Background
Roscoe Gilkey Dickinson was born on May 3, 1894 in Brewer, Maine, United States. His father, George E. M. Dickinson, was a violin teacher and director of music for the Hyde Park, Massachusetts, city schools; his mother’s maiden name was Georgie Simmons.
Education
Dickinson attended grammar school and high school in Hyde Park and then studied chemical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received the Bachelor of Science degree in 1915. In 1920 he became the first person to receive a Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology.
Career
After two years of graduate work Dickinson was appointed instructor at the California Institute of Technology. He remained there all his life; at the lime of his death he was professor of physical chemistry and acting dean of graduate studies.
As a graduate student Dickinson became familiar with the technique of determining the atomic structure of crystals by the X-ray diffraction method through his contact with C. Lalor Burdick and James H. Ellis, who carried out, in Pasadena, the first crystal-structure determination made in the western hemisphere. At that time the lack of quantitative information about the interaction of X rays and crystals made the task of the crystal-structure investigator a difficult one. The field was, however, especially well suited to Dickinson, whose outstanding characteristics were great clarity of thought, a mastery of the processes of logical deduction, and meticulous care in his experimental work and in the analysis of data.
He carried out many crystal-structure determinations, all of which have been found to be reliable to within the limits of error that he assigned. He determined the structures of a number of crystals containing inorganic complexes, including the hexachlorostannates, the tetrachloropalladites and tetrachloroplati- nites, and the tetracyanide complexes of zinc and mercury. His determination (with one of his students, A. L. Raymond) of the structure of hexamethylenetetramine was the first structure determination ever made of a molecule of an organic compound. In a decade he developed the leading American school of X rays and crystal structure.