Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech
Special Collections and University Archives, University Libraries (0434)560 Drillfield Drive
Newman Library, Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, Virginia 24061
Business Number: 540-231-6308
specref@vt.edu
URL: http://spec.lib.vt.edu
Tamara Kennelly, Archivist
Administrative Information
Conditions Governing Reproduction and Use
The copyright status of this collection is unknown. Copyright restrictions may apply. Contact Special Collections and University Archives for assistance in determining the use of these materials.
Reproduction or digitization of materials for personal or research use can be requested using our reproduction/digitization form: http://bit.ly/scuareproduction . Reproduction or digitization of materials for publication or exhibit use can be requested using our publication/exhibition form: http://bit.ly/scuapublication . Please contact Special Collections and University Archives (specref@vt.edu or 540-231-6308) if you need assistance with forms or to submit a completed form.
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research.
Preferred Citation
Researchers wishing to cite this collection should include the following information: [identification of item], [box], [folder], Department of Biochemistry Oral History Collection, Ms2003-009, Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Va.
Source of Acquisition
The Department of Biochemistry Oral History Collection was donated to the Special Collections in 2001-2003. Individual interviews and oral history transcripts were donated as they were completed and became available.
Processing Information
The processing, arrangement, and description of the Department of Biochemistry Oral History Collection was completed in 2004.
Administrative History
The Department of Biochemistry was established at Virginia Polytechnic Institute through the leadership of Dr. H. N. Young, director of the Agricultural Experiment Station. In 1952, he recruited Dr. R. W. Engle from Auburn University. As the first department head (1952-1966) of the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, Engel pulled together faculty from existing departments with interests in agricultural chemistry and nutrition. Facilities in Price and Smyth Halls soon became inadequate, and with Engel's leadership, funds were acquired from the National Institutes of Health and matched by funds from the Commonwealth of Virginia for construction of the building now called Engel Hall. From 1962, when the building was occupied, through 1967, additions to the faculty broadened the research expertise of the department. Significant impact on basic and applied nutrition and analytical service to the Commonwealth characterized these initial fifteen years.
Kendall King served as head from 1966 to 1968. The department awarded only graduate degrees until the undergraduate biochemistry curriculum was established in 1968. A faculty committee comprised of Clemens Ackerman, Robert R. Schmidt, and Ryland Webb led the department from 1968 to 1970. Bruce M. Anderson provided stable leadership as head from 1970 to 1982. During this period, significant changes in facilities and services accompanied the emphasis on basic research. Thomas W. Keenan (head, 1982-1988) shepherded careers of faculty and growth in the undergraduate program. In 1988, Judith S. Bond, the fifth department head (1988-1992), established significant changes in laboratories, supported new faculty, and facilitated faculty efforts in the successful dedication of the biochemistry building to honor R. W. Engel.
During the 1990s, the university sustained huge reductions in operating funds while undergraduate enrollments increased. Under William E. Newton's leadership (1992-1998), faculties were merged between the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition and the Anaerobe Lab. Subsequently, the present Department of Biochemistry was identified. In 1994, the department was recognized as University Exemplary Department for its commitment to employing research successfully, as a foundation for undergraduate education.
Four new faculty members joined the department since 1998. Faculty in spring of 2003 included a complement of seventeen scientists and educators with John L. Hess as department head (1998-). Two faculty members had laboratories in the Fralin Biotechnology Center, a state-of-the art research and teaching facility adjoining Engel Hall. Faculty employed a broad spectrum of research tools to explore how organisms function and to assess unique attributes which many be developed to serve humankind. Faculty research programs and collaborations were in core areas: functional genomics and proteomics, molecular microbiology, and molecular mechanisms of response to stress and disease. In 2002-2003, faculty provided education and training for 25 graduate and 300 undergraduate majors.
Scope and Content
The Department of Biochemistry Oral History Collection spans the years (bulk 2001-2005, the period during which the oral histories about the Virginia Tech department were collected). It includes interviews with R.W. Engel, founding head of the department; Juel Albert, early faculty member; Bruce Anderson, department head, 1970-1982; Cecil Cummins, professor emeritus of microbiology and faculty in the Anaerobe Lab; Robert Smibert, faculty in the Anaerobe Lab, Everett L. Wisman, first faculty member; and Roddy Young, early faculty member. The founding of the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition including faculty, facilities and equipment, instruction, and research is given special attention. The founding of the Anaerobe Lab is also discussed.
In the interview of Juel Albert by Robert S. Schmidt, Albert discussed planning for the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, including facilities and apparatus, such as the Kjeldahl apparatus; department faculty; and research projects, including forage testing and analyses and a multi-state project on nutrition of pre-adolescent girls.
In his interview by Thomas O. Sitz, Bruce M. Anderson spoke of his charge as Head of the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition to convert the department into an independent research oriented department rather than an analytical tool for other agricultural sciences at the university. The interview covered claiming the biochemistry building for the Department of Biochemistry so that it could expand in numbers of faculty and research laboratories. This involved relocating people that were not in the department. Anderson also set up the mass-spectroscopy facility and developed the undergraduate program. The interview also touched on Anderson's research in enzymology.
The R. W. Engel interview by George Edwin Bunce explored Engel's vision for the new department, early faculty, inter-departmental relationships, background on how the department obtained grants and other funding for the new building, and Engel's work with Kendall King on the Mothercraft Centers in the Philippines.
The Robert Smibert interview by John Hess explored the establishment of the Anaerobe Lab at Virginia Tech. Smibert also talked about his work with anaerobes; the Anaerobe Manual; laboratory equipment and techniques; research focus on ruminant disease, nutrition and human health; projects, including working with campylobacter; and achievements of the Anaerobe Lab.
In his oral history interview by Lewis Barnett, Everett L. Wisman discussed the beginnings of the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, including courses, faculty, and facilities; Virginia Tech in the 1940s; and various changes in Virginia Tech and the campus.
The interview of Roderick Young by Robert Schmidt dealt with the groundwork behind starting the Department of Biochemistry including the role played by his father, Dr. Harold Newell Young; selection of faculty for the new department; the column Roderick Young developed for separating amino acids; research interests of the department; the department's teaching program; the first black female graduate student on campus; and the pesticide program.
The interview of Cecil Cummins by John Hess focuses on the history of the Anaerobe Lab and on some of the research that was conducted in that facility.
Full text of most of the interviews and selected sound clips as well as images and other documents about the history of the Department of Biochemistry and its faculty are available in the Special Collections exhibit, 50 Year Celebration of the Department of Biochemistry, 1952-2003 .
Arrangement
The collection is arranged by format and then alphabetically by interviewee.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
- Faculty and staff
- Oral histories (literary works)
- University Archives
- University History
- Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (1970-)
- Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Department of Biochemistry
Rights Statement for Archival Description
The guide to the Department of Biochemistry Oral History Collection by Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech, is licensed under a CC0 ( https://creativecommons.org/share-your-work/public-domain/cc0/ ).
Container List
- box-folder 1 folder: 2
Juel Albert Oral History Interview Transcript
- box-folder 1 folder: 3
Bruce M. Anderson Oral History Interview Transcript
- box-folder 1 folder: 4
R. W. Engel Oral History Interview Transcript
- box-folder 1 folder: 5
Robert M. Smibert Oral History Interview Transcript
- box-folder 1 folder: 6
E. L. Wisman Oral History Interview Transcript
- box-folder 1 folder: 7
Roderick Young Oral History Interview Transcript
- box-folder 1 folder: 8
Cecil Cummins Oral History Interview Transcript
- box 2 folder: 1
Juel Albert interview microcassette,February 14, 2002
- box 2 folder: 2
Bruce M. Anderson interview cassette, copy 1February 7, 2002
- box 2 folder: 3
Bruce M. Anderson interview cassette, copy 2February 7, 2002
- box 2 folder: 4
Bruce M. Anderson interview DAT master,February 7, 2002
- box 2 folder: 5
R. W. Engel interview cassette, copy 1October 3, 2001
- box 2 folder: 6
R. W. Engel interview cassette, copy 2October 3, 2001
- box 2 folder: 7
R. W. Engel interview DAT master,October 3, 2001
- box 2 folder: 8
Robert M. Smibert interview cassette,June 19, 2002
- box 2 folder: 9
Robert M. Smibert DAT master,June 19, 2002
- box 2 folder: 10
Robert M. Smibert DAT safety copy,June 19, 2002
- box 2 folder: 11
E. L. Wisman interview cassette, copy 1January 22, 2002
- box 2 folder: 12
E. L. Wisman interview cassette, copy 2January 22, 2002
- box 2 folder: 13
E. L. Wisman interview DAT masterJanuary 22, 2002
- box 2 folder: 14
Roderick Young interview cassette, copy 1November 20, 2001
- box 2 folder: 15
Roderick Young interview cassette, copy 2November 20, 2001
- box 2 folder: 16
Roderick Young interview DAT masterNovember 20, 2001
- box 2 folder: 17
Cecil Cummins interview cassette, copy 1March 17, 2005
- box 2 folder: 18
Cecil Cummins interview cassette, copy 2March 17, 2005
- box 2 folder: 19
Cecil Cummins interview DAT masterMarch 17, 2005
- box 2 folder: 20
Cecil Cummins interview DAT copyMarch 17, 2005