Francis Fergusson was born in 1904 in
Albuquerque,
New Mexico, being educated there and in
Washington, D.C. where his father,
Harvey Butler Fergusson, was a
congressman. Fergusson's father died under mysterious circumstances in Albuquerque in 1915. Either Francis or his mother, Clara, discovered his father's body hanging from a
cottonwood tree in their garden, finding that his throat had been cut. The incident caused Fergusson to lose his appetite for four years and as a result he developed a spinal hump due to
malnutrition. In 1917 or 1918, Fergusson moved with his mother to
Manhattan, leaving his brother and two sisters, all some years older, in New Mexico. During this time, his mother occupied a low-paid position as a decorator of
chinaware. In
New York, Fegusson was educated at the
Bronx High School of Science, then subsequently completed his secondary education at
The Ethical Culture School, where he befriended
J. Robert Oppenheimer and
Jeannette Mirsky. In 1921, Fergusson enrolled as an undergraduate at
Harvard University, where he earned a partial scholarship, with Oppenheimer joining him a year later due to the latter's poor health. At Harvard, Fergusson's studies focused on
biology as well as
Dante scholarship and philosophy, taught to him by
Raphael Demos. At this time he also began to write poetry and a novel, though neither survive. In 1923, he was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to
The Queen's College, Oxford, reading biology under the influential
Charles Scott Sherrington, though he opted to change course at the end of his first year, believing he would never attain the requisite mathematics. He moved instead to read
modern greats (now philosophy, politics and economics), a course established three years earlier as a modern alternative to
classics; he also joined the poetry society. In the summers of 1924 and 1925, Fergusson took part in the French
symposia , held at
Pontigny Abbey. At this time he also became acquainted with
Lady Ottoline Morrell, with whom he would often have tea. During Fergusson's last year at Oxford, Oppenheimer was teaching at the
University of Cambridge and the two spent the Christmas vacation of 1925–26 in
Paris. Oppenheimer's
psychotic episodes began to strain the two's relationship, however; and Oppenheimer attempted to strangle Fergusson after the latter told him that he had proposed to his girlfriend, Frances Keeley, and that she accepted. Oppenheimer later apologized for the incident by letter. Fergusson graduated from Oxford in 1926, taking
Second-Class honors degree. == Career ==