Clare de Brereton EvansClare de Brereton Evans (C. de B. Evans, 1866–1935) was a scientist and academic who became the first woman to be awarded a doctorate in Chemistry (DSc).[1][2] She was a pioneer translator of Meister Eckhart's German works.[3][4] Education and careerShe was educated at Cheltenham Ladies College and obtained a BSc (London) in 1889 while studying there. Following graduation, she undertook research at the Central Technical College where, in 1897, she became the first woman to be granted a DSc degree for her work on aromatic amines.[5] In 1898 she became a lecturer at London School of Medicine for Women and also undertook research at UCL, where she published a number of papers, one of which describes her attempts to separate an unidentified element from iron residues.[6] The Letter of 19In 1904, she was one of nineteen signatories to a petition to the Chemical Society calling for the admission of women as Fellows. References
Information related to Clare de Brereton Evans |