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).

Previous in Blog: The "Title Nine-ing" of Science   Next in Blog: RIP Harriet Burns, Imagineer and Disney Legend
Close
Close
Close
Rate Comments: Nested

July 25: Four Women Who Made a Difference

Posted July 25, 2008 10:47 AM by julie

In science and technology, spheres of society where women are woefully underrepresented, this day in history offers a bountiful exception. Here are the milestones:

In 1865, "James Barry," the first woman physician in modern times, compelled to disguise herself as a man in order to practice her profession, dies.

In 1920, Rosalind Franklin, the unheralded co-discoverer of DNA, is born.

In 1978, Louise Joy Brown, the world's first test-tube baby, is born.

In 1984, cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya becomes the first woman to walk in space.

Click to read the full feature in Wired Magazine.

Reply

Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.
Guru
United States - Member - New Member Technical Fields - Technical Writing - New Member Popular Science - Weaponology - Organizer Hobbies - Target Shooting - New Member Engineering Fields - Nuclear Engineering - New Member

Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 2969
Good Answers: 33
#1

Re: July 25: Four Women Who Made a Difference

07/28/2008 11:55 AM

Rosalind Franklin deserved a Nobel Prize, but did not receive one since they aren't awarded posthumously!

Reply
Reply to Blog Entry

Previous in Blog: The "Title Nine-ing" of Science   Next in Blog: RIP Harriet Burns, Imagineer and Disney Legend

Advertisement