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Oral history interview with Richard S. Stein

  • 1987-Jun-17

Oral history interview with Richard S. Stein

  • 1987-Jun-17

Richard Stein starts this interview by reflecting on the New York City schools which provided a real stimulus, especially in mathematics and science, to him and his contemporaries. At Brooklyn Technical High School, he took a more vocational set of courses, thinking that the family resources would not cover college study. Contrary to that belief, Stein was able to attend to Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, and under the wartime circumstances, he was able to graduate within three years, including a productive senior project on light scattering with Paul Doty. Stein then accepted a Textile Foundation fellowship at Princeton University. In the three years of his PhD program, he worked under a succession of three advisors: Henry Eyring, Robert Rundle, and Arthur Tobolsky. During this section of the interview, Stein describes the organization of graduate study in chemistry at Princeton and recollects Eyring, Taylor, Rundle, and Tobolsky. An NRC fellowship took Richard Stein from Princeton to Cambridge to work on infrared dichroism under Gordon Sutherland, and he recalls the austerities of life in postwar England and the primitive facilities in the Cambridge physical chemistry laboratories. Soon after his return to this country, Stein was appointed to an assistant professorship in the chemistry department of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Stein describes his heavy teaching load, how he started his research program, and the growth of polymer interests at UMass. The latter led to the inauguration of the Polymer Research Institute at UMass, and Stein reflects on the academic interactions between chemistry and polymer science. The interview concludes with recollections of the visit of a chemistry delegation to China and also with his views on research funding.

Property Value
Interviewee
Interviewer
Place of interview
Format
Genre
Extent
  • 57 pages
  • 03:08:00
Language
Subject
Rights Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
Rights holder
  • Science History Institute
Credit line
  • Courtesy of Science History Institute

About the Interviewer

James J. Bohning was professor emeritus of chemistry at Wilkes University, where he had been a faculty member from 1959 to 1990. He served there as chemistry department chair from 1970 to 1986 and environmental science department chair from 1987 to 1990. Bohning was chair of the American Chemical Society’s Division of the History of Chemistry in 1986; he received the division’s Outstanding Paper Award in 1989 and presented more than forty papers at national meetings of the society. Bohning was on the advisory committee of the society’s National Historic Chemical Landmarks Program from its inception in 1992 through 2001 and is currently a consultant to the committee. He developed the oral history program of the Chemical Heritage Foundation, and he was CHF’s director of oral history from 1990 to 1995. From 1995 to 1998, Bohning was a science writer for the News Service group of the American Chemical Society. In May 2005, he received the Joseph Priestley Service Award from the Susquehanna Valley Section of the American Chemical Society.  Bohning passed away in September 2011.

Institutional location

Department
Collection
Oral history number 0071
Physical container
  • Shelfmark QD22.S7456 A5 1987

Related Items

Interviewee biographical information

Born
  • August 21, 1925
  • New York, New York, United States
Died
  • June 21, 2021
  • Amherst, Massachusetts, United States

Education

Year Institution Degree Discipline
1945 Polytechnic Institute of New York BS (magna cum laude) Chemistry
1948 Princeton University MA Physical Chemistry
1949 Princeton University PhD Physical Chemistry

Professional Experience

University of Cambridge

  • 1948 to 1949 National Research Council Fellow

Princeton University

  • 1949 to 1950 Research Associate

University of Massachusetts

  • 1950 to 1957 Assistant Professor of Chemistry
  • 1957 to 1959 Associate Professor of Chemistry
  • 1959 to 1961 Professor of Chemistry
  • 1961 to 1980 Commonwealth Professor
  • 1961 to 1989 Founder and Director, Polymer Research Institute
  • 1980 to 1989 Charles A. Goessmann Professor

Honors

Year(s) Award
1968 Fulbright Visiting Professor, Kyoto University
1969 International Award, Society of Plastics Engineers
1970 Honor Scroll Award, New England Chapter, American Institute of Chemists
1972 Applied Polymer Chemistry Award, American Chemical Society
1972 Bingham Medal, Society of Rheology
1976 Polymer Physics Award, American Physical Society
1978 Chancellor's Medal, University of Massachusetts
1983 Polymer Chemistry Award, American Chemical Society
1985 Whitby Lecturer, University of Akron
1988 Polymer Science Society of Japan Award

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Complete transcript of interview

PDF — 464 KB
stein_r_0071_updated_full.pdf

The published version of the transcript may diverge from the interview audio due to edits to the transcript made by staff of the Center for Oral History, often at the request of the interviewee, during the transcript review process.

Complete Interview Audio File Web-quality download

7 Separate Interview Segments Archival-quality downloads