Professor George B. Butler, 1916-2007
June 8th, 2007
Gainesville, Florida
George B. Butler, 91, the polymer chemist who introduced macromolecules
to the University of Florida, died June 7th, 2007, in Gainesville,
Florida. Born and raised in Liberty, Mississippi, educated at Southwest
Mississippi Junior College, Mississippi College, and the University of
North Carolina/Chapel Hill, Professor Butler was known as a kind and
considerate gentleman who offered quiet advice and genuine friendship
every day of his life.
Professor Butler's introduction to polymer chemistry came as a
researcher at the Rohm & Haas Company in Philadelphia in the early
1940s, where he pioneered the synthesis of polymeric binders for
propellants. In 1946 he and his wife Josephine moved to Gainesville,
where he began teaching as an Instructor at the University of Florida.
Today, 61 years later, more than 18 faculty and 120 students study
macromolecular science and engineering on campus, a tribute to his
remarkable academic career.
The Butler research program is perhaps best known for its discovery of
cyclopolymerization, chemistry that has proven to be of enormous
academic interest and practical importance. The $10,000 research grant
he received from the Navy to pursue this chemistry was one of the first
external grants to be awarded on campus. Well over 4,000 publications
have dealt with various aspects derived from the original discovery.
His and Professor Paul Tarrant's entrepreneurial spirit led to the
establishment of Peninsular Chem Research Corporation in Gainesville,
thereby spawning commercial development worldwide in the water
treatment, textiles, cosmetics, paper, coal, and glass industries.
These and other contributions led to his receiving the 1980 ACS Award
in Polymer Chemistry, along with numerous other awards during his
distinguished academic career.
More than 180 graduate students and postdoctoral associates recall
Professor Butler as an outstanding mentor. These people and his other
friends around the world remember him for his hard work, unwavering
integrity, generous spirit, friendly nature, chemical insight, and
fierce loyalty to those who depended on him.
A memorial service arranged by Williams Thomas Funeral Home will be
held in Gainesville at the First Presbyterian Church at 11 a.m. on
Wednesday, June 13th.
Conveyed by Professor Ken Wagener, University of Florida
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