Women scientists
Found in 11 Collections and/or Records:
Records of the Bureau of Vocational Information, 1908-1932
Correspondence, questionnaires, printed material, etc., of the Intercollegiate Bureau of Occupations and its predecessor Bureau of Vocational Information.
Papers of Margaret Harwood, 1902-1974
Correspondence, family papers, photographs, etc., of Margaret Harwood, astronomer.
Papers of Elizabeth Weichel Moore, 1929-2007
Illustrated autobiography, etc., of Elizabeth Weichel Moore, Radcliffe Class of 1946.
Notable American women, the modern period, records, 1975-1980
Correspondence, drafts research notes, etc., documenting the preparation of volume four of Notable American Women, The Modern Period, a biographical dictionary of American women.
Additional papers of Helen Brewster Owens, 1882-1958
Correspondence and memoir re: suffrage campaign in Kansas, writings re: women in science and mathematics by suffragist and mathematician Helen Brewster Owens and others.
Papers of Helen Brewster Owens, 1867-1968
Correspondence, scrapbooks, speeches, etc., of Helen Brewster Owens, mathematician and suffragist.
Papers of Irene K. Fischer, 1942-1991
Papers of Irene K. Fischer, mathematician and geodesist, includes typed memoir entitled Geodesy? What's That? My Personal Involvement in the Age-old Quest for the Size and Shape of the Earth; also photographs, diaries, correspondence, awards, notes for speeches, reprints, etc.
Records of the Radcliffe "Women in Science" Exhibit, 1935-1940
Correspondence, financial records, clippings, etc., of Radcliffe "Women in Science" Exhibit, which was held July-September 1936, in connection with Harvard’s Tercentenary.
Papers of Freda Friedman Salzman, 1927-1981
Correspondence, memoranda, notebooks, etc., of Freda Friedman Salzman, physicist.
Records of the Senior Faculty Caucus for Gender Equality, 2004-2008
The records of the Senior Faculty Caucus for Gender Equality consists of correspondence, clippings, and printed minutes of Harvard Faculty of Arts & Sciences meetings documenting controversy arising from comments made by Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers on the subject of women's ability to excel in science.
Women of Harvard, 1636-1986, exhibit files, 1986
Research material and publicity for the exhibition, "Women of Harvard, 1636-1986."