Horace Terhune Herrick (April 22, 1887 – October 8, 1948) was a scientist and director of the North Regional Research Laboratory of the United States Department of Agriculture .[ 1] [ 2]
He was born in Newark, New Jersey on April 22, 1887 to James Frederick Herrick and Christine Terhune Herrick . Herrick graduated from Columbia University from the Henry Krumb School of Mines with a degree in chemical engineering and by 1910 was working in the research laboratories of the New Jersey Zinc Company , in Palmerton, Pennsylvania .[ 3]
In 1929 he developed a process for making gluconic acid by fermentation with Orville E. May
[ 4] [ 5] which was subsequently covered in wider media.[ 6] [ 7]
He died on October 8, 1948.[ 1]
^ a b "Horace Herrick, 61, Agricultural Aide" . The New York Times . October 8, 1948. Retrieved June 18, 2010 .
^ "Medical News" (PDF) . JAMA . Retrieved 2010-07-12 .
^ Columbia University, Henry Krumb School of Mines . Columbia University . 1912. Retrieved 2010-07-12 . Horace T. Herrick, Chem. E., has a position in the research laboratories of the New Jersey Zinc Co., at Palmerton, NJ [sic]
^ May, Orville E.; Herrick, Horace T.; Thom, Charles; Church, Margaret B. (1927). "The production of gluconic acid by the penicillium luteum-purpurogenum group. Part I." Journal of Biological Chemistry . 75 (22): 417–422. doi :10.1016/S0021-9258(18)84153-9 .
^
May, Orville E.; Herrick, Horace T. (1928). "The production of gluconic acid by the penicillium luteum-purpurogenum group. Part II" . Journal of Biological Chemistry . 77 (1): 185–195. doi :10.1016/S0021-9258(18)84051-0 .
^ "Ugly Green Mold" . Popular Science . March 1, 1931. Retrieved 2010-07-12 .
^ "All Chemistry" . Time magazine . May 13, 1929. Archived from the original on June 3, 2011. Retrieved 2010-07-12 .