Professor George Gray, who died in August 1999, had
a notable career as a pioneer electron microscopist of
neural tissues. His name is still attached to synapses,
which can be classified as Gray type 1 (symmetric) or
type 2 (asymmetric), and in addition he made a
number of other profound contributions to our
knowledge of synaptic structures.
He started his academic career late, having worked
before the second World War as a bank clerk, and
then serving in the Navy, patrolling for U-boats in the
North Sea and Atlantic for 4 years during the latter
part of the war. He had an early interest in zoology,
particularly in marine biology and microscopy and
when he left the Navy he took the opportunity to
work for a degree in Zoology at the University of
Wales in Aberystwyth. A first class honours degree
was followed by a PhD on melanophores in teleosts.
It was fortunate that the external examiner for the
thesis was J. Z. Young, who was impressed by the
work and by George, and who invited George to work
as his assistant in the preparation of The Life of the
Mammals in the Anatomy Department at University
College London.