Kenneth Hopper - Biographical Background

Biographical Background

He is married to Claire White Hopper, a former bank executive, and lives in Hackettstown, New Jersey. His brother, William Hopper, is an investment banker, based in London. Kenneth Hopper was born Glasgow, Scotland (May, 1926).

Kenneth Hopper is the son of an eminent Scottish professor of chemistry who had been raised on small farms in Northern Ireland and educated in a one-room schoolhouse through secondary school. The father's talent, however, earned him a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Science in Dublin. Professor Hopper, being Irish, was not allowed to serve in the Army during World War I, so he found employment as a graduate foreman with British Dyestuffs ( later the Imperial Chemical Industries, Ltd.). The nitroglycerine section, where he worked, was known as “the land of the one-legged stools,” as the workers could not risk dozing on the job and dropping the containers of highly explosive liquid. His father, in addition to his duties at the Royal Technical college, was co-author of a respected text on organic chemistry which is still being used. Professor Hopper also headed the Scottish section for the Society of Chemical Industry. Kenneth recalls many discussions about the chemical industry around the family table, particularly the issues raised about his father’s opinion that the Haber labs in Germany were much superior to any British installation. This question of the superior efficacy of various nations’ manufactures was thus an early perception of Kenneth Hopper’s.

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