Background
Gordon Stone was born in Exeter, Devon in 1925, the only child of Sidney Charles Stone, a civil servant, and Florence Beatrice Stone (née Coles).
Gordon Stone was born in Exeter, Devon in 1925, the only child of Sidney Charles Stone, a civil servant, and Florence Beatrice Stone (née Coles).
He received his Bachelor of Arts in 1948 and Doctor of Philosophy in 1951, both from Christ"s College, Cambridge (Cambridge University), England, where he studied under Harry Julius Emeléus.
He specialized in the synthesis of main group and transition metal organometallic compounds. After graduating from Christ"s College, Cambridge, he was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Southern California for two years, before being appointed as an instructor in the Chemistry Department at Harvard University, and was appointed assistant professor in 1957. He was the Robert A. Welch Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Baylor University, Texas until 2010, but his most productive period was as Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at Bristol University, England (1963–1990), where he published hundreds of papers over the course of 27 years.
In research he competed with his contemporary Geoffrey Wilkinson.
Among the many foci of his studies were complexes of fluorocarbon, isocyanide, polyolefin, alkylidene and alkylidyne ligands. At Baylor, he maintained a research program on boron hydrides, a lifelong interest.
In 1988 he chaired the Review Committee commissioned by the British Government (the now-dissolved University Grants Committee) to carry out a review of chemistry in United Kingdom academia ("University Chemistry — The Way Forward", "The Stone Report"). His main recommendation, "that the University Grants Commission fund properly not fewer than 30 chemistry departments" and that "at least 20 of these departments have 30 or more academic staff to compete successfully at the international level" was never implemented.
His autobiography Leaving Number Stone Unturned, Pathways in Organometallic Chemistry, was published in 1993.
With Wilkinson, he edited the influential series Comprehensive Organometallic Chemistry. With Robert West, he edited the series Advances in Organometallic Chemistry. The Gordon Stone Lecture series at the University of Bristol is named in his honour.
Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (1970) Fellow of the Royal Society (1976), Vice-President 1987-1988 Chugaev Medal of the Kurnakov Institute (Russian Academy of Sciences) (1978) American Chemical Society’s award in Inorganic Chemistry (1985) Royal Society of Chemistry’s Sir Edward Frankland Prize Lectureship (1988) Royal Society"s Davy Medal (1989) Royal Society of Chemistry’s Longstaff Medal (1990) Commander of the Order of the British Empire (1990).
Royal Society.