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Jonas Salk

Biologist

In 1955 Jonas Salk became a medical hero for developing a vaccine that helped conquer polio. Salk grew up in New York City and earned a medical degree in 1939 from New York University. During the 1940s he worked at the University of Michigan and the University of Pittsburgh, studying influenza and, during World War II, working on a flu vaccine for the U.S. Army. After 1947 he began work on the problem of polio (at the time known as "infantile paralysis"), thanks in large part to the work of a Harvard group led by John Enders. (Enders had developed a way to grow the polio virus, which in turn allowed expanded research.) Many microbiologists were working on a vaccine, but Salk got there first. In 1952 he began a program of experimental vaccines on humans, and by 1954 the vaccine was being prepared in quantity. The story became public in 1955 and Salk became a celebrity because of the success of the vaccine. A tireless champion of public health education and vaccinations, Salk became the director of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in 1963, a post he held the rest of his career. He also authored several books, including Man Unfolding (1972), The Survival of the Wisest (1973) and Anatomy of Reality (1983).

Four Good Links

Jonas Salk

Good biographical background and an interview from 1991

TIME 100: Jonas Salk

Background with a focus on the resentments of others in his field

Jonas Salk Biography

From the Salk Institute for Biological Studies

Jonas Salk, M.D.

Profile from the Lucid Café

Vital Stats

Birth

28 October 1914

Birthplace

New York, New York

Death

23 June 1995
(age 80)

Best Known As

Developer of the polio vaccine