George Henry Alexander Clowes (1877–1958)[2] was a medical doctor who worked as the first research director at Eli Lilly and Company. He was responsible for mobilizing Eli Lilly resources to mass-produce insulin,[3] making it available for diabetics beginning in 1923.[4][5] He was also an art collector whose collection of paintings by European Old Masters was donated to the Indianapolis Museum of Art.[6] He and his two sons established The Clowes Fund in 1952 to fund art, education, and social services.[7] The Clowes Award for cancer research was named in his honor.[8]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/00/George_Henry_Alexander_Clowes_%281877-1958%29.png/220px-George_Henry_Alexander_Clowes_%281877-1958%29.png)
His grandson, Alexander Whitehill Clowes, wrote The Doc and the Duchess, a book about his grandfather's life and legacy.[9]
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