Puneet Varma (Editor)

Alice Miles Woodruff

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Virologist

Main interests
  
Viruses

Institution
  
Vanderbilt University

Institutions
  
Vanderbilt University

Notable works
  
egg culture virology

Spouse(s)
  
Charles Eugene Woodruff (m. 1927)

Children
  
Alice, Mary Jean, Charles Eugene

Alma maters
  
Mount Holyoke College, Yale University

Alice Miles Woodruff (also known as Alice Lincoln Miles), together with Ernest William Goodpasture developed a method for growing fowlpox outside of a live chicken. Her research greatly facilitated the rapid advancement in the study of viruses.

Contents

Education and career

Alice Woodruff obtained a MS in 1924 and a PhD in 1925 from Yale University. She worked as a research assistant at Vanderbilt University from 1927 until 1931. While working with her husband and Goodpasture, she conducted studies in the "nature, infectivity, and purification of fowl-pox virus, and the character of the changes it induced on experimental infection of fowls," which became the forerunner in the cultivation of viruses.

Personal life

She married Charles Woodruff on 25 August 1927 and had three children with him: Alice, Mary Jean, and Charles Eugene.

References

Alice Miles Woodruff Wikipedia