Frederick J. Almgren Jr. ’55
Fred was so alive to life that his death on Feb. 5, 1997, came as a shock. He died of pneumonia following a bone marrow transplant for myelodysplasia.
The 10th recipient of the Class of '55 Award, Fred served as a professor of mathematics at Princeton for 35 years. A pioneer in the fields of geometry and the calculus of variations, he studied the geometry of surfaces of least area.
He and his wife, Jean Taylor, a mathematics professor at Rutgers, wrote an elegant original paper for Scientific American (1976) on the geometry of soap bubbles, a gloriously inviting and original work. The author of a book, Plateau's Problem, and a computer
generated mathematics video, Fred was a superb teacher attuned to the paths young mathematicians might take among the mountains in this field.
Elected to Phi Beta Kappa our junior year, winning three varsity letters as a pole vaulter, graduating with highest honors in engineering, Fred excelled at whatever he tried. He earned his PhD in mathematics at Brown after serving as a fighter pilot in the Navy.
Entries in our 40th-reunion directory noted that he was proudest of his family, some of his theorems, and his PhD students; passionate about his wife, his kayak, and his wine cellar. He noted, too, a backlog of papers which need writing, trips which need taking, and trails which need hiking.
We relished his company. We miss him.
The Class of 1955
Paw in print
November 2024
Princetonians lead think tanks; the perfect football season of 1964; Nobel in physics.