Engineering Education Blog: First Woman Elected to National Academy of Science

by Arianne Agogino Gieringer · April 25th, 2008 · Add a Comment

photo of Dr. Sabin
Photo of Dr. Flrence Rena Sabin Smith College Seal
Signature of Florence Sabin
 

Today in History - April 25, 1925 - Florence Rena Sabin is the first woman elected to National Academy of Science. Dr. Florence Rena Sabin, Professor of Histology in the Johns Hopkins Medical School was also the first woman to be a full professor in that institution and also the first woman to be President of the American Association of Anatomists. She became a leader for her research in embryology and histolology (the study of tissues). The National Academy of Science tribute to Dr. Sabin recongizes that: By her example she did more than any other person to open the careers of scientific investigation in laboratories, medical schools, and hospitals to women.

I was interested in Dr. Rena Sabin as she started her academic career at Smith College, where I am now a first year student. After graduation in order to earn money for medical school, Dr. Sabin taught mathematics in Denver for two years. After that she served as an assistant in the Zoology Department at Smith College from 1895 to 1896.

Even in her retirement Dr. Florence Rena Sabin was a pioneer as a public health activist in Colorado and in 1951 received a Lasker Award for this work. It was during this period that she is known for one of her more famous quotes: The prohibition law, written for weaklings and derelicts, has divided the nation, like Gaul, into three parts — wets, drys, and hypocrites.

Logo for NIH's website on Changing the Face of Medicine   cover to Beyond Bias and Barriers Report

Check out the Engineering Pathway’s many educational resources on women in medicine, women in science, women in engineering, women inventors and gender equity.

For a more indepth analysis of the issues associated with gender equity in our faculties and recommended solutions, read the Engineering Pathway’s “most commented” resource - the National Academies’ Beyond Bias and Barriers report. My mother’s editorial on the report was published in ASEE Prism, November 2006, vol. 16 (3).

Also on this date in history in 1953, the DNA double helix was published in Nature by James Watson and Francis Crick and the integrated circuit was first patented by Robert Noyce in 1961.

Tags: BioEngineering and Biomedical Engineering · General Engineering, Engineering Science · Gender Equity

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