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Suzan Rose Benedict : ウィキペディア英語版 | Suzan Rose Benedict
Suzan Rose Benedict (November 29, 1873 – April 8, 1942) was the first woman awarded a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan and had a long teaching career at Smith College.〔Judy Green and Jeanne LaDuke, ''Pioneering Women in American Mathematics: the pre-1940 PhD’s''(American Mathematical Society, 2009), p. 10〕 == Early life and Education ==
Suzan Benedict was born in Norwalk, Ohio, the youngest of seven children of David DeForrest Benedict, MD and Harriott Melvina Benedict (née Deaver). Dr. Benedict had been a Union Surgeon in the American Civil War.〔Judy Green and Jeanne LaDuke, ''Pioneering Women in American Mathematics: the pre-1940 PhD’s''(American Mathematical Society, 2009), p. 141〕 She was a niece of oil magnate and philanthropist, Louis Severance.〔"Mother was Former Norwalk Resident", ''Sandusky Daily Register'', January 19, 1936, p. 9, C-2〕 After graduating high school in Norwalk, Suzan Benedict entered Smith College in 1891. She graduated in 1895 with a major in Chemistry and minors in mathematics, German, and physics, then returned to Norwalk and taught mathematics until 1905, when she began graduate studies at Teacher’s College, Columbia University. She received a M.A. in Mathematics from Columbia in 1906. That same year she joined the Mathematics Department at Smith College as an assistant in mathematics and rose to become an instructor the following year. The summers of 1911 through 1913 she resumed her graduate studies at the University of Michigan and in 1913–14 she took a leave of absence from Smith to finish her dissertation directed by Louis Charles Karpinski: “A Comparative Study of the Early Treatises Introducing into Europe the Hindu Art of Reckoning.” She received her PhD in 1914.
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