Edna Hague Fawcett

American botanist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican botanist
PlacesUnited States of America
wasScientist Botanist Pathologist Phytopathologist Science writer
Work fieldBiology Literature Science
Gender
Female
Birth1879, Washington, D.C., District of Columbia, USA
Death10 January 1960Washington, D.C., District of Columbia, USA (aged 81 years)
Education
Smith College
Barnard College
The details

Biography

Edna Hague Fawcett (1879 – 1960) was an American botanist and specialist on plant health problems.

Life and career

Fawcett earned a bachelor's degree from Smith College in 1901. Around this same time, Fawcett held a temporary position as an assistant at a public school in Springfield, Massachusetts. She continued her studies at Barnard College before taking a position at the New York Botanical Garden. She joined the research staff of the Bureau of Plant Industry at the United States Department of Agriculture in 1906. Working her way up from a technician position, Fawcett eventually became an assistant pathologist in 1930.

Among her most notable written studies are Stabilization of Boric Acid Buffers By Aeration and The Problem of Dilution in Colorimetric H-Ion Measurements, which were both written in conjunction with S. F. Acree.

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