Alexander Fleming
1881–1955 — Scotland
Era: Modern
Brilliance: 9/10 | Stewardship: 7/10 | Composite Index: 63
A messy lab bench saved millions of lives.
"One sometimes finds what one is not looking for. When you make a discovery by accident, it is usually because you were alert enough to see the importance of it."
Biography
Alexander Fleming was a Scottish bacteriologist whose accidental discovery of penicillin in 1928 revolutionized medicine and saved millions of lives from bacterial infections. His keen observation of a contaminated culture plate led to the first widely used antibiotic, fundamentally transforming modern medicine and earning him the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945.
Key Facts
- Fleming discovered penicillin by chance when a mold contaminated one of his bacterial cultures at St. Mary's Hospital in London
- He initially struggled to purify and produce penicillin in useful quantities, and it took over a decade for other scientists to develop it into a practical medicine
- Fleming was known for his untidy laboratory habits, which ironically created the conditions for his greatest discovery
- He served as a medical officer in World War I and was deeply motivated to find cures for infected wounds
- Fleming's discovery earned him a knighthood in 1944 and he shared the Nobel Prize with Howard Florey and Ernst Boris Chain
Messy lab bench. Contaminated petri dish. Millions saved.
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