Places
Many prominent early women biochemists educated from the 1880s originated from a few girls’ schools, notably 1. King Edward VI High School for Girls in Birmingham
A high number then passed to undergraduate studies at Newnham College, Cambridge, including the 2. Balfour Laboratory , where historians have perceived the emergence of a subculture of womens’ science after 1884
Women and men occupied a more shared space in 3. the Dunn Institute’s laboratories at Cambridge, which opened forty years later in 1924
4. The Lister Institute in London hired its first woman biochemist (Harriette Chick) in 1905 and the presence of women in its laboratories prompted comment in the medical press
By the 1930s, however, women accounted a full 40 per cent of 5. the Lister Institute’s staff, as a notably mixed place for the practice of biochemistry
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