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Margaret Clay Ferguson

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Institutions
  
Wellesley College

Institution
  
Wellesley College

Fields
  
Botany

Died
  
1951

Name
  
Margaret Ferguson


Margaret Clay Ferguson

Born
  
29 August 1863 Orleans, New York, United States of America (
1863-08-29
)

Known for
  
First woman president of the Botanical Society of America

Notable awards
  
Honorary doctorate from Mount Holyoke

Margaret Clay Ferguson was an American botanist best known for advancing scientific education in the field of botany. She also contributed on the life histories of North American pines.

Margaret Clay Ferguson Margaret Clay Ferguson Wikipedia

She was born in Orleans, New York in 1863 and attended the Genesee Wesleyan Seminary in Lima, New York. Ferguson attended the Wellesley College, where she graduated in botany and chemistry in 1891, receiving her PhD in botany from Cornell University in 1901.

Margaret Clay Ferguson Margaret Clay Ferguson US botanist Stock Image C0359056

She was the first female President of the Botanical Society of America in 1929.

Career

She became professor of botany and head of the department at Wellesley College in 1930.

Ferguson worked on a variety of systems including Fungi, Pine and Petunia. Her study on the latter revealed how plant flower color and pattern do not follow Mendelian laws of inheritance. Ferguson encouraged many women botanists during her time at Wellesley College where lab work was a major of her teaching.

In 1932, Ferguson retired from Wellesley College, though she continued researching until 1938. She received an Honorary doctorate from Mount Holyoke.

In her later years, she spent time in Florida before moving to San Diego where died of a heart attack in 1951.

Greenhouses in the Wellesley College Botanic Gardens are named in her honor.

References

Margaret Clay Ferguson Wikipedia