Sir Frederick Grant Banting, KBE , MC , MD , FRSC (November 14, 1891 – February 21, 1941) was a Canadian medical scientist, doctor and Nobel laureate noted as one of the co-discoverers of insulin.
Dissatisfied with his practice and fascinated by his idea, Banting left London (University of Western Ontario) and moved to Toronto. There, on 17 May, 1921 he began his research at the University of Toronto, under the supervision of professor John Macleod. He was assigned a single assistant to help him, the young graduate student Charles Best.
During a summer of intense work, Banting tested his idea, performing operations on dogs to tie up their pancreatic ducts, which resulted in a partial atrophy of the pancreas. The pancreas would be then removed some weeks later, with the hope that it would then contain a high concentration of uncontaminated secretion of the pancreas. An extract would then be made from it and administered to dogs with diabetes, to test whether it could treat their diabetes through lowering the blood sugar level.
After some months of work, it appeared to Banting that his method was working, and that he could keep dogs with diabetes alive with his extract. He enthusiastically reported his findings to Macleod, who had been away on his summer holidays during this time. In retrospect, some claim that Banting's experiments were crude and did not prove the validity of his idea, which was not physiologically sound in any case. However, the results encouraged further intensive work in the fall, with direct participation by Macleod and the chemist James Collip. The use of dog pancreases proved impractical and was soon abandoned in favour of using pancreas from calves and cows. The technique of tying pancreatic ducts was also discarded, with all the efforts concentrated on developing methods to extract a useful extract from a normal pancreas. The efforts of the team in 1921-1922 culminated in developing the ability to obtain a useful extract, named insulin.
This was one of the most significant advances in medicine at the time. Insulin was not only discovered, but put into mass production in a matter of months. Hence, almost immediately it began to extend the lives of millions of people worldwide who suffered from the endocrine disease diabetes mellitus that could not be treated and had a very poor prognosis. People suffered from problems with fat and protein metabolism, leading to blindness and then death only a short time after the onset of the illness. Leonard Thompson was the first person to be administered.
In 1923 Banting and Macleod received the Nobel Prize in Medicine. Banting shared the award money with Best, believing that Best deserved the Prize more than Macleod, who in turn shared his award money with Collip. Banting was widely esteemed in Canada as the first Canadian to achieve worldwide scientific fame. The Canadian government gave him a lifetime grant for his research. In 1924 King George V bestowed a knighthood on him, making him Sir Frederick Banting.
Dr. Banting married Marion, the daughter of Dr. William Robertson of 249 Geddes St. in Elora, Ontario in 1924; they had one child, William (b. 1928). The marriage ended in a sensational divorce in 1932. In 1937 Banting married Henrietta Ball.
At the pinnacle of his career, Banting was killed on February 21, 1941, when the Lockheed Hudson patrol bomber in which he was he was travelling to England crashed shortly after takeoff from Gander, Newfoundland. The exact purpose of his flight to England is unclear, but it appears likely he was going to meet with colleagues in an effort to convince them to produce biological weapons as a last-ditch weapon in case of a German invasion of England. Another possibility was Banting's desire to work on the front lines. He had been denied his request to do so a month earlier, as Canadian officials believed he would be more useful in Canada doing research. Banting was able to dress the pilot's wounds before he succumbed to his own injuries.
During his lifetime he was never fully comfortable with the medical establishment of the day. He had always been an avid amateur painter and in an attempt to alleviate the anxiety he felt around the medical community he befriended the legendary Canadian artists, The Group of Seven. Many of his surviving canvases bear a striking resemblance to the Group of Seven's work.
He was married twice and had one son from his first marriage, William Banting. William died in May, 1998 in British Columbia. Orphaned at a young age after the death of his mother, he later worked for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and kept some distance from his father's legacy.
He is interred in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto.
In 1994 Frederick Banting was inducted into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame. In 2004, he was nominated as one of the top 10 "Greatest Canadians" by viewers of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. When the final votes were counted, Banting finished fourth behind Tommy Douglas, Terry Fox and Pierre Trudeau.
Ironically, during the voting for "Greatest Canadians" in late 2004, controversy rose over the future use of the Banting family farm in New Tecumseth which had been left to the Ontario Historical Society by Banting's late nephew, Edward, in 1998. The dispute centred around the future use of the 100 acre (40 ha) property and its buildings. As of June, 2006, it had still not been resolved.
Banting was distantly related to Standard Oil co-founder, and 'Father of Florida', Henry Morrison Flagler. They were 3rd cousins 3 times removed.
1891 births | 1941 deaths | Canadian World War I people | Canadian Medical Hall of Fame | Canadian medical researchers | Canadian physicians | Diabetes | Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada | Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire | Londoners (Ontario) | Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine winners | People from Simcoe County, Ontario | Scottish Canadians | University of Toronto alumni | National Inventors Hall of Fame
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