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World of Health on Henry Hallett Dale
Henry Hallett Dale was a British physiologist who devoted his scientific career to the study of how chemicals in the body regulate physiological functions. In 1936 Dale and German pharmacologist Otto Loewi were jointly awarded the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for research demonstrating that nerve cells communicate with one another primarily by the exchange of chemical transmitters. In addition to his scientific work, Dale was a prominent figure in science and medicine in England at critical junctures in that nation's history. He was knighted in 1932.
Born June 9, 1875, in London, Henry Hallett Dale was the second son of seven children born to Charles Dale, a London businessman, and his wife, Frances Hallett Dale. After graduating from Tollington Park College, London, and the Leys School, Cambridge, Dale entered Trinity College at Cambridge University in 1894. His academic skills gained him first honors in the natural sciences and the Coutts-Trotter studentship...
This section contains 1,228 words (approx. 5 pages at 300 words per page) |