kids encyclopedia robot

Timeline of women in science in the United States facts for kids

Kids Encyclopedia Facts

This is a timeline of women in science in the United States.

19th Century

20th Century

  • 1901: Florence Bascom became the first female geologist to present a paper before the Geological Survey of Washington.
  • 1903: Marie Curie became the first woman to win the Nobel Prize, awarded in Physics, and went on to also win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. She performed pioneering research in radioactivity, and discovered two elements (polonium and radium).
  • 1912: Henrietta Swan Leavitt studied the bright-dim cycle periods of Cepheid stars, then found a way to calculate the distance from such stars to Earth.
  • 1924: Florence Bascom became the first woman elected to the Council of the Geological Society of America.
  • 1925: Florence Sabin became the first woman elected to the National Academy of Sciences.
  • 1928: Alice Evans became the first woman elected president of the Society of American Bacteriologists.
  • 1936: Edith Patch became the first female president of the Entomological Society of America.

1940s

1950s

  • 1950: Isabella Abbott became the first Native Hawaiian woman to receive a PhD in any science; hers was in botany.
  • 1950: Esther Lederberg was the first to isolate lambda bacteriophage, a DNA virus, from Escherichia coli K-12.
  • 1952: Grace Hopper completed what is considered to be the first compiler, a program that allows a computer user to use English-like words instead of numbers. It was known as the A-0 compiler.
  • 1956: The Wu experiment was a nuclear physics experiment conducted in 1956 by the physicist Chien-Shiung Wu, born in China but having become an American citizen in 1954, in collaboration with the Low Temperature Group of the US National Bureau of Standards. That experiment showed that parity could be violated in weak interaction.

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

  • 1990: Antonia Novello became the first woman, first person of color, and first Hispanic to serve as Surgeon General of the United States.
  • 1991: Doris Malkin Curtis became the first woman president of the Geological Society of America.
  • 1992: Edith M. Flanigen became the first woman awarded the Perkin Medal (widely considered the highest honor in American industrial chemistry) for her outstanding achievements in applied chemistry. The medal especially recognized her syntheses of aluminophosphate and silicoaluminophosphate molecular sieves as new classes of materials.
  • 1992: Mae Jemison becomes the first Black woman to travel into space when she served as a mission specialist aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour.
  • 1993: Ellen Ochoa became the first Hispanic woman to go to space when she served aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery.
  • 1998: Nurse Fannie Gaston-Johansson became the first African-American woman tenured full professor at Johns Hopkins University.
  • 1998: Rita R. Colwell became the first female director of the National Science Foundation.

21st Century

2000s

2010s

2020s

  • 2020: Kathryn D. Sullivan, the first American woman to walk in space, descended 35,810 feet to the Challenger Deep, making her the first person to both walk in space and to reach the deepest known point in the ocean.
kids search engine
Timeline of women in science in the United States Facts for Kids. Kiddle Encyclopedia.