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Frederick R. Archibald
Born in Seaforth, Ont, in 1905, Frederick R. Archibald graduated
from Queen's University with a B.A. (Medallist in Chemistry) in
1933 and an M.A. (Chemistry) in 1934. He attended the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Graduate School in 1947 and 1948.
From 1934 to 1940, he worked with Professor G.J. MacKay Queen's
on the MacKay Process for treating arsenical ores. He later joined
Beattie Gold Mines, a Ventures Ltd. company, as a research chemist.
His achievements at Beattie led to the treatment of the arsenical
ores at Giant Yellowknife. He went on to establish the Ventures
Ltd. Research Laboratory at Beattie and another at Lakefield,
Ont. This lab still flourishes today as Lakefield Research.
In the midst of the Second World War, Archibald was enlisted to
guide the design and construction of a plant to produce uranium
metal from Canadian uranium oxides. Dubbed the Hydride Process,
this was a crucial part of the U.S. war effort, for it was a key
component of the Manhattan Project, the building of the world's
first atomic bomb.
Archibald's superb metallurgical versatility was again tested
following the war when he designed, built and operated a plant
producing alumina from clay in South Carolina.
He later was named Chief Metallurgist of Falconbridge, retiring
to a consultancy in 1971.
All through his work in the private sector, Archibald supported
academic research and trained graduate students.
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