Mary Chilton Noyes
Mary Chilton Noyes (January 13, 1855 – September 13, 1936) was a
Mary Chilton Noyes | |
---|---|
Born | January 13, 1855 |
Died | PhD 1895 | September 13, 1936
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Lake Erie College Minneapolis Academy |
Thesis | The Influence of Heat and the Electric Current upon Young's Modulus for a Plano Wire (1895) |
Career
Mary Chilton Noyes was born on January 13, 1855. She attended the University of Iowa, earning a Ph.B. in 1881 and an A.M. in 1884. Noyes subsequently attended Cornell University, where she earned an M.S. in 1894.[1]
Noyes then earned a PhD in 1895 at
Noyes's doctoral degree was also one of the first awarded in physics to a woman by a United States institution. She was awarded her degree the same year as Caroline Willard Baldwin, who earned her degree in 1895 from Cornell University.[7] That same year another American woman, Margaret Eliza Maltby, also earned her doctorate, but from the University of Göttingen.[8] This achievement was quickly followed by Isabelle Stone, who earned a PhD in physics from the University of Chicago in 1897.[9]
Noyes spent most of her career at Lake Erie College, where she worked from 1886 to 1900 and taught mathematics, physics, and astronomy. From 1900 until her retirement she worked at the Minneapolis Academy, again teaching mathematics, physics, and astronomy. She retired to Pasadena, California, and died in 1936.[1]
Notes
- ^ ISBN 9781135963439.
- ^ thedaily (2012-05-18). "A look at the history of women graduates at Case Western Reserve". The Daily. Retrieved 2023-12-14.
- ^ "Varia Historia 1897 | Kelvin Smith Library". digital.case.edu. Retrieved 2024-03-20.
- ^ "CWRU's First Women". case.edu. Retrieved 2023-12-14.
- .
- ISBN 978-1-56396-282-0.
- ISBN 978-0-8108-3287-9.
- ISBN 9780521821971.
- ISSN 0001-026X.