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Oral history interview with Charles G. Cochrane

  • 2024-Jun-03

Oral history interview with Charles G. Cochrane

  • 2024-Jun-03

Charles (Charley) G. Cochrane begins his interview discussing his family, his childhood, and his adolescence in Berkeley, California. His father emigrated from England and attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he and Cochrane’s mother met. Though his father’s investment business ran into difficultly at the outset of the Great Depression, necessitating his father’s temporary move to Mexico, life in Berkeley was quite enjoyable with good weather and plenty of opportunities to spend time outdoors to play tennis with friends and classmates. Cochrane had an early interest in science and his parents supported his, and his older brother’s, interest in pursuing undergraduate and graduate education on the East Coast. Cochrane’s brother attended Yale University for undergraduate studies and Cochrane the University of Rochester. Cochrane used their general proximity to visit his brother during long weekends whenever the opportunity arose. Interested in pursuing medicine, Cochrane ultimately decided to attend the University of Rochester Medical School in large part due to the changes that George H. Whipple established during his deanship there.

During medical school, Cochrane decided to pursue Internal Medicine as his specialty, but upon graduating his interests shifted to immunology and he wanted to undertake scientific research—not clinical—related to that topic. Finding a wonderful group of immunological researchers, Cochrane moved to Frank J. Dixon’s lab at the University of Pittsburgh to begin his career in research; he did so with support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). After a time spent at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, France, Cochrane joined most of his colleagues from Dixon’s lab when they all moved to the Scripps Clinic in California. The five of them founded Scripps Research in 1961.

Cochrane and his colleagues had complete independence at Scripps to pursue whatever research they desired with the funds they received from the NIH and other granting institutions. It is at Scripps that Cochrane began his work on inflammation and inflammatory responses, now working with postdocs who came from all over the world to study with him. It is at Scripps that Cochrane discovered what protein is responsible for keeping the alveolus open and functioning, which had great importance for treating premature babies who suffered from oxygen deprivation soon after birth. Cochrane spends the rest of the interview discussing this research and the therapy developed from it, as well as his life and work post retirement.

Property Value
Interviewee
Interviewer
Place of interview
Format
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Extent
  • 96 pages
  • 2 h 56 m 52 s
Language
Rights Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
Credit line
  • Courtesy of Science History Institute

About the Interviewers

David J. Caruso earned a BA in the history of science, medicine, and technology from Johns Hopkins University in 2001 and a PhD in science and technology studies from Cornell University in 2008. Caruso is the director of the Center for Oral History at the Science History Institute, a former president of Oral History in the Mid-Atlantic Region (2012-2019), and served as co-editor for the Oral History Review from 2018-2023. In addition to overseeing all oral history research at the Science History Institute, he also holds several, in-depth oral history training workshops each year, consults on various oral history projects, and is adjunct faculty at the University of Pennsylvania, teaching courses on the history of military medicine and technology and on oral history.

Michelle DiMeo is Vice President of Collections and Programs and the Arnold Thackray Director of the Othmer Library at the Science History Institute. She holds a PhD in English and History from the University of Warwick, where she studied the cultural and intellectual history of seventeenth-century science and medicine. Michelle has taught history of medicine courses at the University of Pennsylvania and Lehigh University, as well as technical communication courses to biomedical engineers at the Georgia Institute for Technology. She is the author of Lady Ranelagh: The Incomparable Life of Robert Boyle's Sister (University of Chicago Press, 2021) and currently serves as Associate Editor of the journal Endeavour.

Institutional location

Department
Collection
Oral history number 1160

Related Items

Interviewee biographical information

Born
  • July 19, 1930
  • Berkeley, California, United States

Education

Year Institution Degree Discipline
1951 University of Rochester Bachelor of Arts Biologic Science
1956 University of Rochester Doctor of Medicine Internal Medicine

Professional Experience

Institut Pasteur (Paris, France)

  • 1959 to 1960 Department of Microbiological Chemistry

University of Pittsburgh. School of Medicine

  • 1960 to 1961 Assistant Professor

Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation

  • 1961 to 1964 Associate, Division of Experimental Pathology
  • 1964 to 1967 Associate Member, Department of Experimental Pathology
  • 1967 to 1974 Member, Department of Experimental Pathology

University of California, San Diego. School of Medicine

  • 1968 to 2005 Adjunct Professor of Pathology

The Scripps Research Institute

  • 1974 to 2005 Member/Professor, Department of Immunology

The Scripps Research Institute

  • 1985 to 1987 Head, Division of Vascular Biology & Inflammation

Honors

Year(s) Award
1953 to 1954 Student Fellowship, Department of Pathology, University of Rochester
1956 to 1960 Sarah Mellon Scaife Fellow, Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine
1961 to 1964 Helen Hay Whitney Research Fellow
1964 to 1969 Established Investigator, The Helen Hay Whitney Foundation
1968 John M. Sheldon Memorial Lectureship of the American Academy of Allergy
1968 President's Symposium, The American Society for Experimental Pathology
1969 Parke Davis Award of the American Society for Experimental Pathology
1969 President's Symposium, The American Society for Experimental Pathology
1973 Beerman Lecture, American Society for Investigative Dermatology
1974 Upjohn Lecture, Canadian Medicine Society
1974 State of the Art Lecture, The American Association of Physicians
1975 President's Symposium, The American Society of Hematology
1978 Chandos Lecture, British Renal Association
1979 Whipple Lecture, The University of Rochester
1983 I.V. Ravdin Lecture in the Basic Sciences, The American College of Surgeons
1986 Visiting Professor, Departments of Medicine and Pathology, University of Minnesota
1986 First Capri Conference on Immunology
1986 European Congress of Pneumology, Paris, France
1986 Symposium on Acute Lung Injury, San Diego, CA
1986 International Symposium on the Biochemistry and Biology of Plasma Protease Inhibitors, San Diego, CA
1986 Centennial Speaker, Frontiers in Basic Sciences of Heart, Lung and Blood Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
1986 Canadian Society of Immunology, Lake Louise, Canada
1986 Symposium on the Biochemical Mechanisms of Trauma, Snowbird, UT
1989 Altemeier Lecture, Surgical Infection Society
1989 Invited: “Conference on Inflammation”, Birmingham, England
1989 Invited: “60 Years of Surfactant Research”, Rotterdam, Netherlands
1990 Invited: “Conference on Oxidants”, Marbella, Spain
1990 President, Inaugural Congress, “International Congresses on Inflammation”; Chairman, Major Symposium and Tutorial Speaker, Barcelona, Spain
1991 Plenary Speaker, 5th World Congress for Microcirculation, Louisville, KT
1991 Chairman, Major Symposium on Structure-Function Relationship, International Congress on Inflammation
1991 Tutorial Speaker, Rome, Italy
1993 The Parker B. Francis Lecturer and Conference Summarizer, Aspen Lung Conference
1993 Invited: “Molecular Basis of Inflammation” Symposium, Heidelberg, Germany
1993 Chairman, Major Symposium on Signal Transduction; Tutorial Speaker, International Congress on “Inflammation '93”; Vienna, Austria
1993 Co-Chairman, NIH Frontiers of Science (NHLBI) “Symposium on Inflammation in Cardiovascular, Lung and Blood Diseases
1993 to 2005 Chairman, Faculty Lecture Series, The Scripps Research Institute
1994 University Lecture, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX
1994 Visiting Professor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
1994 “President's Lecture” to the Annual Meeting of the Shock Society, Big Sky, Montana
1995 Recipient, Ciba-Geigy Morris Ziff Award, International Association of Inflammation Societies, Presented at “Inflammation '95,” Brighton, England
1995 Recipient, Klemperer Award, New York Academy of Medicine
1999 Lecturer, “Frontiers of Medicine,” Nobel Symposium, Stockholm, Sweden
2004 Recipient, American Lung Association “Live and Breathe Award,” San Diego, CA

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Complete transcript of interview

PDF — 1.5 MB
cochrane_c_1160_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

2 Separate Interview Segments Archival-quality downloads