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BULLETIN FOR THE HISTORY OF CHEMISTRY
Number 19, 1996
NOTE: This issue is now open access.
If you have any problems, please email
mainz@illinois.edu
.
TITLE
Author
Page
Number
Introduction.
K. U. Ingold
1
C. K. Ingold at University College London: Educator and Department Head.
Gerrylynn K. Roberts
2
The Progress of Physical Organic Chemistry as Mirrored in the Faraday Society Discussions of 1923, 1937, and 1941.
Derek A. Davenport
13
Teaching Chemistry Embedded in History: Reflections on C. K. Ingold's Influence as Historian and Educator.
Theodor Benfey
19
C. K. Ingold's Development of the Concept of Mesomerism.
Martin D. Saltzman
25
Physical Organic Terminology, After Ingold.
Joseph F. Bunnet
33
Ingold, Robinson, Winstein, Woodward, and I.
Derek H. R. Barton
43
The Beginnings of Physical Organic Chemistry in the United States.
John D. Roberts
48
"Plus Commode et Plus Elegant": the Paris School of Organic Reaction Mechanisms in the 1920's and 1930's.
Mary Jo Nye
58
Base Hydrolysis of Cobalt (III) Amines.
Fred Basolo
66
Medium Effects of Micelles as Microreactors and the Scope of the Hughes-Ingold Solvent Theory.
Clifford A. Bunton
72
A Personal History of the Benzidine Rearrangement.
Henry J. Shine
77
Picture of Sir Christopher Returning from Buckingham Palace
93
Book Notes.
American Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Vol. 2
Reviewed by Peter J. Rambert
W. D. Miles and
R. F. Gould
1994
94
Thinking About Matter: Studies in the History of Chemical Philosophy
Reviewed by Jan Golinski
John Hedley Brooke
1995
94