, a concern about social inequalities and a determination to do what she could to prevent armed conflict. Dorothy became particularly concerned about the threat of nuclear war. In 1976, she became president of the Pugwash Conference and served longer than any who preceded or succeeded her in this post. She stepped down in 1988, the year after the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty imposed "a global ban on short- and long-range nuclear weapons systems, as well as an intrusive verification regime".{{cite journal | last1 = Howard | first1 = Judith Anne Kathleen | title = Timeline: Dorothy Hodgkin and her contributions to biochemistry | doi = 10.1038/nrm1243 | journal = Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | volume = 4 | issue = 11 | pages = 891–96 | year = 2003 | pmid = 14625538| s2cid = 20958882 }} {{closed access}} She accepted the Lenin Peace Prize from the Soviet government in 1987 in recognition of her work for peace and disarmament.

=Disability and death=

Due to distance, Hodgkin decided not to attend the 1987 Congress of the International Union of Crystallography in Australia. However, despite increasing frailty, she astounded close friends and family by going to Beijing for the 1993 Congress, where she was welcomed by all.

She died in July 1994 after a stroke, at her husband's home in the village of Ilmington, near Shipston-on-Stour, Warwickshire.{{cite web|title=The Biography of Dorothy Mary Hodgkin|url=http://news.biharprabha.com/2014/04/the-biography-of-dorothy-mary-hodgkin/|access-date=11 May 2014|year=2014|author=Anon|website=news.biharprabha.com|archive-date=6 May 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170506002326/http://news.biharprabha.com/2014/04/the-biography-of-dorothy-mary-hodgkin/|url-status=live}}

Portraits

The National Portrait Gallery, London lists 17 portraits of Dorothy Hodgkin{{cite web |title=Search the Collection: Dorothy Hodgkin |url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp05412/dorothy-mary-crowfoot-hodgkin |website=National Portrait Gallery, London |access-date=27 June 2018 |archive-date=27 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180627204028/https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp05412/dorothy-mary-crowfoot-hodgkin |url-status=live }} including an oil painting of her at her desk by Maggi Hambling{{cite web |title=Dorothy Hodgkin |url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw07497/Dorothy-Hodgkin |website=National Portrait Gallery, London |access-date=27 June 2018 |archive-date=20 September 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170920025500/http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw07497/Dorothy-Hodgkin |url-status=live }} and a photograph portrait by David Montgomery.{{cite web |title=Dorothy Hodgkin |url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp05412/dorothy-mary-crowfoot-hodgkin |website=National Portrait Gallery, London |access-date=27 June 2018 |archive-date=27 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180627204028/https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp05412/dorothy-mary-crowfoot-hodgkin |url-status=live }}

Graham Sutherland made preliminary sketches for a portrait of Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin in 1978. One sketch is in the collection of the Science History Institute and another at the Royal Society in London. The portrait was never finished.{{cite web |title=Digital Collections: Professor Dorothy Hodgkin |url=https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/zg64tm662 |website=Science History Institute |access-date=27 June 2018 |archive-date=27 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180627202644/https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/zg64tm662 |url-status=live }}{{cite web |title=A Nobel laureate |url=https://royalsociety.org/collections/dorothy-hodgkin/ |website=The Royal Society |access-date=27 June 2018 |archive-date=27 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180627202432/https://royalsociety.org/collections/dorothy-hodgkin/ |url-status=live }}

A portrait of Dorothy Hodgkin by Bryan Organ was commissioned by private subscription to become part of the collection of the Royal Society. Accepted by the president of the society on 25 March 1982, it was the first portrait of a woman Fellow to be included in the Society's collection.{{cite journal |last1=Cornforth |first1=J. |title=Portrait of Dorothy Hodgkin, O.M., F.R.S. |journal=Notes and Records of the Royal Society |date=1 August 1982 |volume=37 |issue=1 |pages=1–4 |doi=10.1098/rsnr.1982.0001 |pmid=11611057 |s2cid=2632315 }}{{cite web |title=Portrait of Dorothy Hodgkin |url=https://pictures.royalsociety.org/image-rs-9626 |website=The Royal Society |access-date=27 June 2018 |archive-date=27 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180627202538/https://pictures.royalsociety.org/image-rs-9626 |url-status=live }}

Honours and awards

=While living=

File:Order of Merit Dorothy Hodgkin.jpg insignia of Dorothy Hodgkin, displayed in the Royal Society, London|226x226px]]

  • By 1945 she had succeeded in identifying the structure of vitamin B12, describing the arrangement of its atoms in three dimensions.
  • Hodgkin won the 1964 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, and is the only British woman scientist to have been awarded a Nobel Prize in any of the three sciences it recognizes.[https://royalsociety.org/about-us/who-we-are/diversity-inclusion/case-studies/scientists-with-disabilities/dorothy-hodgkin/ Royal Society website, Dorothy Hodgkin FRS][https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-33157396 BBC website, The women whom science forgot, article dated 19 June 2015]
  • In 1965 she was appointed to the Order of Merit. She was the second woman to receive the Order.[https://hekint.org/2020/11/04/dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin-om-frs-1910-1994/ Hektoen International website, Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin OM, FRS (1910-1994), article by J. M. S. Pearce]
  • In 1976, she was the first woman to receive the prestigious Copley Medal.[https://www.britannica.com/science/Copley-Medal Britannica website, Copley Medal]
  • In 1947, she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1947{{cite journal |last1=Dodson |first1=Guy |author-link=Guy Dodson |year=2002 |title=Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin, O.M. 12 May 1910 – 29 July 1994 |journal=Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society |volume=48 |pages=179–219 |doi=10.1098/rsbm.2002.0011 |issn=0080-4606 |pmid=13678070 |s2cid=61764553}} {{free access}} and EMBO Membership in 1970.
  • Hodgkin was Chancellor of the University of Bristol from 1970 to 1988.
  • She was given an honorary Degree of Science from University of Bath in 1978.
  • In 1958, she was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.{{cite web|title=Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter H|url=http://www.amacad.org/publications/BookofMembers/ChapterH.pdf|publisher=American Academy of Arts and Sciences|access-date=25 July 2014|archive-date=15 November 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111115175123/http://www.amacad.org/publications/BookofMembers/ChapterH.pdf|url-status=live}}
  • In 1966, she was awarded the Iota Sigma Pi National Honorary Member for her significant contribution.{{cite web|url=http://www.iotasigmapi.info/awards/professionalawards.html|title=Professional Awards|author=Anon|website=iotasigmapi.info|publisher=Iota Sigma Pi: National Honor Society for Women in Chemistry|access-date=16 December 2014|year=2017|archive-date=23 March 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190323234904/http://www.iotasigmapi.info/awards/professionalawards.html|url-status=dead}}
  • She became a foreign member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the 1970s.
  • In 1982 she received the Lomonosov Medal of the Soviet Academy of Sciences.
  • In 1987 she accepted the Lenin Peace Prize from the government of Mikhail Gorbachev and was the first woman to receive the Copley Medal in 1976.
  • An asteroid (5422) discovered on 23 December 1982 by L.G. Karachkina (at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory, M.P.C. 22509, in the USSR) in 1993 was named "Hodgkin" in her honour.[http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/ECS/MPCArchive/1993/MPC_19930901.pdf Minor Planet Center, "Hodgkin"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304063337/http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/ECS/MPCArchive/1993/MPC_19930901.pdf |date=4 March 2016 }}.
  • In 1983, Hodgkin received the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art.{{cite web | url = http://www.parlament.gv.at/PAKT/VHG/XXIV/AB/AB_10542/imfname_251156.pdf | title = Reply to a parliamentary question | language = de | page = 690 | access-date = 21 October 2012 | archive-date = 1 May 2020 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200501061109/https://www.parlament.gv.at/PAKT/VHG/XXIV/AB/AB_10542/imfname_251156.pdf | url-status = live }}

=Legacy=

  • The Dorothy Hodgkin Quarter, a student accommodation block at Somerville, is named after Hodgkin.[https://www.some.ox.ac.uk/life-here/accommodation/ Somerville College website, Accommodation at Somerville]
  • British commemorative stamps - Hodgkin was one of five 'Women of Achievement' selected for a set issued in August 1996. The others were Marea Hartman (sports administrator), Margot Fonteyn (ballerina/choreographer), Elisabeth Frink (sculptor) & Daphne du Maurier (writer). All except Hodgkin were Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBEs). In 2010, during the 350th anniversary of the founding of the Royal Society, Hodgkin was the only woman in a set of stamps celebrating ten of the Society's most illustrious members, taking her place alongside Isaac Newton, Edward Jenner, Joseph Lister, Benjamin Franklin, Charles Babbage, Robert Boyle, Ernest Rutherford, Nicholas Shackleton and Alfred Russel Wallace.{{cite web |url=https://www.newscientist.com/gallery/the-royal-society-stamp |title=Getting the Royal Society stamp of approval |work=New Scientist |access-date=12 May 2014 |archive-date=5 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140705042136/http://www.newscientist.com/gallery/the-royal-society-stamp |url-status=live }}
  • The Royal Society awards the Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship (named in her honour) "for outstanding scientists at an early stage of their research career who require a flexible working pattern due to personal circumstances, such as parenting or caring responsibilities or health-related reasons."{{cite web|url=https://royalsociety.org/grants-schemes-awards/grants/dorothy-hodgkin-fellowship/|title=The Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship|author=Anon|year=2017|publisher=Royal Society|location=London|access-date=2 November 2016|archive-date=16 November 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161116213947/https://royalsociety.org/grants-schemes-awards/grants/dorothy-hodgkin-fellowship/|url-status=live}}
  • The Council offices in the London Borough of Hackney and buildings at University of York, Bristol University and Keele University are named after her, as is the science block at Sir John Leman High School, her former school.
  • In 2012, Hodgkin was featured in the BBC Radio 4 series The New Elizabethans to mark the diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. In this series a panel of seven academics, journalists and historians named her among the group of people in the UK "whose actions during the reign of Elizabeth II have had a significant impact on lives in these islands and given the age its character".{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01jxs2c/features/about|publisher=BBC|title=The New Elizabethans – Dorothy Hodgkin|access-date=30 May 2016|archive-date=25 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121125012450/http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01jxs2c/features/about|url-status=live}}
  • In 2015 Hodgkin's 1949 paper The X-ray Crystallographic Investigation of the Structure of Penicillin was honoured by a Citation for Chemical Breakthrough Award from the Division of History of Chemistry of the American Chemical Society presented to the University of Oxford (England). This research is notable for its groundbreaking use of X-ray crystallography to determine the structure of complex natural products, in this instance, of penicillin.{{cite web|title=2015 Awardees|url=http://www.scs.illinois.edu/~mainzv/HIST/awards/CCB-2015_Awardees.php|website=American Chemical Society, Division of the History of Chemistry|publisher=University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign School of Chemical Sciences|date=2015|access-date=1 July 2016|archive-date=21 June 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160621153928/http://www.scs.illinois.edu/~mainzv/HIST/awards/CCB-2015_Awardees.php|url-status=live}}{{cite web|title=Citation for Chemical Breakthrough Award|url=http://www.scs.illinois.edu/~mainzv/HIST/awards/Citations/2015%20-%20Crowfoot%20plaque.pdf|website=American Chemical Society, Division of the History of Chemistry|publisher=University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign School of Chemical Sciences|date=2015|access-date=1 July 2016|archive-date=19 September 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160919190522/http://www.scs.illinois.edu/~mainzv/HIST/awards/Citations/2015%20-%20Crowfoot%20plaque.pdf|url-status=live}}
  • Since 1999, the Oxford International Women's Festival has presented the annual Dorothy Hodgkin Memorial Lecture, usually in March, in honour of Hodgkin's work.{{cite web|url=https://oxfordinternationalwomensfestival.co.uk/2019-festival/|title=2019 Festival|date=2018-03-31|website=Oxford International Women's Festival|language=en|access-date=2019-10-09|archive-date=9 October 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191009010530/https://oxfordinternationalwomensfestival.co.uk/2019-festival/|url-status=live}} The Lecture is a collaboration between Oxford AWiSE (Association for Women in Science & Engineering), Somerville College and the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.

See also

Notes

{{reflist|group=nb}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

{{div col|colwidth=30em}}

  • Papers of Dorothy Hodgkin at the Bodleian Library. Catalogues at [http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/hodgkin/hodgkin-main.html Catalogue of the papers and correspondence of Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin, 1828–1993] and [http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/hodgkin/hodgkin-adds.html Catalogue of the additional papers of Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin, 1919–2003]
  • {{cite book|last=Opfell|first=Olga S.|title=Lady Laureates : Women Who Have Won the Nobel Prize |url=https://archive.org/details/ladylaureateswom0000opfe|url-access=registration|year=1978|publisher=Scarecrow Press|location=Metuchen, NJ & London|isbn=978-0810811614|pages=[https://archive.org/details/ladylaureateswom0000opfe/page/209 209–23]}}
  • Dodson, Guy; Glusker, Jenny P.; Sayre, David (eds.) (1981). Structural Studies on Molecules of Biological Interest: A Volume in Honour of Professor Dorothy Hodgkin. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Hudson, Gill (1991). "Unfathering the Thinkable: Gender, Science and Pacificism in the 1930s". Science and Sensibility: Gender and Scientific Enquiry, 1780–1945, ed. Marina Benjamin, 264–86. Oxford: Blackwell.
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20060525114905/http://www.royalsoced.org.uk/fellowship/obits/obits_alpha/hodgkin_dorothy.pdf Royal Society of Edinburgh obituary (author: William Cochran)]
  • Ferry, Georgina (1998). Dorothy Hodgkin A Life. London: Granta Books.
  • [http://webofstories.com/gl/dorothy.hodgkin Dorothy Hodgkin tells her life story at Web of Stories] (video)
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20040921114554/http://cwp.library.ucla.edu/Phase2/Hodgkin,_Dorothy_Crowfoot@841234567.html CWP] – Dorothy Hodgkin in a study of contributions of women to physics
  • [http://www.sdsc.edu/ScienceWomen/hodgkin.html Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin: A Founder of Protein Crystallography]
  • Glusker, Jenny P. in [http://www.cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521821971 Out of the Shadows (2006)] – Contributions of 20th Century Women to Physics.
  • [https://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9040680/Dorothy-Crowfoot-Hodgkin Encyclopædia Britannica, "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin" (author: Georgina Ferry, 2014)]
  • Wolfers, Michael (2007). Thomas Hodgkin – Wandering Scholar: A Biography. Monmouth: Merlin Press.
  • {{cite book|last1=Haber|first1=Louis|title=Women pioneers of science|date=1979|publisher=Harcourt|location=New York|isbn=9780152992026|oclc=731559034|url=https://archive.org/details/womenpioneersofs00habe}}
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Glusker | first1 = J.P. | last2 = Adams | first2 = M.J. | doi = 10.1063/1.2808036 | title = Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin | journal = Physics Today | volume = 48 | issue = 5 | page = 80 | year = 1995 |bibcode = 1995PhT....48e..80G | doi-access = free }}
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Johnson | first1 = L.N. | last2 = Phillips | first2 = D. | doi = 10.1038/nsb0994-573 | title = Professor Dorothy Hodgkin, OM, FRS | journal = Nature Structural Biology | volume = 1 | issue = 9 | pages = 573–76 | year = 1994 | pmid = 7634095| s2cid = 30490352 | doi-access = free }}
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Perutz | first1 = Max| author-link1 = Max Perutz| title = Obituary: Dorothy Hodgkin (1910–94) | doi = 10.1038/371020a0 | journal = Nature | volume = 371 | issue = 6492 | page = 20 | year = 1994 | pmid = 7980814|bibcode = 1994Natur.371...20P | s2cid = 4316846| doi-access = free }}
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Perutz | first1 = M. | title = Professor Dorothy Hodgkin | doi = 10.1017/S0033583500003085 | journal = Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics | volume = 27 | issue = 4 | pages = 333–37 | year = 2009 | pmid = 7784539| doi-access = free }}

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External links

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  • {{Nobelprize}} including the Nobel Lecture, 11 December 1964 The X-ray Analysis of Complicated Molecules
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  • Four interviews with Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin recorded between 1987 and 1989 in partnership with the Royal College of Physicians are held in the Medical Sciences Video Archive in the Special Collections at Oxford Brookes University:
  • [https://doi.org/10.24384/000157 Professor Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin OM FRS in interview with Sir Gordon Wolstenholme: Interview 1 (1987).]
  • [https://doi.org/10.24384/000156 Professor Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin OM FRS in interview with Max Blythe: Interview 2 (1988).]
  • [https://doi.org/10.24384/000155 Professor Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin OM FRS in interview with Max Blythe: Interview 3 (1989).]
  • [https://doi.org/10.24384/000158 Professor Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin OM FRS at home talking with Max Blythe: Interview 4 (1989).]
  • [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNl5rwIg4B4 Watch a lecture of Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910–1994) at the 1988 Nobel Laureates Symposium at the annual meeting of the American Crystallographic Association, Philadelphia]
  • [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0008wkk Dorothy Hodgkin featured on the BBC Radio 4 program In Our Time on 3 October 2019.]
  • [https://www.bbc.co.uk/ideas/videos/the-exceptional-life-of-dorothy-crowfoot-hodgkin/p09x02lh?playlist=day-of-the-scientist "The exceptional life of Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin", BBC "Ideas" video, 27 September 2021]

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