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Rosalind Franklin
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Family :<3:
did not marry or have children; she conceived of her choice to go into science as giving up marriage and children
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Awards after death :
Died: 16.4.1958
1982, Iota Sigma Pi designated Franklin a National Honorary Member
1984, St Paul's Girls School established the Rosalind Franklin Technology Centre
1993, King's College London renamed the Orchard Residence at its Hampstead Campus as Rosalind Franklin Hall
1997, Birkbeck, University of London School of Crystallography opened the Rosalind Franklin Laboratory
1995, Newnham College, Cambridge opened a graduate residence named Rosalind Franklin Building and put a bust of her in its garden
1997, Birkbeck, University of London School of Crystallography opened the Rosalind Franklin Laboratory
1998, National Portrait Gallery in London added Rosalind Franklin's portrait next to those of Francis Crick, James Watson and Maurice Wilkins
2000, King's College London opened the Franklin–Wilkins Building in honour of Franklin's and Wilkins's work at the college
2001, the American National Cancer Institute established the Rosalind E. Franklin Award for women in cancer research
2002, the University of Groningen, supported by the European Union, launched the Rosalind Franklin Fellowship to encourage women researchers to become full university professors
2004, the Advanced Photon Source (APS) and the APS Users Organization (APSUO) started the APSUO Rosalind Franklin Young Investigator Award for young scientists who made contributions through the APS.
2006, the Rosalind Franklin Society was established in New York by Mary Ann Liebert
2008, Columbia University awarded an honorary Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize to Franklin, "for her seminal contributions to the discovery of the structure of DNA
Awards :red_flag:
Did not recieve any awards in life time: the only one she received were in the form of research fellowships, grants, honors for academic achievement.
Rosalind should recieve the noble price because of its dicovery, but until the 1970s it was only possible to give to the ones who had died just few months before, but Rosalind Franklin died four years before
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Life :checkered_flag:
Born: 25 July 1920
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Early life :silhouette:
joined the physical chemistry laboratory of the University of Cambridge to work under Ronald George Wreyford Norrish
1938: went to Newnham College, Cambridge
at age 11 she went to Paul's Girls' School in Hammersmith, one of the few girls' schools in London that taught physics and chemistry
at age 9 she entered Lindores School for Young Ladies in Sussex, which is a boarding school
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joined Norland Place School, a private day school in West London
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Was the second child, the eldest daughter
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By concluding that substances were expelled in order of molecular size as temperature increased, she helped classify coals and accurately predict their performance for fuel purposes and for production of wartime devices such as gas masks
in1945 Franklin's PhD thesis “The physical chemistry of solid organic colloids with special reference to coal” for which the University of Cambridge awarded her a PhD
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Religion :fire:
culturally Jewish, but was not religious,
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