Prof John Masson Gulland FRS FRSE FRIC (1898 – 1947) was a Scottish chemist and biochemist. His main work was on nucleic acids, morphine and aporphine alkaloids. His work on electrometric titration was important in the foundation of principles leading to the discovery of the DNA double helix. He established the Scottish Seaweed Research Association and the Lace Research Council.
He was born at 6 Alva Street in Edinburgh’s west end, the only son of Dr George Lovell Gulland and Helen Orme Masson, on 14 October 1898. His maternal grandfather was David Masson and his maternal uncle was David Orme Masson. His paternal uncle was John William Gulland MP. John’s father later became Professor of Medicine at Edinburgh University.
He attended Edinburgh Academy 1906 to 1917 and was then conscripted into the army in the First World War. He applied for a commission and served as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Engineers. He was assigned to the Divisional Signals Company and saw little if any enemy action. After the war he won a Carnegie Research Scholarship and entered academia, firstly studying at St Andrews University then Manchester University before joining the Dyson Perrins Laboratory at Oxford University where he graduated MA then Edinburgh University where he gained a BSc in 1921. He became a Demonstrator in Chemistry at Balliol College in Oxford University in 1924 and gained a doctorate (from St Andrews University) in 1925. He was then promoted to Lecturer in Organic Chemistry in Oxford.