Abstract

In the 1920s, C&EN—then called Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, News Edition —was dedicated almost entirely to the practical needs of industrial chemists. Most of the content was notices about new equipment and books, advertisements for upcoming symposia, and short announcements of chemists who were changing jobs. In the March 20, 1928, issue , the lead story— “St. Louis as an Industrial Center” —ballyhoos the city’s access to railroads. That same issue carries a small notice of a job change that would have enormous consequences for the chemical industry and beyond. It states that Wallace H. Carothers was hired away from Harvard University to join E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company (now called DuPont) at the Experimental Station in Wilmington, Delaware. A chemist leaving academia to conduct basic research at a company was a watershed for the maturation of industrial R&D. And the appointment was a milestone in the

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