James Peter Taylor | 1979 - 2020

Good ideas don’t have owners—they belong to everyone (@jxtx)



We miss you James.

Community

A small sample of what's been shared about James online, from his community:

James was a cornerstone of the department and of the scientific community. But most of all he was the exemplar of a colleague and just a wonderful human being
Vincent J. Hilser, Chair,Department of Biology, Johns Hopkins
James Taylor was an amazing colleague, scientist, and friend. I love him very much and I will miss him very much.
Bob Johnson, Johns Hopkins
James was a truly wonderful mentor, scientist, and human being. He was so brilliant, but so approachable. He was a giant in the field and I was so lucky to have the chance to work with him. He will be deeply missed.
Nathan Roach, Johns Hopkins
I am in shock and saddened over the horrible news that James Taylor has passed away.
He was a cornerstone of the bioinformatics community, and with his leadership Galaxy grew to tremendous heights.
So heartbreaking, a true loss. My sincerest condolences to his family and all his friends. He will be sorely missed.
Stian Soiland-Reyes, University of Manchester
Massive contributions to bioinformatics and an amazing person.
Ben Busby, DNANexus
This is a such a tragic loss. Thank you, James, for being such a supportive mentor and friend. We will miss you.
Rajiv McCoy, Johns Hopkins
What a tragedy. He was a terrific researcher and an awesome human being. A huge loss for the world.
You were a hero James — we'll do our best to carry on your work. RIP, we will all miss you terribly!
Dan Stanzione, TACC
This is devastating news. James Taylor will be missed by our entire community and well beyond. All my condolences to his family
Cedric Notredame, CRG
This is just such devastating news. I have known James for the best part of seven years, as we set up Galaxy in Australia and James, of course, immediately agreed to visit in 2013 to help make that happen. He was visionary, looking to create free, open platforms for global science.

He was also enormously good company, going out for beers and in depth discussions on any and all topics. I thoroughly enjoyed James' company in social and academic forums...but far more importantly than that, he both led and built software and data science communities that will define community-focussed global bioscience from here on.

Personally, it's crushing - I am so sorry for his family and friends, of which of course I count myself - but the loss to the world of science eclipses that. We are all the poorer for losing James. If it is any consolation, he accomplished so much - the world of science is changed because of James.
Andrew Lonie, University of Melbourne
I am in shock. James was a great scientist, great person, and a cornerstone of the Jetstream effort.
Craig Stewart, Indiana University
I'm so very sorry to hear this news. A wonderful person and scientist who made awesome contributions to science. He will be greatly missed. Heartfelt wishes to his family, friends and all the Galaxy crew.
Vivien Bonazzi, NIH
My condolences. The galaxy project has grown such a supportive and positive community around it, and Dr. Taylor was right at the center of it.
Dan Fornika, BCCDC
I am utterly shocked and terribly saddened to hear this. James has been a wonderful colleague, collaborator, and a great mentor to many students.
Steven Salzberg, Johns Hopkins

James and Alvey

Our hearts are heavy. James Taylor has passed away.

A kind and generous person. His contributions to science are innumerable and he was just getting started.

Deep condolences to his family and many friends and colleagues all over the world.

Denis Wirtz, Johns Hopkins
James was a scientific giant, dedicated to sharing what he knew with everyone no matter their background and one of the kindest people I knew. We will miss James so much.
Jeff Leek, Johns Hopkins
I am so shocked and saddened by the news of James's death. This is such a huge loss to the bioinformatics community. Galaxy has been an inspiration to our Cistrome project. James will be sorely missed!
Xiaole Shirley Liu, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
James was, simply put, an amazing person. He was certainly an amazing scientist, but so much more than that. He was what we all hope to be as scientists, mentors, colleagues, and friends.

We will miss you James.

Karen Reddy, Johns Hopkins
Heartbroken to hear this. Kind person, great scientist and open science advocate. He will be dearly missed, especially by the Galaxy community
Nicola Soranzo, Earlham Institute
This is devastating news. I had the privilege of working with James since he was a grad student and we are still collaborating with him on the VISION Project. He was brilliant, creative, insightful, and passionate about bioinformatics, biology, and full transparency in data & analyses.
Ross Hardison, Penn State University
I am so sorry — these are dark days and James was always such a hopeful ray of light — I cannot properly express my shock hearing of his passing.

May we all conduct our lives with the urgency he did, have the positive impact on society that he did, and thereby honor his legacy.

Tim Treche, VAn Andel Research Institute
Deeply saddened at the loss of James Taylor. I remember first reaching out to James at the start of my PhD. I had the great pleasure of rotating in his lab, which not only helped me develop my bioinformatic skills, but also ultimately set me on my career trajectory.

I owe a lot to James. In addition to happily agreeing to be on my thesis committee he was an immense source of knowledge and an overall great colleague. I’m grateful for having had the opportunity to work with him. James - you will be missed dearly.

Brendan Miller, Johns Hopkins
I am shocked. A supremely talented scientist and a wonderful collaborator gone way too soon. We will miss you. Rest In Peace, my friend.
Sergei Pond, Temple University
Devastating news. James had such a large impact on how we work in and teach bioinformatics. He was a great person to work with and had great enthusiasm.
Dan MacLean, The Sainsbury Lab
I've had tremendous respect for James and his dedication to open science and, to sum it up briefly, making the world a better place for everyone. He was an amazing human and a scientist and will be missed dearly.
Monika Cechova Mich, Czechia
This is shocking. James was an inspiration and admired vision and community building, above all. Was lucky to get to know him, and will be terribly missed, RIP
Suresh Marru, Indiana University
Some lead from above, but the best leaders lead from within by lifting up everyone around them into a strong community. I will miss you dearly my friend and leader James.
Michael Schatz, Johns Hopkins
James was a trailblazer and wonderful person. What a terrible loss.
Anshul Kundaje, Stanford University
My heart goes out to his wife, his family, his lab, and to our scientific community. He was an exceptional person in every way that matters.

2020 is now officially cancelled.

Karen Reddy, Johns Hopkins
I learned galaxy from you, sir. Your legacy will be continued. Rest in peace.
Yousef Ali, Bangladesh
He came to UIUC back on the job hunt, gave an awesome presentation. Sadly I didn't know him well but met him many times through GCC and BOSC (I hazily recall late night laughs w/ beers involved). He was nice, amazing, awesome. I am so sorry for your loss Galaxy community. This hurts
Chris Fields, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
My friend James Taylor is dead. I'm heartbroken and thinking of all of his family and friends. He is leaving a hole that cannot be filled.

I met James when I started grad school at Penn State. I had no idea what to expect (I'd only learned of PhD programs within the previous year). We were both students, but he was clearly in a league of his own.

James was one of the smartest people I've ever known, in a way that wasn't (as) intimidating. Talking with James was easy and enlightening. He advocated and put in the work for better science, in all aspects.

James supported my science and my career in ways I don't think I can ever fully communicate. As a colleague, he believed in me. As a friend, he expected me to do good. He supported my growth, selflessly.

Most of all, James was an advocate.

He advocated for his students, for trainees, for open science, for open data, for making this world a better place.

I will miss him so terribly.

Melissa A. Wilson, Arizona State University

What a beautiful tribute, Melissa. James was my colleague in the Hopkins Biology department. His loss has left us reeling.
Rejji Kuruvilla, Johns Hopkins
The first time I saw James was at ISMB 2007 in Vienna when he gave a Demonstration on Galaxy's tool integration framework - the room was packed and everyone was deadly silent whilst he live xml'ed.

We are all poorer for this today.
valé James.
Jim Proctor, University of Dundee
A great visionary and a lovely person too. We are all shocked and saddened. Such a loss to us all. Thoughts are with his family and friends.
Carole Goble, University of Manchester
James was so approachable. Though we never got the chance to collaborate directly, when I first met *the* James Taylor I remember feeling that approachability in that someone so famous in our field would always take the time out to talk to me about science or about whatever the topic of the moment was. We had many conversations - some just a glance across a busy crowd at a conference where that would be our only acknowledgement, some, hours long chats. The first memory that came to mind thinking back now was the many weeks he spent at CSHL instructing at courses in the fall. There were months when he was on campus more than I was. The particular memory that flashed when I heard this news was finishing a beer with him around 2 am in the cold outside the bar at Blackford. The bar had long closed, but we were having a crazy conversation along with one other course instructor about awful American TV shows. The conversation was of course punctuated with thoughts on comparative genomics. James was brilliant, but it wasn’t this that made him a star, helped him build a global community, or an enduring vision. He was a lovable and decent human being who will be fondly remembered. His work and the community he helped to create will live on. For every researcher who continues his legacy and works to live up to his achievements, don’t forget to bring along also his charm, curiosity, compassion, and love.
Jason Williams, CSHL
Terribly sad news. He was kind enough to let my high school daughter tour his lab and was so supportive of her interest in science. My sympathies to his family and colleagues.
Sally C. Morton, Virginia Tech
Very sad news and a great loss for the scientific community. James Taylor was a visionary leader in open science and reproducible research. My condolences to his family.
Nils Gehlenborg, Harvard University
Rest in peace. I will always remember you.
Min Hyung Cho, Johns Hopkins
I feel very lucky to have been taught computational biology by James Taylor throughout this first year at Hopkins. Wish this could have continued and will miss him greatly.
Sara Debic, Johns Hopkins
Deeply saddened by this. Such a tremendous loss for science!
Mihaela Pertea, Johns Hopkins
Completely in shock and saddened by this. He will be so missed.
Jason Stajich, UC Riverside
I was fortunate to be introduced to James via the IU/TACC Jetstream project, where he promised to consume large quantities of CPU time on behalf of the Galaxy project. His vision and his plans for achieving it were both straightforward and clear. In short: Give us a key to your system (an API key, in this case), and we will make sure it's used for good. And he delivered, spectacularly! While this straightforward approach might at first appear naive, he articulated his plans clearly and proved soundly that he could do it. He was always ready to share examples of discoveries that had been enabled by Galaxy. In later visits on other topics, I was impressed by his astute understanding of how the research community works and how to make (important, substantive) things happen. People like him are rare and special, and a joy to encounter and work with. This is a heavy loss for the research community.
Lee Liming, University of Chicago
I still remember the nice after meeting time we had with Nate in Collioure. I had nothing but the greatest respect for him and his work. Hope you rest in peace James.
Tuto
We will miss you James. Thank you for all you contributed. My sincere condolences to his family and friends. This loss is a burden that will be shared by many.
John Fonner
James was a great force for openness, community, and science. He was a truly lovely man. I first met him in Oslo in 2013 and he was immediately welcoming even though he had no idea who I was. Over the years that followed we shared beers, meals, conversations, games and laughs. The thing I'll most remember about him is the glint of pride he got in his eye whenever he saw the wonderful Galaxy community get together. He and Anton created something amazing.

My sincere condolences to James' family, his colleagues and the rest of the Galaxy world.
Simon Gladman, Australia
The bioinformatics community has produced many stars; James was a galaxy.
Andrew Stuart
Extraordinarily sad news in these already troubling times. This is an enormous loss for the field and for the community. Virtual hugs to those who need one from me. Vale James.
Ross Lazarus, Australia
As an undergrad, tinkering with pipelines and tutorials on Galaxy was how I started to learn about bioinformatics. James Taylor’s work to make these resources accessible and free changed my life.
Sam Bogan
I just do not know what to say. My thoughts go to his family, friends, and to the great Galaxy Project community to which he was a father. Sincere condolences.
Hervé Ménager, France
This is so heartbreaking. I didn't interact with James that many times IRL, but those few moments witnessed strongly about his generosity and humbleness. This puts tears to my eyes and a makes my heart heavy. Rest in peace dear fellow human!
Samuel Lampa
James was my PhD advisor. For 6 years he patiently helped me become a better scientist and supported me for years after.

James you are one of the smartest and kindest person I have ever met and I will miss you very much!
Olgert Denas, Adobe Research
What tragic news. My heart goes out to all those who loved him, his family, friends, colleagues, the Galaxy team and community.
Maria Doyle, Peter MacCallum Cancer Center
Many aspects of what we are going through right now will pass with time. James' impact on many of us personally and on how science is done will live on and I suspect grow with time.
Sean Davis
Almost every project I've worked on since entering the field of bioinformatics has referenced Galaxy Project directly or indirectly. Sad for the loss of a great scientist, but inspired by the camaraderie of the community around good science, especially given current events. RIP.
H M Dingerdissen
James has been a part of our community since 2003 and this devastating news is hitting us hard, and doesn't feel possible. His brilliance and positive energy were undeniable and affected everyone lucky to have met and work with him. We we will miss you James.
CSHL Courses
We are deeply saddened by the loss of a wonderful person that was part of our CSHL courses family for many years. Im just heartbroken with the news. We will miss you Dr. Taylor, thank you for all your kindness. It was an honor working with you.
Alicia Vanessa Franco
As I write this from Colombo, Sri Lanka, one can only think of the impact that James has had across the entire world at such a young age, and how his untimely loss has taken away so much from it. The software and community that James was a chief architect of, has positively affected hundreds of thousands of scientists around the world. The loss felt by all of us in this vibrant, welcoming world-wide community that he helped to create, cannot be captured in words. Rest in peace James, the community and impact you have created will live on in your name.
Nuwan Goonasekera, University of Melboune
This makes no sense. So incredibly sad to hear this. My heart goes out to all who knew and loved him
Scott Edmunds, GigaScience

Sarah's James-inspired shoes

James' shoes, an example

James Taylor always wore the coolest shoes. He inspired me to buy my own sparkly shoes, as he inspired me & my cohort of grad students to push our own boundaries of knowledge. He was a generous & kind collaborator. I will miss him.

Sarah Hadynick, Johns Hopkins

Damn right he did!
Martin Cech, Penn State University
His course on Galaxy is part of what inspired me to enter this field. Years later I felt honored to work with him. A great mind, gone too soon. This is devastating news... sincerest condolences to his family and colleagues.
Stephen Shank
This is devastating and shocking. What a terrible loss for the community and humanity. Deepest condolences to his loved ones.
Malachi Griffith, Washington University
what a shock. he was a great collaborator, always generous and a pleasure to work with, and he made a huge impact on the field. what a loss, I can't believe it.
Ben Berman
<expletives deleted />
Matthew Links, University of Saskatchewan
James was visionary. And he had this rare quality of making you want to follow him. It is called charisma. It really changed my priorities and I don't regret any of these changes. His disappearance is a heartbreak.
Christophe Antoniewski, ARTbio @ Sorbonne-Universite
I remember James from when we met at GCC in Portland 2018. He was thoughtful with an edge. He had a mystique to him. We shared a conversation about the craziness of skate bombing mountains in Vermont. His Coursera Galaxy courses made a big impact on my early training as the whole Galaxy project is for us; impacting. It's just so crazy to lose him so soon.
Jean-Paul Courneya, University of Maryland
What a terrible loss for the Galaxy Project and the open source/access community - it is so sad. The Best we can do is to continue working with even more dedication on all the great projects he has been part of.
Hans-Rudolf Hotz, FMI
I am shocked and heartbroken at losing a friend and mentor. James was a visionary scientist, and he exemplified the values of collaboration and community. He inspired everyone around him to be the best scientist and human being they could be. My heart breaks for his wife and family, his lab, colleagues, collaborators, trainees, and all the scientific communities touched by his passion. James - we will all miss you terribly.
Mallory Freeberg, EMBL-EBI
I am a researcher in Genetics, and took a series of Coursera Genomic Analysis courses, in which Prof. Taylor was the instructor. As a teacher I am passing on what I learned there, and by coincidence this week I am teaching an on-line version of his course for students and researchers at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, helping us to have some intellectual activity during this quarentine. Two or three days ago I was reviewing some of his lectures !!! That is a real global influencer. We are here in Rio de Janeiro in the middle of a crisis, and still we are learning from his. I thank him a lot.
Ana Coelho, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Such a huge loss. James made huge contributions to open-source, accessibility, and reproducibility. Anyone who runs a bioinformatics tool on the cloud does so thanks to James's work.
Andrew Carroll. Google
RIP to a Real One.
Ikenna Okafor, Johns Hopkins
My deepest condolences to his family and the Galaxy family. This is an incredibly loss for the bioinformatics community, we have lost an advocate for open and reproducible science.
Radhika Khetani, Harvard University
The bioinformatics open source community has lost a visionary. Condolences for the family. This is terrible news.
Sumaira Zaman, UConn
James Taylor's passing leaves a galaxy-sized void in the world of computational biology. An inspirational colleague and a brilliant, unselfishly kind mind.
Alex Bortvin, Carnegie Institution for Science
Terrible news in a world where I was starting to get immune to bad news.
Rita Strack, Nature Methods
So sad to hear this — the impact of his work and thought leadership on bringing genomics into the cloud computing age cannot be overstated. It just feels really wrong to lose such an amazing talent.
Jeffrey G Reid, Regeneron
Deeply saddened to hear about the loss of James Taylor. My clearest memory is from him offering a very friendly & encouraging comment on a simple lighting talk I gave as a young engineer at a Galaxy conference years ago. Meant lots to me and a testament to his generosity. I didn't interact with James that many times in real life, but those few moments witnessed strongly about his generosity and humbleness. This puts tears to my eyes and a makes my heart heavy. Rest in peace dear fellow human!
Samuel Lampa, Sweden
James was a wonderful mentor to me. We will all deeply miss you. Such a huge loss to the community. RIP
Sheng Chih Jin, Washington University
Had the pleasure of working with James on the AnVIL project. A great scientist and a greater human being. Condolences to his family, friends, and colleagues.
Rob Fullem
My world feels vastly diminished. James we will miss you.
Dave Clements, Johns Hopkins

The truth is, the world *is* diminished without him in it.
Karen Reddy, Johns Hopkins
We are proud to have collaborated with James for many years. Our hearts go out to the Galaxy team and his family. He will be missed. He already is.
UCSC Genome Browser Team
He made an impact on scientists (and scientists-in-training!) all over the world, and will be deeply missed.
He also had *the coolest* stickers on his laptop.
Lauren Shunkwiler, Medical University of South Carolina
Deepest condolences to friends/family. Cant even describe the scale of impact of contributions to the bioinformatics community. He will be missed greatly.
Sasikanth Manne, Unniversity of Pennsylvania
I was using Galaxy when I found out... 2020 sucks. I want a redo.
Alexis Norris, Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania
No words
Manuel Corpas, Cambridge Precision Medicine
We will miss you James. Thank you for all you contributed. My sincere condolences to his family and friends. This loss is a burden that will be shared by many.
John Fonner, TACC
I am so shocked and sad to learn that James Taylor, a pioneer in cloud and open-source genomics is dead. I feel privileged to have been one of many whose professional lives he transformed teaching the CSHL genomics course. I will miss his kindness and generosity the most.
Marcus Alexander, Yale University
The bioinformatics community has produced many stars; James Taylor was a galaxy.
Andrew Stewart, FeedMob & Johns Hopkins
I had the chance to hang out with Jamesx for the first time at a dinner after a seminar talk I gave at JHU's IDIES. I had the pleasure of hanging out with him multiple times since. He was kind, funny, brilliant & cool as f&%k; and despite it all, so down-to-earth. I will miss him.
Rob Patro, University of Maryland
We are so sorry to hear of James Taylor's death. As co-lead Galaxy, a professor of biology and computer science at Johns Hopkins and a treasured member of the international Galaxy community, his legacy will continue have profound impacts around the world
Galaxy Australia Team
Shocked to hear this. Always looked forward to a good talk with a drink whenever our paths crossed. His impact on the field is immense. My condolences to his family...
Jan Aerts, University of Hasselt
Sending a big hug to James's family and loved ones. He had such a positive impact on so many of us.
Erik Garrison, UCSC
Condolences to all touched by James. As a user of Galaxy, I hope his star shines on brightly in our community.
Bruce Nash, CSHL DNA Learning Center
Whatever bioinformatics I know today, it all started with the help of Galaxy during my PhD years. Even though I didn't know James personally, I've been following his fascinating research. A huge loss for everybody...
Rasim Barutcu, University of Toronto
Thank you James Taylor for teaching me and so many others Galaxy. Meaningful and life-saving work will come from your genomics efforts. RIP
Megan Longcor, D8A Institute
I am still shocked by this. James was such a great person and scientist. I got to know him through the course at CSHL. In addition to being passionate about science, he was just as passionate about teaching and bringing computational biology to the masses.
R. David Hawkins, University of Washington
Hard to overstate the outsized impact he had on the biological sciences. And he was a lovely person.
Jeremy Ash, North Carolina State University
he was indeed ageless, & im so sad that he is gone, I am a big fan of James & Anton & the Galaxy Project. A visionary project, democratizing open bioinformatics. The Gaalaxy community is large, and will continue and do well, but we will all miss James!
Francis Ouellette, Bioinformatics.ca
Okay google. Play James Taylor. Missing you James. (He didn’t actually like JT the singer, although I think it captures his introspective reflective personality.)
Michael Schatz, Johns Hopkins
This is so tragic, I'm so sorry to James and his family and colleagues. Working on Galaxy in the early days was one of the best things in bioinformatics. I will always cherish that.
Mary Mangan
09/06/2014 - Dr. James Taylor and I realized we had a mutual love for the Canadian show Trailer Park Boys at a happy hour post-bootcamp during my first week of grad school. His first email to me was to let me know the new season of TPB was on netflix. Will miss him greatly.
Diego Rivera Gelsinger, Johns Hopkins
I worked with James Taylor from 2000-2002 when he was in Vermont. I got him into mountain biking and he turned me on to Modest Mouse. He was a wonderful human and the smartest person I've ever known. I am not surprised at the lives he's touched.
Arkon Bey, Vermont
James Taylor was an NHGRI-funded investigator who made significant contributions to the field of genomics — having developed the Galaxy data-analysis platform, having worked as an AnVIL PI, and having participated in ENCODE. He will be missed by us at NHGRI.
National Human Genome Research Institute

James and Greg at Biohackathon 2009

So sad to learn of the passing of James Taylor. Met James long ago via the OBF/Galaxy/WormBase. A truly positive an inspiring force. Quick snap of James (with Greg von Kuster) at the 2009 Biohackathon on Okinawa.
Todd Harris, Wormbase
As someone who began their bioinformatics genomics journey by using Galaxy's ultra-friendly user interface, I am very sad to find out that one of its founders, Dr. James Taylor, died this week at just 40. Thanks for making my first assemblies so much less intimidating!
E. Sally Chang, Washington, DC
I did not know you, but your influences on me has been great. Galaxy laid the bioinformatics foundation for myself and the rest of my lab. Your contribution to science has been immense and I am sad that it has been cut short. RIP James Taylor
Christopher Ne Ville, CSUSB
I'm so sorry to hear this. James' influence and work has enabled so many people and discoveries, and will continue to do so for many years to come. We share your loss and our thoughts are with you all.
Leighton Pritchard, University of Strathclyde
I met James over five years ago though the Galaxy Community, and I believe that his personality and role as co-founder helped shape that positive and welcoming atmosphere. Looking back it is clear that he and Anton convinced funders of the importance of community building, evident in how the Galaxy Project funded and has continued to fund dedicated staff for community, outreach and training. James cared both about people and principles - he was also vocal on open science and open data, embodied in the Galaxy platform's ethos of reproducible research. Just days ago, he was tweeting complaints about how in a pandemic so much new covid19 viral sequence data was not being shared openly (as in the NCBI/INSDC), but instead under restricted terms in the GISAID database. It is clear from the posts of his students, mentees, collaborators and friends, that while he would have achieved much more, he has already built a legacy we can all be proud of.
Peter Cock, James Hutton Institute
I'm just a citizen scientist active in human genome analysis especially regarding Y-DNA J2 and ancestral and relatives haplotype clusters. I cheer and am thankful of public science services like Galaxy Project and hereby would like to send my thanks to James Taylor et al for what they provided to every interested person.
Chris R., Tyrol, Alps
I am heartbroken. When I think of James I remember him relaxing in the sun during one of the GCC hackathons. At the time I was attending as a lowly delegate from Africa, and engaging with a Galaxy project PI was quite a leap. We got talking and got to know each other over meetings and beers over the years. I cannot believe he is gone. His family and friends are left with a gaping hole in their lives. My strength to you (us) all. Sincere condolences to James' family and everyone in the Galaxy community from SANBI and myself.
Peter van Heusden, SANBI

Jeff Leek's laptop stickers: 60% James and Company

60 percent of my laptop stickers are due to @jxtx and team. Glad to be with them during this.
Jeff Leek, Johns Hopkins

Jeff, and we are really glad to have you.
Galaxy Project
I remember James as embodying an uncompromising commitment to community-driven science to the point of making it feel like a family; how do we help each other to move science forward. It was noticeable in each conversation we had and this imprint he made will always stick with me. When you stop and think about how much scientific progress was made because he had a strong hand in breaking down silos and building global bridges, that impact is both lasting and expanding.
Anushka Brownley, 10X Genomics
I never knew James personally but I just wanted to say that I saw him from afar many times during my academic career and he was always surrounded by laughing and joy. We will not soon forget the joy and spirit he left with us all.
Matt Velinder, University of Utah
James was an incredibly kind teacher and friend. You could tell he was truly passionate about teaching and building others up around him. He cared deeply for his students and was willing to invest in anyone who wanted help. It was clear he was truly passionate about making computational tools and skills accessible to as many people as possible and I suspect that this will be one of his greatest gifts to the world.

I still remember going up to James during one of his lectures and expressing that I was skeptical of many of the available bioinformatic tools. I was a bit shocked when he replied, "You should be incredibly skeptical. You should use most of them and trust none of them." I really admired this intellectual honesty, how he was able to teach and rely on many tools while still being highly objective and critical of them. That is something I will always remember about him and carry with me as a guiding principle in the years to come.

One of the privileges of being an academic is the opportunity to meet truly remarkable people, those who not only possess incredible intelligence but also incredible character. James was undoubtedly one of those individuals and his passing is a true loss.

Cole Wunderlich, CSHL
What sad news! He will be dearly missed, especially by the Galaxy community. My condolences to his family, his friends and the team.
Bérénice Batut, University of Freiburg
I am so saddened to hear this. I felt a bond with James over his commitment to reproducible science. I admired his drive and integrity. This is a great loss.
Cricket Sloan, UCSC

James at ApacheCon, with Kurt Schrader

I met James in November 2002 at an open-source software conference. He was working professionally as a software developer and was speaking of his desire to go back to school to study bioinformatics. I’ve watched his career from afar as he’s done amazing work. I know he will be missed.
Peter Royal
I am feeling a deep sadness knowing that a true scientist has passed away. I have not met Dr Taylor, but I felt him like my friend I learnt a lot from his participation in Galaxy and online courses and I am sure his legacy will never ever be forgotten. My condolences to his family and colleagues.
Adnan A. Lahuf, University of Kerbala, Iraq
I was lucky to have conversation with him a couple of times during GCC 2019, His legacy will be remembered in the complete path of the Galaxy Project.
Kiran K Telukunta, VIB
James was so helpful to various projects I've been involved in over the years. and lately he was a valuable voice of technical and educational experience in various NIH-driven projects. Beyond his obvious talent as a scientist, and a supportive colleague, he was a thoughtful and considerate person. It was always a pleasure to work with him. My thoughts go out to his family, trainees, close colleagues, and the entire community on this terrible loss.
Deanne Taylor, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
People who interacted with James in any capacity thought the world of him.
Debashis Ghosh, University of Colorado, Denver

From Björn Grüning

Community building is so hard and so important. If we are talking about sustainability, this almost ever means to maintain and grow a community. Galaxy will be soon 15 years old. You and your team did it! Thanks for everything that you have given us James. I will miss you.
Björn Grüning, University of Freiburg
The world of genomics, bioinformatics, and to a great extent, current biology has lost a pioneer. Galaxy has been there for almost a decade and a half and was so ahead of its time. Your work has advanced science significantly and will be carried on. RIP & condolences to family
Pierre Cauchy
This is truly very sad, my deepest condolences to his family, friends and to the Galaxy community. I had the chance of meeting James briefly during the last GCC, a very nice person and true advocate of open science and open source. RIP James.
Pablo Moreno, EMBL-EBI

At Hopkins

I came in today and found this in front of James’ office.
John Kim, Johns Hopkins
I met James at a Galaxy Community developers conference in the first year of my PhD and was taken aback by how friendly he and his team were and welcoming to all as equals. A great admirer and user of his work and saddened by this loss.
Craig Monger, Trinity College Dublin
Your kind words about James bring tears. Our family thanks you all.
Laurie Taylor Gates
It's been a couple weeks now, and I still feel like it is so surreal that this could have happened. I didn't know James super well but he will always be the voice I hear announcing the state of the Galaxy during the community conference. He had a hand in so many initiatives and was so central to the communities I'm a part of, I'm left wondering how the world will possibly go on without his leadership.
Carrie Ganote, Indiana University