Haldan Keffer Hartline was born in
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, on December 22nd, 1903. His parents
were teachers there in the State Normal School (now Bloomsburg
State College) where he received his early education. His father,
Daniel S. Hartline, was Professor of Biology, but a man whose
wide interests also included Astronomy and Geology. It was
through his father that Keffer became interested in Natural
Sciences.
Keffer Hartline attended Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania,
graduating in 1923 (B. Sc.). His college teacher of biology,
Beverly W. Kunkel, encouraged him to undertake research; his
first scientific paper concerned visual responses of land
isopods. Summers at the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole added to
his biological training; there he was especially influenced by
Jacques Loeb, Selig Hecht, and Merkel H. Jacobs.
In the autumn of 1923 he entered the Johns Hopkins School where
he was encouraged to continue his research interest in vision in
the Department of Physiology under E. K. Marshall and C. D.
Snyder. Dr. Snyder let him use his Einthoven string galvanometer with which
Hartline undertook the study of the retinal action potential
using frogs, decerebrate cats and rabbits. He learned to obtain
electroretinograms from intact animals, and recorded clearly
recognizable retinal action potentials from human subjects. He
also used intact insects for quantitative studies.
After receiving his M. D. from Johns Hopkins in 1927 a National
Research Council Fellowship (Medical Sciences) enabled him to
study Mathematics and Physics so as to strengthen his background
for future biophysical research. He spent two years in the
Physics Department of Johns Hopkins taking courses and working as
a student in the laboratory of A. H. Pfund; F. D. Murnaghan was
his teacher of mathematics. In 1929 he received an Eldridge
Reeves Johnson Traveling Fellowship from the University of
Pennsylvania, for a continuation of his studies in Physics.
He spent one semester with W. Heisenberg's seminar
group in the University of Leipzig and two semesters attending
lectures by A. Somerfeld at the University of Munich.
In the spring of 1931 Hartline returned to the United States
taking a position at the University of Pennsylvania, in
Philadelphia, in the Eldridge Reeves Johnson Foundation for Medical
Physics, which was under the directorship of Detlev W.Bronk. This
was the start of a stimulating association with Bronk, which has
continued to the present time.
At the Johnson Foundation Hartline began his studies on the
activity of single optic nerve fibers in the eye of the horseshoe
crab, Limulus, recording the responses of receptor units
under various conditions of stimulation and adaptation. In the
mid 1930's he undertook the single fiber analysis of the optic
responses of the vertebrate retina, principally in the eye of the
frog. In the early 1940's Hartline worked on problems of night
vision in human subjects. In 1940-1941 he was Associate Professor
of Physiology at Cornell Medical College in New York City, but
returned to the Johnson Foundation where he stayed until
1949.
In 1949 Hartline accepted a position at Johns Hopkins
University as Professor of Biophysics and Chairman of the
Thomas C. Jenkins Department of Biophysics. There, he began with
his colleagues work on intracellular recording from receptor
units in the Limulus eye. It was at that time that he took
up the study of the inhibitory interaction in the Limulus
retina, begun briefly several years before. In 1963 he accepted
his present position as Professor at the Rockefeller
University (then the Rockefeller Institute). Hartline was
joined there, in 1954, by Floyd Ratliff and they have continued
to the present time collaboration in their joint laboratory on
the study of receptor properties and inhibitory interaction in
the eye of Limulus, and on related aspects of visual
physiology.
Hartline was awarded the William H. Howell Award (Physiology) in
1927; the Howard Crosby Warren Medal (Society of Experimental
Psychologists) in 1948; an Sc. D. (hon.) from Lafayette College,
1959; the Albert A. Michelson Award ( Case Institute of
Technology) in 1964; a degree of LL. D. from the Johns Hopkins
University in 1969; and an hon. D.Sc. from the University of
Pennsylvania in 1971; the Lighthouse Award in 1969; hon. M.D.
Albert-Ludwigs University, Freiburg im Breisgau,
1971.
Professor Hartline is a Member of the National Academy of Sciences; Foreign Member of the
Royal
Society (London); Member of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences; Member of the American
Philosophical Society, American Physiological Society, Optical Society of
America, Biophysical Society, etc.
In 1936 Haldan Keffer Hartline married Elizabeth Kraus, daughter
of the eminent chemist C. A. Kraus. At that time she was
instructor in Comparative Psychology at Bryn Mawr College. They
have three sons, Daniel Keffer, Peter Haldan, and Frederick
Flanders. Daniel Keffer and Peter Haldan have positions in
neurophysiology in the University of California at San Diego; Frederick
Flanders is still engaged in graduate studies in the biological
sciences.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
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.
Haldan K. Hartline died on March 17, 1983.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1967