Harry Nursten


Harry Erwin Nursten was a British food chemist, specialising in flavour chemistry at the Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences at the University of Reading.

Biography

Harry Erwin Nursten was born in Czechoslovakia in August 1927, son of Sergius Nursten and Helene. The family managed to escape to England shortly before WW2. In the 1939 England and Wales Register the parents were living at Corringham Court, Golders Green; Sergius was listed as “Dental surgeon.” The family settled in Ilkley, Yorkshire, where Harry attended Ilkley Grammar School and gained his Higher School Certificate in 1944. He went to the University of Leeds where he read colour chemistry and dyeing, followed by a PhD in colour chemistry, awarded in 1949.
In the summer of that year Nursten was one of a group of volunteers harvesting at Windlestone Hall. Also there was Jean Frobisher, Harry’s fellow student and bridge partner at Ilkley Grammar School, and now a welfare worker. They were married on 23 December 1950 at St Paul’s Church, Esholt.
After more research at Leeds, Nursten taught dyeing and textile chemistry at Nottingham Technical College. He returned to Leeds in 1955 as a lecturer in the Procter Department of Leather Science.
Following two sabbaticals at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and UC Davis, he moved into the area of food and flavour science. In 1976, he was appointed Chair of Food Science at the University of Reading. Following the merger of the National College of Food Technology and the Department of Food Science, he became Head of Department of one of the biggest Food Science Departments in the UK. In 1992, the year he retired, Nursten ensured that the Hugh Macdonald Sinclair endowment was used to set up a new centre for human nutrition research at the University of Reading.
Harry Nursten died in Reading on 20 December 2011. His wife, Jean Patricia Nursten, is a noted Professor of social work, and author.

Some publications

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