Selman
Abraham Waksman was born in Priluka, near Kiev, Russia, on
July 22nd, 1888, as the son of Jacob Waksman and Fradia London.
He received his early education primarily from private tutors,
and completed his school training in Odessa in an evening school
and with private tutors. He obtained his matriculation diploma in
1910 from the Fifth Gymnasium in Odessa as an extern, and left
for the United States immediately afterwards.
In the autumn of 1911 he entered Rutgers
College, having won a State Scholarship the previous spring.
He received his B.Sc. degree in Agriculture from Rutgers in 1915.
He was then appointed research assistant in soil bacteriology
under Dr. J. G. Lipman at the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment
Station, and was allowed to continue graduate work at Rutgers,
obtaining his M.Sc. degree in 1916. In the same year, he became a
naturalized United States citizen and was appointed a Research
Fellow at the University of California where he received his
Ph.D. in Biochemistry in 1918.
He was invited by Dr. Lipman to return to Rutgers, where he
received an appointment as microbiologist at the Experiment
Station and as Lecturer in Soil Microbiology at the University.
He was appointed Associate Professor in 1925 and Professor in
1930. When the Department of Microbiology was organized in 1940,
he became Professor of Microbiology and Head of the Department.
In 1949, he was appointed Director of the Institute of
Microbiology. He retired in 1958. However, he has a
laboratory and office at the Institute to continue a limited
amount of research and considerable writing and lecturing.
Apart from his activities at Rutgers, he was invited to organize
a division of Marine Bacteriology at the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution in 1931; he was also appointed marine
bacteriologist at the same institution, where he served until
1942. He was then elected as a Trustee, and later a Life Trustee.
On various occasions, he held industrial positions for limited
periods of time and served as consultant to industrial
laboratories, government and other scientific institutions.
Professor Waksman's fields of work include, in chronological
order, the microbiological population of the soil, sulphur
oxidation by bacteria, microorganisms and soil fertility;
decomposition of plant and animal residues, nature and formation
of humus; occurrence of bacteria in the sea and their role in
marine processes; production and nature of antibiotic substances;
taxonomy, physiology, and biochemistry of the actinomycetes. He
has published more than 400 scientific papers and has written,
alone or with others, 18 books.
He has isolated, together with his students and associates, a
number of new antibiotics, including actinomycin (1940),
clavacin, streptothricin (1942), streptomycin (1943), grisein
(1946), neomycin (1948), fradicin, candicidin, candidin, and
others. Two of these, streptomycin and neomycin, have found
extensive application in the treatment of numerous infectious
diseases of men, animals and plants. They have been covered by
patents, that on streptomycin having been recently listed as one
of the ten «patents that shaped the world».
Professor Waksman holds honorary doctor's degrees in medicine,
science, agriculture, law or letters from the Universities of
Liège,
Athens, Pavia, Madrid,
Strasbourg, Jerusalem, Göttingen, Perugia, Keio (Japan) and
several American universities and colleges. He is a member,
honorary member or fellow of a number of scientific societies in
the USA, France, Sweden, Mexico, India, Germany, Brazil, Spain,
and Israel. He is a Former President of the American Society for
Microbiology.
His work in the field of microbiology has been recognized by
numerous scientific and other societies in the USA, Denmark, The
Netherlands, Canada, Sweden, Japan, Israel, Italy, Spain, and
Turkey. In 1950 he was made Commander of the French Légion
d'Honneur, and in 1952 he was voted as one of «the most
outstanding 100 people in the world today» ( Little, Brown
& Co.).
In 1949, the Trustees of Rutgers University voted to establish an
Institute of Microbiology and made Professor Waksman its first
Director. The larger portion of the funds derived from the
royalties obtained from streptomycin and neomycin have been
assigned for the building and support of this Institute, which is
being used for research and advanced teaching on a doctorate and
post-doctorate level in microbiology. Out of the small portion of
the royalties assigned to him personally, Dr. and Mrs. Waksman
established the «Foundation for Microbiology», for the
support of research and publications in the field of microbiology
at various institutions of the world. Professor Waksman continues
as President of this Foundation. He and his wife have also
established a scholarship for an immigrant student, or the son or
daughter of an immigrant, at Rutgers University, and Mrs. Waksman
has established a music scholarship at Douglass College, Rutgers University.
Professor Waksman's wife is Deborah B. Mitnik. They have one son,
Byron H. Waksman, M.D., who was a Research Associate at Massachusetts
General Hospital, Boston, and Assistant Professor at Harvard University
Medical School, and more recently Professor of Microbiology
at Yale University Medical School, and two
grandchildren, Nan and Peter.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
For more updated biographical information, see: Waksman, Selman Abraham, My Life With Microbes. Simon and Schuster, New York, 1954.
Selman A. Waksman died on August 16, 1973.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1952