It’s the second Tuesday in
October, so it must be Ada Lovelace Day, when we honor women who’ve made major
contributions to the advancement of society via one of the STEM (science,
technology, engineering and mathematics) disciplines.
In
the past I’ve brought to your attention the mother of modern computers, Grace
Hopper (whose Celebration is taking place in Houston this week);
Nobel Laureate (in Physiology/Medicine) Rosalyn
Sussman; Hedy
Lamarr (if you’re reading this on a mobile device, you can thank her
for developing the frequency hopping system on which mobile communications are
based); and two engineers who contributed to the Allied victory in World War
II: Joan
Struthers Curran, whose work on little aluminum bits called “chaff” helped to
foil Nazi radar and divert attention from the D-Day landings; and Beatrice
Shilling, who solved the problem of British fighter planes cutting
out mid-dogfight due to carburetors that weren’t designed to support the kinds
of maneuvers necessary to take on the Luftwaffe.
Last
year I wrote about a woman who went through two careers—one military and one in
private practice—as an occupational therapist, during which she designed and
patented various devices to help patients achieve and maintain balance.
Eventually, after retiring twice, and in her 90s, Barbara
Beskind got to achieve her longstanding dream of being an inventor when she
joined Silicon Valley design giant IDEO.
Today,
though, we’ll go back to academia and to bench research, and talk about Marie
M. Daly, the first African American woman to be granted a Ph.D. in chemistry.
If you are concerned about your cholesterol, happy about your cholesterol or
know anything at all about your cholesterol, it’s largely because of the work
that Daly did.
Born
in Queens in 1921, Daly was encouraged to follow her interest in science by her
family and her teachers at Hunter College High School (which was all-female, a
fact that I cannot believe is insignificant). She pursued studies at Queens
College, living at home to keep expenses down, and graduating magna cum laude
in 1942 with a degree in chemistry.
She
followed with a master’s in a year from New York University, while working
part-time as a lab assistant at Queens College (who thought enough of her
potential to fund her studies at NYU). Following a year tutoring chemistry
students she enrolled in the doctoral program at Columbia University, working
under another woman pioneer, Mary L. Caldwell, whose focus was on the digestive
enzyme amylase. She was awarded her Ph.D in 1947.
Daly
taught for two years at the historically black Howard University in Washington,
D.C., then received a grant from the American Cancer Society to support a
postdoc at the Rockefeller institute in New York. There she worked on understanding
the metabolism of components of the cell nucleus. Her career included teaching
at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, and at the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Daly
was also an investigator for the American Heart Association, researching how
hypertension affects the circulatory system. She was also a fellow of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science.
In
addition to her research and teaching, Daly set up programs and scholarships to
increase diversity in the ranks of chemists. Her real passion was expanding
knowledge, whether it was as a bench researcher, a teacher or an encourager.
It’s
hard to know what kinds of hurdles she faced as a black woman in science in
academia. Bias against women and minorities is still rife at all levels of STEM
(and elsewhere); rather ironically, this is well-documented in scientific study
after scientific study. But she never wavered, not from her first discovery as
a child of Paul De Kruff’s book, The
Microbe Hunters. She knew at an early age what she wanted to do, and she
did it.
All
this is an extraordinary tale. But the thing that drew me to Daly’s story is
this quote, which is applicable to everyone: “Courage is like—it’s a habitus, a
habit, a virtue: you get it by courageous acts. It’s like you learn to swim by
swimming. You learn courage by couraging.”
Well,
yes you do.
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