Dale Husemoller


Dale Husemöller is an American mathematician specializing in algebraic topology and homological algebra who is known for his books on fibre bundles, elliptic curves, and, in collaboration with John Milnor, symmetric bilinear forms.

Life and career

Husemöller was born in 1933 in Austin, Minnesota, USA. He earned his BA in mathematics at the University of Minnesota. He began his graduate career there as a physicist, transferring to Harvard University in 1953. There, he switched from physics to the PhD program in mathematics.
He completed his Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1959. His doctoral supervisor was Lars Ahlfors. His dissertation topic was Mappings, Automorphisms and Coverings of Riemann Surfaces.
After the PhD, he served on the faculty of the University of Rochester and the Pennsylvania State University. There his interests shifted to topology. He spent most of his career at Haverford College from 1961 until his retirement in 1996. He is currently Professor Emeritus at Haverford.
During Husemöller's career, he spent several sabbatical years as a visiting scholar at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques and at the University of Bonn. After retirement, he was visiting lecturer at both of these places as well as at the Universities of Munich, Heidelberg, and Münster, the Tata Institute in Bombay, the Institute of Physics and Mathematics in Tehran, and the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Bonn. He was a regular attendee at the Arbeitstagungen in Bonn.
Professor Husemöller's five children Carl, Anna, Erich, Kurt, and Greta grew up on Haverford College Campus, and spent sabbatical years and subsequent summers with him at the Résidence de l'Ormaille at the IHES in France, and for another year at the Ernst-Moritz-Arndt Gymnasium in Bonn while he was at the University there. All five received their BAs at Haverford. Professor Husemöller has 10 grandchildren, Colette, Adrian, Ingrid, Paloma, Atena, Alexey, Annika, Jacob, Rose, and Mbali. He currently lives in western Massachusetts.