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Willey Glover Denis

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Nationality
  
United States

Name
  
Willey Denis

Fields
  

Willey Glover Denis

Institutions
  
U.S. Department of AgricultureUniversity of ChicagoHarvard Medical SchoolMassachusetts General HospitalTulane University Medical School

Alma mater
  
University of ChicagoH. Sophie Newcomb CollegeBryn Mawr College

Died
  
January 9, 1929, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States

Education
  

Willey Glover Denis (February 26, 1879 – January 9, 1929) was an American biochemist and physiologist. She was noted particularly for her collaborations with Otto Folin, including studies of protein metabolism. She was a pioneer in the field of clinical chemistry and the measurement of protein in biological fluids (blood, urine and cerebrospinal fluid. She also developed the first reliable method of assaying lead in body tissue and waste.

Willey Glover Denis Willey Glover Denis 18791929 Subject Denis Willey Glo Flickr

Biography

Denis earned her A.B. in 1899, majoring in modern languages at Tulane's H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College. She attended Bryn Mawr College for two years, then returned to Tulane, where she was awarded an MA degree. In 1905 she moved to the University of Chicago, pursuing a doctorate in organic chemistry. Her dissertation involved studies of the oxidation of aldehydes, ketones and alcohols.

Dennis then taught at Grinnell College for a year, moving to the U.S. Department of Agriculture where she worked until 1909. After attempts to attend medical school that ended due to harassment, she moved to Harvard Medical School to become a research assistant for Otto Folin; she worked part-time with Folin for about a decade.

In 1920, Denis was appointed to the faculty of Tulane Medical School, the first appointment of a woman to a major U.S. medical school. She eventually headed the newly developed department of biological chemistry there. She was also the first woman to be elected a member of the Massachusetts General Hospital staff.

Denis died on January 9, 1929, aged 49, from complications from metastatic breast cancer.

References

Willey Glover Denis Wikipedia


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