Michael Meredith Swann, Baron Swann, FRS, FRSE[1] (1 March 1920 – 22 September 1990) was a British molecular and cell biologist. He was appointed chairman of the BBC, awarded a knighthood and subsequently a life peerage.
Early life
Swann was born in Cambridge, the eldest of three children of pathologist Meredith Blake Robson Swann and his wife, Marjorie Dykes.[2]
He served with the British Army during World War II, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and being Mentioned in Dispatches.[4] From 1946 Swann lectured in zoology at the University of Cambridge, his alma mater.[5]
His academic work was on the mechanisms of cell division and fertilisation. He used cell polarisation methods to understand the changes in molecular organisation of the mitotic spindle. With his collaborator Murdoch Mitchison, he found evidence in support of a new theory of cell division. He collaborated with Victor Rothschild in experiments on changes in membrane structure during fertilisation.
From 1965 to 1974, he was the principal and vice-chancellor of Edinburgh University. In 1968, he was awarded an honorary doctorate of science from the University of Leicester.[7] During his term as principal, he encountered difficulty with students led by Gordon Brown, who had unusually been elected as rector of the university.[8] He received a knighthood in the 1972 Birthday Honours,[9] having the honour conferred by the Queen herself on 5 December 1972.[10]
In 1969 he led the Swann Report "on The Flow into Employment of Scientists, Engineers and Technologists". In 1985 he led the Swann Report "Education for All", a report of the Committee of Enquiry into the Education of Children from Ethnic Minority Groups.
The Michael Swann Building of the University of Edinburgh at Kings Buildings is named after him. It continues to be used for work on cell division and fertilisation to this day.
Family
In 1942, he married Tess Gleadowe (died 2009). They had two sons and two daughters.