Nobel prize for discovering DNA up for auction
US: The Nobel prize awarded to Francis Crick in 1962 for discovering
the structure of DNA has been put up for auction by his family along
with one of his lab coats, his books and other memorabilia.
It is believed to be the first Nobel prize placed at auction in more
than 70 years and the opening bid is set for $250,000, Heritage Auctions
said Monday. Some of the proceeds from the April 10 auction in New York
will help fund research at the new Francis Crick Institute in London set
to be completed in 2015.
His family said Crick was a modest man who preferred to outfit his
office with a big chalkboard and a portrait of Charles Darwin than to
display his many awards. The Nobel has been in storage for much of the
past 50 years and his family hopes to sell it to a museum or institute
where it can be on public display.
“Our hope is that, by having it available for display, it can be an
inspiration to the next generation of scientists,” said granddaughter
Kindra Crick.
Born in England in 1918, Crick’s graduate work was interrupted by the
outbreak of World War II. He returned to research in 1949 with a
position at Cambridge University. A critical influence in his career was
his friendship with the American zoologist and geneticist James Watson.
Together, they proposed the double-helical structure for DNA and the
replication scheme in 1953. Crick and Watson subsequently suggested a
general theory for the structure of small viruses.
Crick’s children have fond memories of the ceremony in Stockholm
where the King of Sweden gave him the award, along with Watson and
Maurice Wilkins, who also contributed to the discovery.
AFP
|