Mullard Award

The Mullard Award is awarded annually by the Royal Society to a person who has "an outstanding academic record in any field of natural science, engineering or technology and whose contribution is currently making or has the potential to make a contribution to national prosperity in Britain."[1] It was established in 1967, and has been awarded to more people at once than any other Royal Society medal, with five individuals receiving the award in 1970.[2] The award is a silver gilt medal, which comes with a £2,000 prize and a £1,500 grant to be used for travel and attending conferences.[1][3]

Mullard Award
Awarded formade to individuals whose work has the potential to make a contribution to national prosperity
Sponsored by
CountryUnited Kingdom
First awarded1967
Websiteroyalsociety.org/grants-schemes-awards/awards/mullard-award/

Mullard medallists

Year Name Rationale Notes
1967George Douglas Hutton Bell"for his contribution to agricultural production in breeding Proctor barley"[4][5]
1968Alastair Pilkington[6]
1969Richard Milroy Clarkson"for outstanding advances in aircraft project conception which he has made and, in particular, the initiation of the HS 125 aircraft"[7][8]
1970Stephen William Kenneth Morgan, Stephen Esslement Woods, John Lumsden, Bennett Gregory Perry and Leslie Jack Derham[9]
1971Frank Ralph Batchelor, Frank Peter Doyle, John Herbert Charles Naylor and George Newbolt Rolinson[10][11]
1972William Robert Boon[12]
1973Charles William Oatley[13][14][15]
1974Frank Brian Mercer[16]
1975John Bingham[17]
1976George Herbert Hutchings[14][lower-alpha 1]
1977Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield[19]
1978James W. Black[17]
1979Ernest Martin Ellis and Geoffrey Light Wilde[20]
1980Edward Penley Abraham[21]
1981Michael Elliott, Norman Frank James and David Allen Pulman[22][23]
1982Martin Francis Wood, John Michael Woodgate and Peter Edward Hanley[24]
1983John William Fozard and Ralph Spenser Hooper[25]
1984Clive Marles Sinclair[26][27]
1985David Kalderon[28]
1986John Bedford Stenlake[29][30]
1987Michael Alan Ford
1988Ralph Louis Wain[31]
1989David Richard Sweatman Hedgeland[32]
1990Peter Mansfield, John Rowland Mallard and James McDonald Strahan Hutchinson[33]:139
1991David Jack and Roy Thomas Brittain
1992Robert Willian Ernest Shannon[34][35]
1993Allen Hill, Monika Green and Anthony Cass"in recognition of their to the translation of bioelectrochemical research into the successful launch of molecular sensors for medical use"[36]
1994John White, Brad Amos, Richard Durbin and Michael Fordham[37][38][39][40]
1995Kenneth Richardson[41]
1996Ian McKittrick[42]
1997Patrick Humphrey[43][44][45]
1998Graham Richards[46]
1999John Rhodes[47]
2000Martin Sweeting[48]
2003Henning Sirringhaus[49]
2004Jeremy Baumberg[50]
2005Ben G. Davis[51]
2007Chris Freeman[52]
2009Shankar Balasubramanian[53]
2014Demis Hassabis[54]
2016Steve Furber and Sophie Wilson"for their distinguished contributions to the design and analysis of the Acorn RISC Machine (ARM) microprocessor in the 1980s, which is now used in mobile phones and other portable electronic devices throughout the world"[55]
2018Florin Udrea and Julian Gardner[56]
2019Hagan Bayley[57]
2020Stephen Jackson[58]
2021Stephen G. Davies[59]
2022Graeme Milliganfor his global leadership in pharmacological and translational studies, his successful "spinning-out" of academic research and his longstanding underpinning support for the bio-pharmaceutical industry

Table notes

  1. Hutchings became the first American to receive the award.[18]

See also

References

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  2. "Mullard archive winners 1989 - 1967". The Royal Society. Archived from the original on 2008-06-09. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  3. "Mullard archive winners". Royal Society. Archived from the original on 2012-05-19. Retrieved 2012-10-17.
  4. Handley-Taylor, Geoffrey; Ernest Kay (1971). Dictionary of International Biography (7th ed.). International Biographical Centre. p. 92. OCLC 53722295.
  5. "Council plan to save trees". The Guardian. 1967-07-20. p. 16. Retrieved 2022-01-24 via Newspapers.com.
  6. Norberg, Ulla M (1979). Morphology of the Wings, Legs and Tail of Three Coniferous Forest Tits, the Goldcrest, and the Treecreeper in Relation to Locomotor Pattern and Feeding Station Selection. The Royal Society. p. 77. ISBN 0-85403-109-X.
  7. Who's Who of British Engineers (4 ed.). MacLaren and Sons. 1974. p. 91.
  8. "Mullard Award By Royal Society". The Times. No. 57676. London. 1969-09-27. p. 8.
  9. West, David Richard Frederick; J. E. Harris (1999). Metals and the Royal Society. Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining. p. 84. ISBN 1-86125-028-2.
  10. McMillan, James (1987). The Way it Changed: 1951-1975. Kimber. p. 174.
  11. Anon (1975). "1975 Royal Society Mullard Award". Electronics and Power. 21 (6): 404. doi:10.1049/ep.1975.0462. ISSN 0013-5127.
  12. Kennedy, Carol (1986). ICI: The Company that Changed Our Lives. Hutchinson. p. 151. ISBN 0-09-167300-3.
  13. Breton, Bernard C.; Peter W. Hawkes; Dennis McMullan; Kenneth C. A. Smith (2004). Advances in Imaging and Electron Physics: Sir Charles Oatley and the Scanning Electron Microscope. Academic Press. p. 519. ISBN 0-12-014775-0.
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  22. Report of the Agricultural Research Council. HMSO. 1981. p. 68. ISBN 0-10-200882-5.
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  54. "Demis Hassabis". Stanford University. Retrieved 2022-01-10.
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