November 03, 2021
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Joseph Edward Murray (April 1, 1919 - November 26, 2012) was an American plastic surgeon. He performed the first successful human kidney transplant on identical twins on December 23, 1954.

Murray shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1990 with E. Donnall Thomas for work on organ and cell transplantation.

Murray was born the son of William A. Murray and Mary DePasquale and grew up in Milford, MA. He was a star athlete at the Milford High School. Murray excelled in football, ice hockey and baseball. Upon graduation, Murray attended the College of the Holy Cross intending to play baseball. The baseball practices and lab schedules conflicted forcing him to give up baseball. Murray later attended Harvard Medical School. After graduating from medical school, Murray joined the U.S. Army where he studied surgery at Valley Forge General Hospital in Pennsylvania.

In 2001, Murray published his autobiography, Surgery Of The Soul: Reflections on a Curious Career, which doubles as a story of 14 of his experiences and the struggles with them.

In December 1954, Murray performed the world's first successful renal transplant between the identical Herrick twins at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital; he was assisted in this task by J. Hartwell Harrison, M.D. and other noted physicians. In 1959, he performed the world's first successful allograft and, in 1962, the world's first cadaveric renal transplant. Throughout the following years, Murray became an international leader in the study of transplantation biology, the use of immunosuppressive agents, and studies on the mechanisms of rejection. In the 1960s, the discovery of anti - rejection drugs such as azathioprine, imuran and prednisone, allowed Murray to carry out transplants from unrelated donors.

Murray served as chief plastic surgeon at Children's Hospital Boston from 1972 – 1985 and retired as professor of Surgery Emeritus in 1986 from Harvard Medical School.

He married Virginia Link in 1945, with whom he had three sons and three daughters. His hobbies were tennis, biking and swimming.