The Faculty History Project documents faculty members who have been associated with the University of Michigan since 1837. Key in this effort is to celebrate the intellectual life of the University. This Faculty History Website is intended as a component of the effort to document the extraordinary academic achievements of Michigan’s faculty in building and sustaining one of the world’s great universities. It provides access to a comprehensive database of information concerning the thousands of faculty members who have served the University of Michigan.
Find out more.
The Bentley Historical Library serves as the official archives for the University.
Memorial
Princeton Alumni Weekly
C. Thornton Murphy ’59
Published in Oct. 9, 2002, issue
Thornton Murphy died Oct. 12, 2001, of injuries sustained in a fall at his home in Batavia, Ill.
Thornton grew up in Oberlin, Ohio, and prepared for Princeton at Western Reserve Academy. At Princeton he played soccer, was vice president of the chapel choir, a keyceptor, and joined Cloister Inn. He earned a master's and a doctorate in high-energy physics at the U. of Wisconsin in 1963, and taught physics at the U. of Michigan and at Carnegie Mellon U. before moving to Fermilab, the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, in 1973. There he coordinated the installation of the superconducting accelerator, Tevatron, and one of Fermilab's two major colliding beam experiments. He also worked with the CERN Laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland, and Frascati, Italy.
Beyond the rigors of particle physics, Thornton lived a liberal-arts life, rich with travel, languages, the arts, and, especially, music. From the Princeton Glee Club, he progressed to become a semiprofessional singer of early music. Only days before his death, on the centennial of Enrico Fermi's birth, he led the Fermilab Singers in "Happy Birthday" in Italian.
The class extends its sympathy to Barbara, his wife of 43 years, and to his children, Elizabeth, Charles, Michael, and Stephen.
The Class of 1959