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Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson : ウィキペディア英語版
Geoffrey Wilkinson
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Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson FRS (14 July 1921 – 26 September 1996) was a Nobel laureate English chemist who pioneered inorganic chemistry and homogeneous transition metal catalysis.
==Education and early life==
Wilkinson was born at Springside, Todmorden, in the West Riding of Yorkshire. His father, Henry Wilkinson,〔daughter, pernille wilkinson〕 was a master house painter and decorator; his mother, Ruth,〔 worked in a local cotton mill. One of his uncles, an organist and choirmaster, had married into a family that owned a small chemical company making Epsom and Glauber's salts for the pharmaceutical industry; this is where he first developed an interest in chemistry.
He was educated at the local council primary school and, after winning a County Scholarship in 1932, went to Todmorden Grammar School. His physics teacher there, Luke Sutcliffe, had also taught Sir John Cockcroft, who received a Nobel Prize for "splitting the atom".
In 1939 he obtained a Royal Scholarship for study at Imperial College London, from where he graduated in 1941.

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