Bruce Stocker | |||||
Birth Name: | Bruce Arnold Dunbar Stocker | ||||
Birth Date: | 26 May 1917 | ||||
Birth Place: | Hambledon, Surrey, England | ||||
Death Place: | Palo Alto, California, USA | ||||
Fields: | Microbiology and immunology | ||||
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Known For: | Study of salmonella | ||||
Awards: | Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize (1965) | ||||
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Bruce Arnold Dunbar Stocker (26 May 1917 - 30 August 2004) was an English-born academic. He was Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at Stanford University from 1966 to 1987.[1]
Born in Hambledon, Surrey, England, on 26 May 1917, Stocker was the son of Eustace Dupuis Henchman Stocker and Ruth Mary Richmond Stocker (née Hursthouse). Eustace Stocker was a military officer who won the Military Cross in World War I, and was appointed an Officer and then Commander of the Order of the British Empire during World War II. Ruth Stocker was the daughter of Richmond Hursthouse, a Member of Parliament and cabinet minister in New Zealand. In 1956, Bruce Stocker married Jane Beveridge in Chelsea, London, and the couple went on to have two daughters.[2]
Stocker was educated at King's College London and Westminster Hospital Medical School.[3] He was Guinness Professor of Microbiology at the University of London until 1965.
In 1966 Stocker was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. He died in Palo Alto, California, on 30 August 2004.[1]