1Preliminary RemarkFort he purpose of this essay, structural chemistryi sc onsidered to comprise the experimentald etermination and geometrical description of the atomic architecture of matter;t he systematization of information thus gained; the theoretical underpinning of geometry in terms of the electronic structure of molecules and crystals;a nd, last but not least, its analytical potential in synthetic chemistry.Assuming that the history of structural chemistrys tarted about 140 years ago with the discoveries of the tetrahedral carbon atom by vantHoff and Le Bel in 1874, this author has witnessed am ere 50 years of this history. In 1966, he joined the research group of Jack Dunitz where he started working on aP h.D.t hesis in structural chemistry using the tools of single-crystal X-ray crystal-structure determination. During his 50 years in the field, he moved from (mostly)m oleculars tructural chemistry towards some of its neglected fields:a tomic and molecular motion in crystals and the determination and description of disordered crystal structures from interpretations of the omnipresent, if mostly weak,s ingle-crystal diffuse scattering between Bragg reflections. This essay reflects personal experience and opinion based on the belief that all chemistry is to somee xtent structural chemistry.T he viewse xpressed herein and the choice of literature references are biased accordingly.