Frjeda Blanchard
Frjeda Blanchard | |
|---|---|
| وُلِدَ | Frjeda Cobb فبراير 10, 1889 Sydney, Australia |
| توفي | أغسطس 29, 1977 (aged 88) |
| المدرسة الأم | Radcliffe College University of Illinois (BA) University of Michigan (PhD) |
| الزوج | Frank N. Blanchard |
| الوالد(ان) |
|
| السيرة العلمية | |
| المجالات | Genetics |
| الهيئات | University of Michigan |
Frjeda Blanchard, née Cobb (October 2, 1889 – August 29, 1977), was an American plant and animal geneticist, the first to demonstrate Mendelian inheritance in reptiles.
Life and work
Frjeda Blanchard was born on October 2, 1889, in Sydney, Australia, daughter of the plant pathologist and nematologist, Nathan Cobb. Her family returned to the United States in 1905, first living in Hawaii and then settling in Washington, D.C. Cobb's family helped him in his work and Frjeda aided her father in his laboratory. She went to Radcliffe College for three years before returning home to assist her father in his home laboratory and graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign with a B.S. degree in 1916. After helping her father with his nematode research later that year, Blanchard was offered a position with the University of Michigan's Matthaei Botanical Gardens by its director, Harley Harris Bartlett. She became assistant director three years later and received her Ph.D from the university in 1920, after researching Mendelian inheritance in strains of Oenothera (evening primrose).[1] She married Frank N. Blanchard, a zoologist at the university, in 1922 and they had three children together.
Frieda won the Jeanne Cady Solis award in 1922 and again in 1926.[2]
The couple collaborated researching garter snakes, Frank focused on life history, while Frjeda concentrated on genetics, being the first scientist to document Mendelian inheritance in reptiles. Frank died in 1937 but Frieda continued their research and raising their children.[3] She died on August 29, 1977, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.[4]
She is in the Blanchard family papers held at the Bentley Historical Archive at the University of Michigan.[5]
Journal articles
- Frank N. Blanchard, M. Ruth Gilreath and Frieda Cobb Blanchard. The Eastern Ring-Neck Snake (Diadophis punctatus edwardsii) in Northern Michigan (Reptilia, Serpentes, Colubridae). Journal of Herpetology, Volume 13, Number 4 (November 15, 1979), pp. 377–402. DOI: 10.2307/1563473
Notes
- ^ Cobb, Frieda (1920). "A case of Mendelian inheritance complicated by heterogametism and mutation in Oenothera Pratincola". Genetics. The University of Michigan. 6 (1): 1–42. doi:10.1093/genetics/6.1.1. PMC 1200496. PMID 17245954.
- ^ Akiyoshi, K; Christy, A (يناير 2026). "Jeanne Cady Solis: an early woman academic neurologist and an avid mentor of women". Journal of Neurology (1). doi:10.1007/s00415-025-13533-y.
- ^ "Outstanding in the Field: The Rich Legacy of UM Women in Botany". MATTHAEI BOTANICAL GARDENS AND NICHOLS ARBORETUM. Retrieved يناير 21, 2026.
- ^ Ogilvie & Harvey, pp. 288–89
- ^ "Blanchard Family Papers". Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved نوفمبر 26, 2017.
References
- Ogilvie, Marilyn & Harvey, Joy, eds. (2000). The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: Pioneering Lives From Ancient Times to the mid-20th Century. Vol. 1: A-K. New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-92039-6.
External links
- Frieda Cobb (Blanchard) (1889-1977) (in إسپانية)
- Short description with empty Wikidata description
- Use mdy dates from March 2018
- Articles with إسپانية-language sources (es)
- 1889 births
- 1977 deaths
- University of Michigan alumni
- Radcliffe College alumni
- University of Michigan faculty
- 20th-century American women biologists
- American geneticists
- American women geneticists
- Biologists from Sydney
- University of Illinois College of Liberal Arts and Sciences alumni