Frederic Jevons

Frederic Raphael Jevons
Born Frederic Raphael Bettelheim
19 September 1929
Vienna, Austria
Died 30 September 2012 (2012-10-01) (aged 83)
Melbourne, Australia
Residence Australia
Alma mater King's College, Cambridge
Occupation Biochemistry
Employer University of Melbourne
Known for Educationalist, first vice-chancellor of Deakin University
Spouse(s) Grete ("Dita") Bradel
Children two sons
Parent(s) Fritz and Hedwig Bettelheim

Frederic Raphael Jevons (born 19 September 1929 in Austria as Frederic Raphael Bettelheim, died 30 September 2012 in Melbourne, Australia)[1] was a British biochemist and later an Australian educator. He was informally known as Fred Jevons and since 1977 lived and worked mostly in Australia.

Early life

Born in Austria in 1929, Jevons survived the Holocaust by being sponsored by a family in England to attend a boarding school in Norfolk. The young Bettelheim was educated at Norwich High School for Boys, joining the household of his school's headmaster, Mr J. H. W. Jevons, from whom he took his new surname. During the Second World War, the school moved from Norwich to Loddon and changed its name to Langley School. His parents, Hedwig and Fritz Bettelheim, survived WWII by escaping from Austria to Venezuela, but were separated from their children for some ten years. Jevons, as he was now known, was reunited with his parents in 1948.[2]

Jevons matriculated at King's College, Cambridge, in 1946,[3] where he held a scholarship and took a 1st class degree in the Natural Sciences Tripos in 1950. He graduated Doctor of Philosophy at Cambridge in 1953 and Doctor of Science at the University of Manchester in 1966.[4]

Career

Jevons was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Washington, Seattle, 1953–1954, then a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, 1953–1959. He was also University Demonstrator in Biochemistry at Cambridge, 1956–1959, before returning to Manchester University as Lecturer in Biological Chemistry 1959–1966, when he was appointed as the University's Professor of Liberal Studies in Science, holding that chair until 1975. He undertook British Council tours in India, East Africa, and Nigeria, between 1972 and 1975. In 1976, he went to Australia as the first Vice-Chancellor of Deakin University, and on his retirement in 1985 was appointed a Professor Emeritus. He was awarded Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in the Queens' Birthday Honours List, 1986. [5][4]

From 1986 to 1987 Jevons was briefly a distance education consultant in southern Africa, before returning to Australia as Professor of Science and Technology Policy at Murdoch University, 1988–1992. In 1992 he went back to Manchester, as Simon Senior Research Fellow. From 1994 to 1996 he was an Honorary Professorial Fellow at Monash University, then joined the University of Melbourne as an Honorary Professorial Associate in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science.[4]

Other work

Selected publications

Honours

Private life

Jevons married, in 1956, Grete, and they have two sons.[4]

References

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