

Brenda Milner defined the function of the hippocampus through her studies of patient H.M. in the 1950s. Her meticulous experiments revealed that the removal of his medial temporal lobes resulted in profound amnesia for new facts while leaving his procedural memory and intellect intact. This proved memory was not a single faculty but a system of distinct processes localized to specific brain regions. Many misunderstand her role as merely an assistant; she was the principal investigator whose cognitive work complemented the surgical focus of her colleagues. Now a centenarian still affiliated with the Montreal Neurological Institute, Milner’s foundational methodology continues to underpin all modern neuroscience of memory and cognition.
1901–1927
Grew up during the Depression, fought World War II, and built the postwar economic boom. Defined by shared sacrifice, institutional trust, and a belief that hard work and loyalty would be rewarded.
Brenda was born in 1918, placing them squarely in The Greatest Generation. The events that shaped this generation — world wars, depression, and rapid industrialization — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1918
The world at every milestone
World War I ends; Spanish flu pandemic kills millions
The Great Kanto earthquake devastates Tokyo
The Empire State Building opens as the world's tallest
Jesse Owens wins four golds at the Berlin Olympics
World War II begins; The Wizard of Oz premieres
Israel declares independence; Berlin Blockade begins
NASA founded
Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy assassinated
First test-tube baby born
Pan Am Flight 103 bombed over Lockerbie
Google founded; Clinton impeachment
“Memory is not a single faculty but a collection of different brain systems.”