Louise Grant was a microbiologist and pathologist, Prof. Louise Grant was affiliated with the University of the West Indies of Jamaica for 20 years where he achieved the highest academic honour, being named professor emeritus in microbiology. Young Louis Grant was surrounded by science from an early age born in Vere, Clarendon in 1913, his father worked in a chemical laboratory at the Appleton Estate. As a student, Grant showed promise and received the Vere Trust scholarship to attend Jamaica College. He went on to Edinburgh University in Scotland and later specialised in tropical microbiology at the London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. Prof. Grant then returned to Jamaica serving his country as a medical doctor, microbiologist and pathologist.
Professor Louis Grant died in 1993
Professor Louis Grant died in 1993
microbiology
Louis Grant Kelly has written: 'Handbook of numerical methods and applications'
microbiology
Grant's wife was from St. Louis. After Grant left the army, he managed the farm of his father-in-law near St. Louis for awhile. The location is now known as Grant's farm, is open to the public as something of an amusement park and includes a reconstruction of the cabin where Grant lived there.
Louis Emerick's birth name is Louis Emerick Grant.
microbiology
Professor Louis Grant's most famous invention was the telephone, which he invented in 1876.
Grant was married at the bride's home in St. Louis, Missouri.
he was born in 1960
a palentologist