American Decades
Kinsey, Alfred C. 1897-1956
SEX RESEARCHER
Childhood.
Alfred Kinsey was born in Hoboken, New Jersey, and his family moved to South Orange, New Jersey, when he was ten years old. He was ill during much of his childhood, suffering rickets (bone deformity from lack of vitamin D), rheumatic fever (which affected his heart), and typhoid fever. His deeply religious family was very protective. While other boys played baseball, Kinsey collected plant specimens and wrote poetry. Even in high school he avoided female companionship rather than upset his religious parents, who disapproved of dating.
Education.
Kinsey's father wanted him to become a mechanical engineer, and he initially tried this field at Stevens Institute, where his father worked. After a stunning failure, he decided to become a biologist. His father gave him one suit of clothes for support, and Kinsey enrolled in Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, to study biology. After...
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1950's Science and Technology
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Chromosome Number in Humans
- Communication
- The Computer Comes of Age
- Computer Predicts Election
- Computer Technology: Evolving Science
- Cyclotron/Bevatron
- DNA
- Dental Drills: High Speed and Painless (More or Less)
- Fossil Dating
- H-Bomb
- ICBM
- Jets
- Mapping the Ocean Floor
- Maser/Laser
- The Microwave Oven
- The New Frontier
- Nuclear Submarines
- Oral Contraceptives
- Radio Astronomy
- Radioimmunoassay
- The Saint Lawrence Seaway
- Sex Change
- Telephones in the Age of Technology
- Television
- Transatlantic Cable
- The Transistor
- Women in Science and Technology
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Science and Technology, 1950–1959
