Christine Ladd-Franklin


Quick Info

Born
1 December 1847
Windsor, Connecticut, USA
Died
5 March 1930
New York City, New York, USA

Summary
Christine Ladd-Franklin was an American psychologist, logician and mathematician who was one of the earliest women to work in American universities.

Biography

Christine Ladd-Franklin's name before she married was Christine Ladd, but she was often known as Kitty. Her parents were Eliphalet Ladd, who was a successful New York merchant, and Augusta Niles and both were originally from New England. Christine was the eldest of Eliphalet and Augusta's three children, having a younger brother Henry and a younger sister Jane.

In order to understand how Christine Ladd had the will and determination to succeed at a time when the odds were stacked heavily against women, we should look briefly at her mother Augusta's views. Augusta and her sister Juliet Niles were [4]:-
... both staunch supporters of women's rights.
In fact Augusta once wrote in a letter that [4]:-
... women belonged not only in the pulpit, a place for which they were peculiarly suited, but also every place where a man should be.
She wrote this after attending a women's rights lecture and, Christine as a young child, attended these lectures with her mother.

Until she was six years old Christine and her family lived in New York, then they moved to Windsor, Connecticut. When Christine was twelve years old, however, her mother died. At this time she was sent to live with her father's mother in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. For two years she attended Wesleyan Academy in Wilbraham, Massachusetts where she followed the same course as the boys who were being prepared to enter Harvard University. Christine's father encouraged her, writing in a letter to her [4]:-
All you want is a little more courage you can do as well as anyone I have no doubt, so do not be afraid but go ahead and do your best. And my word for it you will have as good an essay as anyone in the school.
She graduated from the College in 1865 and wanted to study at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York. This was a women's college which had been set up to allow women to obtain an education of equivalent standard to that available to men. However Ladd's family, particularly her father's mother, were opposed to this course of action, despite the encouragement that her father had shown. Ladd wrote in her diary at this time [3]:-
Vassar! Land of my longing! Mine at last... Is it really for the best? I confess I have misgivings - everyone is so opposed to it ...
Despite the opposition, Ladd won them round and entered the second year of the course at Vassar College supported financially by Juliet Niles, her mother's sister whom we mentioned above. Her father wrote encouragingly to her about her good performance [4]:-
I was pleased to see that you passed so good an examination in all your different studies and I trust you will stand No. 1 in your classes though I suppose that you will have abler contestants that at Wilbraham but then you must fight the harder.
Ladd spent one year at Vassar, then took a year out, because of financial difficulties, when she taught in Utica, New York. However it was a year in which she not only made money by teaching but also [6]:-
... practised piano, read in three or four languages, worked problems in trigonometry, and collected 150 botanical specimens.
When she returned to Vassar College after teaching for a year, she was greatly encouraged by the professor of astronomy there, Maria Mitchell, to follow her interests in mathematics and science. In fact Ladd was really interested in physics but at this time, although mathematics was possible for women, physics was not possible since they were not allowed into the laboratories. She graduated from Vassar College in 1869 with an A.B. and went into teaching.

For nine years Ladd taught in schools in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New York as an instructor of science and mathematics. She continued to take an active interest in mathematics and wrote numerous articles in that topic in the Educational Times, published in London England. She also published work in the American publication The Analyst. Teaching, however, began to displease her. She wrote in her diary [3]:-
Sunday evening is the most miserable time of all the week. The burdens of the morrow look impossible to be born. Teaching I hate with a perfect hatred...I shall not be able to endure it another year.
Johns Hopkins University opened in Baltimore, Maryland, as a graduate school for men in 1876. In 1877 Sylvester accepted the chair of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University and it was to Sylvester that Ladd turned to see if she could be admitted to study for a doctorate in mathematics. Sylvester already knew of Ladd through her mathematics articles in Educational Times, which he had read in England before coming to the United States, and so he requested that the University admit Ladd even although entry was not in general open to women. Ladd was admitted to Johns Hopkins in 1878 on the condition that she only attend lectures given by Sylvester.

Sylvester was not the only quality mathematician at Johns Hopkins. There was also William Story and the mathematical logician Charles Peirce. After one very successful year at Johns Hopkins when Ladd only attended Sylvester's lectures, the university relented and allowed her to attend lectures by others. In particular she attended those by William Story and Charles Peirce. Sylvester also persuaded the University to award her a $500 a year fellowship for the three years 1879-82, but she was not entitled to the title "Fellow" nor was her name recorded on the list of students at the university.

Charles Peirce's only academic post was the courses on logic he gave at Johns Hopkins from 1879 and 1884 and it was these courses which led Ladd to write a doctoral thesis entitled The Algebra of Logic. Now when we say "doctoral thesis" we should make it clear that as women were not officially admitted to Johns Hopkins they certainly could not graduate so, although Ladd's dissertation was published in 1883, she was not awarded a Ph.D. She had published several papers in the American Journal of Mathematics while she undertook research and few men who were receiving their Ph.D.s at this time could have equalled her achievements. One of the mathematics faculty at Johns Hopkins was Fabian Franklin who was about five years younger than Ladd. They married on 24 August 1882 and within two years two children were born, although one died while an infant the other, Margaret, survived.

Hurvich writes in [7] about how Ladd-Franklin, as she now called herself, became interested in colour vision:-
Her interest in this area began with a study (1886) of the horpoter, which is the locus of points in external space whose images are so formed on the retinas of the two eyes that they are seen singly in binocular vision.
Ladd-Franklin wrote up the results of her studies in a paper which was published in the first volume of the American Journal of Psychology in 1887. In the same year she was awarded an honorary LL.D. degree from Vassar College. Fabian Franklin took sabbatical leave in session 1891-92 and what better place was there for a mathematician to spend their sabbatical than at Göttingen in Germany. Ladd-Franklin went to Göttingen with her husband and daughter Margaret and, although Göttingen would not admit women to lectures, she was able to persuade G E Muller, a leading expert on colour vision, to let her conduct experiments in his laboratory. Muller went even further and often repeated for her lectures which he had given yet Ladd-Franklin was not permitted to attend.

Wishing to study under Hermann von Helmholtz in Berlin, she left her husband in Göttingen to care for Margaret while she spent a while in Berlin. There she was able to work in Helmholtz's laboratory and to attend lectures at the university. Ladd-Franklin developed her own theory of colour vision while working in Germany and in 1892 she visited England and presented it to an International Congress of Psychology in London.

Back in the United States, Fabian Franklin resumed his teaching at Johns Hopkins and Ladd-Franklin asked to be allowed to lecture at the University. Her request was turned down, as were several other requests she made over the following years. Beginning in 1901 she helped to administer the Sarah Berliner fellowships which were to support women who had recent been awarded a Ph.D. in their postdoctoral research. She continued to help administer these fellowships for 17 years.

Also in 1901, she became the associate editor for logic and philosophy in Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology, a position she held until 1905. The year before this Johns Hopkins relented and allowed her to teach one course in logic and philosophy. This arrangement was continued on a yearly basis over the following years until 1909. Fabian Franklin had decided to end his mathematical career in 1905 and take up journalism. When he obtained the post of associate editor of the New York Evening Post in 1910 Ladd-Franklin went to New York with her husband.

She was never able to obtain a proper academic post, for these were certainly closed to married ladies, but she was able to continue to teach part-time. This she did at Columbia University from 1912-1913, then at Clark University and Harvard University in 1913, finally teaching at the University of Chicago in 1914. She seldom received payment for giving courses at these universities.

Typical of her attempts to attend meetings of experimental psychologists were letters she wrote in 1912 [3]:-
I am particularly anxious to bring my views up, once in a while, for hand-to-hand discussion before experts, and just now I have especially a paper which I should like very much to read before your meeting of experimental psychologists. I hope you will not say nay!
The experimental psychologists did say nay and Ladd-Franklin wrote again [3]:-
... a scientific meeting is a public affair, and it is not open to you to leave out a class of fellow workers without extreme discourtesy.
She was never admitted to these meetings, but times were slowly changing and, in 1926, Johns Hopkins University awarded Ladd-Franklin a Ph.D. for the dissertation she had completed in 1882. In 1929 she published a major work on colour vision Colour and Colour Theories. This collected together the research she had undertaken on the subject over many years.


References (show)

  1. Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/biography/Christine-Ladd-Franklin
  2. M W Rossiter, Women Scientists in America, Struggles and Strategies to 1940 (Baltimore-London, 1982).
  3. E Scarborough and L Furumoto, Untold Lives : The first generation of American women psychologists (New York, 1987)
  4. L Furumoto, Joining Separate Spheres : Christine Ladd-Franklin, woman scientist (1847-1930), American Psychologist (February 1992).
  5. L Furumoto, Christine Ladd-Franklin's color theory : Strategy for claiming scientific authority?, in H E Adler and R W Rieber, (eds.), Aspects of the history of psychology in America : 1892-1992 (New York, 1994), 91-100.
  6. J Green, Christine Ladd-Franklin (1847-1930), in L S Grinstein and P J Campbell (eds.), Women of Mathematics (Westport, Conn., 1987).
  7. D J Hurvich, Christine Ladd-Franklin, in E T James, J W James and P S Boyer, Notable American women 3 (Cambridge, Mass., 1971), 354-356.
  8. D Malone (ed.), Dictionary of American Biography (New York, 1933), 528-530.
  9. S M Moite, Christine Ladd-Franklin, in R Young (ed.), Notable Mathematicians From Ancient Times to the Present (1998), 295-297.
  10. Obituary : Christine Ladd-Franklin, New York Times (6 March 1930).
  11. M B Ogilvie, Christine Ladd-Franklin, in Women in science (Cambridge, Mass., 1986), 116-117.
  12. E Shen, The Ladd-Franklin formula in logic : the antilogism, Mind 37 (1927), 54-60.
  13. L Zusne (ed), Biographical Cyclopedia of American Women 3 (New York, 1928), 135-141.

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Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update April 2002