Josiah Parsons Cooke

Josiah Parsons Cooke
BornOctober 12, 1827
DiedSeptember 3, 1894(1894-09-03) (aged 66)
Resting placeMount Auburn Cemetery
Education
Occupations
Spouse
Mary H. Huntington
(m. 1860)
Known forMeasurement of atomic weights
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry
InstitutionsHarvard University
12th president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
In office
1892–1894
Preceded byJoseph Lovering
Succeeded byAlexander Agassiz

Josiah Parsons Cooke (October 12, 1827 – September 3, 1894) was an American chemist who worked at Harvard University and was instrumental in the measurement of atomic weights, inspiring America's first Nobel laureate in chemistry, Theodore William Richards, to pursue similar research. Cooke's 1854 paper on atomic weights has been said to foreshadow the periodic law developed later by Mendeleev and others.[1] Historian I. Bernard Cohen described Cooke "as the first university chemist to do truly distinguished work in the field of chemistry" in the United States.[2]

  1. ^ Jackson, Charles L. (1902). "Memoir of Josiah Parsons Cooke". Biographical Memoirs. 4. National Academy of Sciences: 175–183.
  2. ^ Cohen, I. Bernard (1959). "Some Reflections on the State of Science in America During the Nineteenth Century". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 45 (5): 666–677. Bibcode:1959PNAS...45..666C. doi:10.1073/pnas.45.5.666. PMC 222615.