WoW Blog (Woman of the Week) Blog

WoW Blog (Woman of the Week)

Each week this blog will feature a prominent woman who made significant contributions to engineering or science. If you have any women you'd like us to feature please let us know and we'll do our best to include them.

Do you know of a great woman in engineering that should be recognized? Let us know! Submit a few paragraphs about that person and we'll add her to the blog. Please provide a citation for the material that you submit so that we can verify it. Please note - it has to be original material. We cannot publish copywritten material or bulk text taken from books or other sites (including Wikipedia).

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Woman of the Week – Mary Engle Pennington (October 8th, 1872 to December 27th, 1952)

Posted May 23, 2008 12:00 AM by Sharkles

Mary Engle Pennington was born in Nashville, Tennessee to Henry and Sarah B. Pennington on October 8th, 1872. A few years after she was born, her family moved to Philadelphia to be closer to her Mother's relatives. Henry Pennington established a successful business in label manufacturing, and the family lived in a three story red brick house near the University of Pennsylvania. Mary enjoyed gardening, a hobby of her fathers, and reading. When Mary was 12 years old she came across a book on medical chemistry and was intrigued, but when she tried to pursue this interest at the boarding school she attended, she was told that such a subject was inappropriate for a woman.

After graduating from the boarding school at 18, Mary Pennington was still interested in Chemistry and was accepted to the Towne Scientific School at the University of Pennsylvania. Mary studied Chemistry and Biology, and completed the requirements necessary for a bachelor's degree within two years. However, the board of trustees disapproved of a woman's presence at the university and refused to grant a diploma. Instead, Mary received a certificate of proficiency in biology.

Mary was unable to apply for graduate studies because she did not hold a bachelor's degree; however, the faculty managed to use a little known University of Pennsylvania statute to allow her to become a doctoral student in the Electrochemical School. Mary Pennington was awarded her Ph.D. in 1895, and stayed on two more years to study chemical botany before accepting a one-year fellowship at Yale University to study physiological chemistry. In 1898 she accepted a position as director of the Clinical Laboratory at the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, while also working as a bacteriologist for the Philadelphia Bureau of Health. During this time, Mary Pennington developed procedures for farmers for the handling and storage of milk.

In 1905, Mary Pennington started working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) as a bacteriological chemist, and in 1907 she joined the staff after passing a civil service exam. In 1908 she was named director of the Food Research Laboratory, a new division of the Bureau of Chemistry created by the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act. As director, she developed a thorough procedure for slaughtering, packaging, shipping, and delivering poultry, eggs, and other perishable foods.

In 1919, Pennington was hired as director of America Balsa, a refrigerator company. Considered an expert in the field of perishable food, she started a consulting firm in 1922 which she ran till she retired in 1952. Mary Pennington made numerous contributions to the designs and advancements in home and commercial refrigeration units as well as the best way to freeze foods.

Mary Pennington received the Notable Service Medal in 1919, and in 1940 she received the Garvan Medal. In 2002, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.

Mary Pennington died December 27th, 1952 in New York.

References
http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCEWWW/Features/eChemists/Bios/pennington.html

http://www.answers.com/topic/mary-engle-pennington

http://www.madehow.com/inventorbios/85/Mary-Engle-Pennington.html

http://www.bookrags.com/biography/mary-engle-pennington-woc/

http://www.csupomona.edu/~plin/inventors/pennington.html

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