Nathan Jacobson, who died on 5 December 1999, was an outstanding algebraist,
whose work on almost all aspects of algebra was of fundamental importance, and
whose writings will exercise a lasting influence. He had been an honorary member
of the Society since 1972.
Nathan Jacobson (later known as ‘Jake’ to his friends) was born in Warsaw (in
what he describes as the ‘Jewish ghetto’) on 5 October 1910 (through an error some
documents have the date 8 September); he was the second son of Charles Jacobson
(as he would be known later) and his wife Pauline, née Rosenberg. His family
emigrated to the USA during the First World War, first to Nashville, Tennessee,
where his father owned a small grocery store, but they then settled in Birmingham,
Alabama, where Nathan received most of his schooling. Later the family moved to
Columbus, Mississippi, but the young Nathan entered the University of Alabama
in 1926 and graduated in 1930. His initial aim was to follow an uncle and obtain a
degree in law, but at the same time he took all the (not very numerous) mathematics
courses, in which he did so well that he was offered a teaching assistantship in
mathematics in his junior (3rd) year. This marked a turning point; he now decided
to major in mathematics and pursue this study beyond College. During his final
year at Alabama he applied for admission and financial aid to three top graduate
schools in the country: Princeton, Harvard and Chicago. He was awarded a research
assistantship at Princeton; after the first year he was appointed a part-time instructor
for two years, and during his fourth year he was appointed a Procter Fellow. The
stipend was enough to enable him to make a grand tour of Europe by car in 1935,
in the company of two Princeton fellow-students at the time: H. F. Bohnenblust and
Robert J. Walker.