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Jarvis Edwin Seegmiller papers, 1942-1992

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Seegmiller, J. E.
Title
Jarvis Edwin Seegmiller papers
Dates
1942-1992 (inclusive)
Quantity
80.75 linear feet
Collection Number
ACCN 1437
Summary
The Jarvis Edwin Seegmiller papers (1942-1992) contain personal and professional correspondence, biographical material, class notes, business office files, catalogues, conference and seminar files, desk material, illustration files, patient related files, proposals and reports, specimen records and laboratory office files, charts, graphs, medical illustrations, transparencies, awards, equipment instruction, lab notebooks, architectural drawings, speeches, manuscript drafts, papers, and general research notes. J. E. Seegmiller (born 1920) is a prominent scientist concerned with the illnesses affecting the elderly.
Repository
University of Utah Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library
University of Utah
295 South 1500 East
Salt Lake City, UT
84112-0860

Telephone: 8015818863
special@library.utah.edu
Access Restrictions

Access to Boxes 34 and 35 restricted except by permission of the Curator of Manuscripts.

Twenty-four hour advanced notice encouraged. Materials must be used on-site. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law.

Languages
English
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Historical Note

Jarvis Edwin (Jay) Seegmiller was born to Edwin Dee and Eleanor Woodbury Jarvis Seegmiller on June 22, 1920 in St. George, Utah. He is the grandson of early Mormon settlers, and Seegmiller Mountain (the highest point on the southern horizon of St. George) was named after his grandfather's ranch. He is the youngest of nine children, and the only son.

He was first introduced to the idea of becoming a scientist in 1936 by Dr. Henry Eyring, who, at the time, was a professor of chemistry at Princeton University. Dr. Eyring's family grew up in St. George, and they were close friends with the Seegmillers. Dr. Seegmiller graduated from Dixie Junior College in St. George in 1940 as the valedictorian. The next year, he transferred to the University of Utah where he graduated in 1942 with an A. B. in Chemistry. He was accepted into the graduate schools of chemistry at both Princeton and Pennsylvania State University, but the onset of World War II prevented his attendance at either one.

Fortunately, a war research project for the National Defense Research Committee took him to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) where he met physicians working on human diseases that had a basis in chemical abnormalities of the body. Finding this more fascinating than anything he had encountered in the chemistry laboratories, he applied to medical school and was accepted at the University of Chicago in 1945, after his discharge from the army. He then graduated three years later with honors. After interning at Johns Hopkins Hospital, he obtained additional research training in biochemistry at the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases of the NIH in Bethesda, Maryland.

While living in Washington, D.C., his roommate suggested that he meet a friend of his from New York, Roberta Mae Eads. She was working on Wall Street as a tax accountant, and Jay was impressed with her from the moment he met her. On their third date, he proposed to her, and she accepted. They were married in the Salt Lake LDS Temple on November 1, 1950. They had been married for almost 42 years when Roberta died of metastatic endometrial cancer and chronic lymphocytic leukemia in August 1992.

Together, Jay and Roberta had four children and seven grandchildren. Their children are Susan Dale, Robert Edwin, Lisa Kristine, and Richard Lewis; and they are married to Craig Lloyd Maudlin, Ruth Jacob, John Robert Taylor, and Marianne Shumway respectively.

In 1952, Dr. Seegmiller became a Research Associate at Harvard Medical School. The following year, he became a Visiting Scientist Investigator at the Public Health Research Institute of the City of New York. In 1954, he returned to the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases as a Clinical Investigator. Then, after spending a year in London studying human genetics, he was appointed Chief to the Section on Human Biochemical Genetics in 1964.

In 1969, he joined the medical faculty of the newly created University of California in San Diego (UCSD) as Professor of Medicine, Director of the Division of Rheumatology, and Director of the Human Biochemical Genetics Program. In late 1983, he was appointed Founding Director of UCSD's newly established Institute for Research on Aging. In 1990, he became Professor Emeritus, but continued as Associate Director at the Institute for Research on Aging.

Dr. Seegmiller's research interests have centered on the genetic and biochemical mechanisms responsible for production of human hereditary disease states, including several forms of arthritis and a number of neurological diseases. His work has been recognized internationally. In fact, between 1968 and 1990, he received twenty distinguished awards and honors including the Geigy Award, the Heberden Society Medal, and the Philip Hench Award. He was also given two Distinguished Service Awards, one from the University of Chicago in 1980, and the other from the Alumni Association of the University of California, San Diego in 1990.

He was a member of thirteen different scientific associations, including the National Academy of Sciences. During 1970, he was the Harvey Society Lecturer. He is the former chief of the Section on Human Biochemical Genetics at the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases; and, between 1948 and 1991 he wrote, edited, or co-wrote 341 publications (more information on these publications is provided in his curriculum vitae).

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Content Description

The Jarvis Edwin Seegmiller papers (1942-1992) have been divided into four sections. Every attempt was made to preserve the original order of the Collection, but it had to be arranged in a format that would make the papers easy to research. Although there is some duplication and crossover of the material between sections, it is not substantial.

Section One contains information on Dr. Seegmiller's personal life and professional training. Box 1 contains all of his correspondence. Box 2 contains information on his personal life and family. Boxes 3-7 contain notes taken during his years at the University of Chicago Medical School. There are fifteen different subjects upon which he took notes, and those subjects are arranged in alphabetical order.

Section Two contains information from Dr. Seegmiller's files. This section has been divided into nine groups of information: business office files, catalogues, conference and seminar files, desk material, illustration files, patient related files, proposals and reports, specimen records and laboratory office files, and unidentified notes. Whenever possible, the files were kept in the order in which Seegmiller had arranged them.

Several folder titles in the business office files (boxes 8-21) start with the acronym UCSD, which stands for the University of California, San Diego. Every grant or research proposal funded by that university was given a UCSD number for clarification on paperwork. Boxes 20 and 21 contain an extensive file, "The General View of Subjects on Aging Related Research Supported by the National Institutes of Health." This file is divided into several subsections identified by their folder titles, and represents topics sanctioned by the National Institutes of Health.

Boxes 28-30 contain materials taken out of his desk and off the walls of his office. A major portion of this group consists of old calendars, but only pages with information written on them were retained. The illustration files in boxes 31 and 32 contain charts, graphs, medical illustrations, photocopies of photographs and slides (the originals are in the Multimedia Section of the Manuscripts Division, P0622), transparencies, and tables. Some of the items in these files were used in Seegmiller's papers, books, and lectures.

The final group of this section (boxes 44-47) contains charts, graphs, and handwritten notes taken during research and/or experiments. However, for most of these files, there is no indication of who did the research, when it was done, what it was, or why it was being done. A more detailed explanation of specific research can be found in Section Four of this Collection.

In 1996, Seegmiller donated an additional group of office files (Boxes 133-164). Box 133 contains general office material such as notes, correspondence, awards, information on visiting professors, and equipment instructions. Boxes 134-138 contain more information on grants and research proposals. The largest portion of these grant files are related to the Human Biochemical Genetics Program (HBGP). These files are organized by each of the twelve years that this grant was awarded, and then followed by miscellaneous material related to the program. Boxes 139-164 contains correspondence, pamphlets, programs, abstracts, related articles, and lecture notes for more of the conferences, symposiums, and annual group meetings upon which Seegmiller attended or received information. At many of these gatherings, he gave a lecture on gout, metabolism, or geriatric health care.

Section Three contains material used in Seegmiller's publications. Boxes 48 and 49 contain material used in his various appearances as a guest lecturer, or by his colleagues for one of their own lectures. Boxes 50 and 51 contain research material and some of Seegmiller's resulting publications. For some of the writings, Dr. Seegmiller was a co-author whose name is not listed first. Boxes 52-61 contain writings by some of Seegmiller's associates, and he used many of them as research for his own articles. Boxes 62-65 hold Seegmiller's bibliographic reference system. Whenever he did research, he kept a bibliography of every source he used. Then, he put those sources on these cards so that, in the future, he could gain access to them easily.

Section Four materials document the identifiable research done by Dr. Seegmiller or one of his assistants. The notebooks in boxes 69-109 contain detailed notes of Dr. Seegmiller's procedures and experiments. These notebooks are arranged in chronological order. Boxes 110-131 contain the laboratory notes of his assistants and/or students. These notebooks are arranged in alphabetical order by the last name of the author. If there is more than one book written by the same person, then those books are arranged in chronological order.

Box 132 contains architectural drawings of the rooms in which Dr. Seegmiller conducted his experiments (which were remodeled for his own use) at the National Institutes of Health. The ideas and notes for these renovations can be found in Section One, at the beginning of box 8.

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Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Use

The library does not claim to control copyright for all materials in the collection. An individual depicted in a reproduction has privacy rights as outlined in Title 45 CFR, part 46 (Protection of Human Subjects). For further information, please review the J. Willard Marriott Library’s Use Agreement and Reproduction Request forms.

Preferred Citation

Collection Name, Collection Number, Box Number, Folder Number. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, The University of Utah.

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Administrative Information

Arrangement

Organized in five series: I. Personal Papers; II. Office Files; III. Research Materials; IV. Experimental Research Notebooks; V. 1996 Addendum.

Acquisition Information

Gift of Jarvis Edwin Seegmiller in 1994 and 1996.

Processing Note

Processed by Debra Penman in 1997.

Separated Materials

Photographs and audio-visual materials were placed in the Multimedia Division of Special Collections (P0622 and A0362).

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Detailed Description of the Collection

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Arthritis--Genetic aspects
  • Genetic disorders
  • Joints--Diseases--Genetic aspects
  • Medical research personnel--United States
  • Nervous system--Diseases--Genetic aspects

Personal Names

  • Seegmiller, J. E --Archives

Form or Genre Terms

  • Architectural drawings
  • Correspondence
  • Notebooks
  • Notes
  • Photographs
  • Reports
  • Reprints
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