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My birth in July 1928 in Methuen, Massachusetts was followed
just eighteen months later by the death of my father, Elias,
a successful business man in that community 30 miles north
of Boston. My mother, Fatina (née Hasham), changed my name
from William to Elias shortly after my father's passing. I
do not remember my father, but all his friends and
associates made it clear that he was a remarkably gifted and
much admired person. I have always been guided by a desire
to be a worthy son to the father I cannot remember and to
the loving, courageous mother who raised me, my brother, and
two sisters through the trials of the Depression and World
War II. My grandparents on both sides, who emigrated from
Lebanon to the United States, also knew how to cope with
adversity, as Christians in a tragically torn country, under
the grip of the Ottoman empire.
In 1931, our family grew to include my mother's sister,
Naciby, and her husband, John Saba, who had no children of
their own. We all lived together in a spacious house in
Methuen, still a gathering place for family reunions. My
uncle and aunt were like second parents to us. As a
youngster I was rather independent, preferring such sports
as football, baseball and hiking to work. However, when my
aunt, who was much stricter than my mother, assigned a
household chore, it had to be taken seriously. From her I
learned to be efficient and to take pleasure in a job well
done, no matter how mundane. We were a very close, happy and
hardworking family with everything that we needed, despite
the loss of my father and the hard economic times. Uncle
John died in 1957, and too soon afterwards, in 1960, my aunt
passed away. My mother died in 1970 at the age of seventy.
They all lived to see each of the four children attain a
measure of success.
From the ages of five to twelve I attended the Saint Laurence
O'Toole elementary school in Lawrence, a city next to
Methuen, and was taught by sisters of the Catholic order of
Notre Dame de Namour. I enjoyed all my subjects there. I do
not remember ever learning any science, except for
mathematics. I graduated from Lawrence Public High School at
the age of sixteen and entered the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, just a few weeks later, in July, 1945, with
excellent preparation, since most of my high school teachers
had been dedicated and able. Although my favorite subject
was mathematics, I had no plan for a career, except the
notion that electronic engineering might be attractive,
since it utilized mathematics at an interesting
technological frontier. My first courses at M.I.T. were in
the basic sciences: mathematics, physics and chemistry, all
of which were wonderful. I became a convert to chemistry
before even taking an engineering course because of the
excellence and enthusiasm of my teachers, the central
position of chemistry in the sciences and the joy of solving
problems in the laboratory. Organic chemistry was especially
fascinating with its intrinsic beauty and its great
relevance to human health. I had many superb teachers at
M.I.T., including Arthur C. Cope, John C. Sheehan, John D.
Roberts and Charles Gardner Swain. I graduated from M.I.T.
after three years and, at the suggestion of Professor
Sheehan, continued there as a graduate member of his
pioneering program on synthetic penicillins. My doctoral
work was completed by the end of 1950 and, at the age of
twenty-two, I joined the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign as an Instructor in Chemistry under the
distinguished chemists Roger Adams and Carl S. Marvel. I am
forever grateful to them for giving me such a splendid
opportunity, as well as for their help and friendship over
many years.
Because my interests in chemistry ranged from the theoretical and
quantitative side to the biological end of the spectrum, I
decided to maintain a broad program of teaching and research
and to approach chemistry as a discipline without internal
boundaries. My research in the first three years, which had
to be done with my own hands and a few undergraduate
students, was in physical organic chemistry. It had to do
with the application of molecular orbital theory to the
understanding of the transition states for various reactions
in three dimensional (i.e. stereochemical) detail. The
stereoelectronic ideas which emerged from this work are
still widely used in chemistry and mechanistic enzymology.
By 1954, as an Assistant Professor with a group of three
graduate students, I was able to initiate more complex
experimental projects, dealing with the structure,
stereochemistry and synthesis of natural products. As a
result of the success of this research, I was appointed in
1956, at age twenty-seven, as Professor of Chemistry. My
research group grew and the scope of our work broadened to
include other topics: enantioselective synthesis, metal
complexes, new reactions for synthesis and enzyme chemistry.
The pace of discovery accelerated.
In the fall of 1957, I received a Guggenheim fellowship and my
first sabbatical leave. It was divided between Harvard, to
which I had been invited by the late Prof. Robert B.
Woodward, and Europe. The last four months of 1957 would
prove eventful. In September, shortly after the beginning of
my stay at Harvard, my uncle John passed away. At least I
had been lucky enough to have seen him just two days before.
I was deeply affected by the loss of this fine and generous
man whom I loved as a real father. In solitude and sadness I
returned to my work and a very deep immersion in studies
which proved to be pivotal to my future research. In early
October several of the key ideas for a logical and general
way of thinking about chemical synthesis came to me. The
application of these insights led to rapid and unusual
solutions to several specific synthetic problems of interest
to me at the time. I showed one such plan (for the molecule
longifolene) to R. B. Woodward and was pleased by his
enthusiastic response. Later in 1957 I visited Switzerland,
London and Lund, the last as a guest of
Prof. Karl Sune Bergström. It was at Lund, in
Bergström's Department, that I became intrigued by the
prostaglandins. Our research in the mid 1960's led to the
first chemical syntheses of prostaglandins and to
involvement in the burgeoning field of eicosanoids ever
since.
In the spring of 1959 I received an offer of a Professorship at
Harvard, which I accepted with alacrity since I wanted to be
near my family and since the Chemistry Department at Harvard
was unsurpassed. The Harvard faculty in 1959 included Paul
D. Bartlett,
Konrad Bloch, Louis F. Fieser, George B. Kistiakowski,
E. G. Rochow, Frank H. Westheimer, E. B. Wilson and
R. B. Woodward, all giants in the field of Chemistry.
Roger Adams, who was always very kind and encouraging to me,
gave his blessing even though years before he had declined a
professorial appointment at Harvard. I have always regarded
the offer of a Professorship at Harvard as the most
gratifying of my professional honors.
At Harvard my research group grew in size and quality, and
developed a spirit and dynamism which has been a continuing
delight to me. I was able to start many new scientific
projects and to teach an advanced graduate course on
chemical synthesis. Using the concepts of retrosynthetic
analysis under guidance of broad strategies, first-year
graduate students could be taught in just three months to
design sophisticated chemical syntheses. My research
interests soon evolved to include the following areas:
synthesis of complex, bioactive molecules; the logic of
chemical synthesis; new methods of synthesis; molecular
catalysts and robots; theoretical organic chemistry and
reaction mechanisms; organometallic chemistry; bioorganic
and enzyme chemistry; prostaglandins and other eicosanoids
and their relevance to medicine; application of computers to
organic chemical problems, especially to retrosynthetic
analysis. My personal scientific aspirations can be
similarly summarized: to be creative over a broad range of
the chemical sciences; to sustain that creativity over many
years; to raise the power of research in chemistry to a
qualitatively higher level; and to develop new generations
of outstanding chemists.
In September, 1961, I married Claire Higham, a graduate of the
University of Illinois. We have three children. David Reid
is a graduate of Harvard (A.B. 1985) and the University of
California, Berkeley (Ph.D., 1990), who is currently a
Postdoctoral Fellow in Chemistry/Molecular Biology at the
University of California Medical School at San Francisco.
Our second son, John, graduated from Harvard (A.B. 1987) and
the Paris Conservatory of Music (1990) and is now carrying
out advanced studies in classical music composition at the
latter institution. Our daughter, Susan, graduated from
Harvard with a major in anthropology (A.B. 1990) and plans
graduate work in Education. Claire and I live near the
Harvard Campus in Cambridge, as we have for nearly thirty
years. My leisure interests include outdoor activities and
music.
I am very proud of the many graduate students and postdoctoral
fellows from all over the world who have worked in my
research group. Their discoveries in my laboratory and their
subsequent achievements in science have been a source of
enormous satisfaction. The Corey research family now
includes about one hundred fifty university professors and
an even larger number of research scientists in the
pharmaceutical and chemical industry. It has been my good
fortune to have been involved in the education of scholars
and leaders in every area of chemical research, and
especially, to have contributed to the scientific
development of many different countries. My research family
has been an extraordinarily important part of my life. Much
of the credit for what I have achieved belongs to that
professional family, my wonderful teachers and faculty
colleagues, and not least, to my own dear personal family. |