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Exeter native Canada's own Marie Curie
Sy Craig Bradford
TIMES -ADVOCATE STAFF
EXETER — A woman born in Exeter is a forgot-
ten pioneer in physics and nuclear science.
Harriet Brooks is considered Canada's first
woman nuclear physicist and is the first person to
realize one element can change into another. She
was also among the early discovers of radon and
the first researcher to attempt to determine its
atomic mass.
Brooks was born in Exeter on July 2, 1876 and
went to school at Seaforth Collegiate Institute. She
entered Montreal's McGill University in 1894 and
graduated with a B.A. Honours in Mathematics
and Natural Philosophy in 1898. Brooks was an
outstanding student, winning a scholarship or
award in each year of her studies at
McGill.
It was in 1898 that Brooks met
Ernest Rutherford, an eminent
nuclear science researcher of the
time. Rutherford moved ' from
England to McGill and after her
graduation Brooks became
one of the first members
of his research group
and his first graduate
student.
Through her work with
Rutherford's research
group, Brooks earned her
master's degree in 1901.
Prior to that in 1899,
Brooks was appointed as
non-resident tutor in mathe-
matics at the newly formed Royal
Victoria College (RVC), a. women's college o
McGill.
Brooks left RVC in. 1901 to take a position at
Bryn Mawr College as Fellow in physics. While at
Bryn Mawr, Brooksreceived a Presidents
European Fellowship to study at England's
Cambridge University. She „worked with another
eminent nuclear researcher of the day, J.J..
Thomson, at Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory,
research that was later published at McGill in
1904. Brooks was the first woman to study at
Cavendish.
Brooks' M.A. was the first awarded to a woman
at McGill, which didn't have a Ph.D program till
1909.
In 1903, Brooks was rehired at the RVC as non-
resident tutor in mathematics and physics and
rejoined Rutherford's research group. She stayed
another year at McGill and then accepted a physics
tutor position at Barnard College.
Her life at Barnard was uneventful till the sum-
mer of 1906 when a woman's role in professional
life at the turn of the century was drilled home
Brooks.
She became engaged to a professor of physics
Columbia University, a development that did n
sit well with Barnard's dean Laura Gill. Gill wro
to Brooks to say she should end her relationsh
with the college because of her upcoming ma
riage.
To this, Brooks wrote this reply:
"I think also it is a duty I owe to my profession
and to my sex to show that a woman has a right to
the practice of her profession and cannot be con-
demned to abandon it merely because she marries.
I cannot conceive how women's colleges, invitin
and encouraging women to enter professions ca
be justly founded or maintained denying snap;
principle."
Despite the intervention on her behalf by
Barnard's head of physics, Margaret Malty, Brooks
eventually left Barnard despite breaking off the
engagement.
Brooks travelled for a
while and eventually ended
up in Italy on the Isle of
Capri. During that time
she made contact with
arie Curie. Brooks
conducted independent
research at the
Laboratorie Curie in Paris
in 1906-07.
Though Brooks never published
any of her work at the Curie
Institute, three later articles from the
Institute cited:her work.
Brooks vied for a position at the
University of Manchester in England in
the spring of 1907.
Brooks made quite an impression on
Rutherford through her research and he gave
glowing references of her whenever asked. Here's
his reference for rooks he sent to Manchester:
"Miss Brooks has a most excellent knowledge of
theoretical and experimental physics and is unusu-
ally well qualified to undertake research. Her work
on 'radioactivity' has been of great importance in
the analysis of radioactive transformations and
next to Mine Curie she is •the most prominent
woman physicist in the department of radioactivi-
ty..."
He credited her identification of radon as a vital
piece of work that led him to propose the theory of
the transmutation of one element into another.
But Brooks then decided to end her research
career and married Frank Pitcher who had been a
laboratory demonstrator at McGill while she was a
student.
The reasons Brooks decided to give up her career
are not clear. Some historians have speculated it
Page 9
to may have been a conscious decision to give up the..
lonely life of a mature single woman science
at researcher. Letters from Pitcher to Brooks also
of show an ardent pursuit.
to After marriage, Brooks returned to Montreal with
ip Pitcher where they raised three children, two of
r- whom died as teens.
Brooks remained active in a number of organiza-
tions including the Women's Canadian Club
(Honourary Secretary in 1909-10, 1911-12, and:
President for 1923-24) and was a member of the
Scholarship Committee of the Canadian. Federation;
of University Women.
g Brooks gave some insfght into her views of
n women in science during a 1910 presentation on:
a Marie Curie to the McGill Alumnae Society. Here's.
an excerpt:
"The combination of the ability to think in math
ems :tical formulas and to manipulate skillfully the.
whimsical instruments of a. physical laboratory a
combination necessary. to attain. eminence in.
physics is apparently one seldom met with in
women. I may seem to runcounter to generally
accepted views in this but it has been my experi-
ence that men are as a rule much more skillful in
the manipulation of delicate and intricate work
than women..."
"But I must not blame entirely the difficulties
besetting the higher reaches of. mathematics and
our lack of deftness of hand for our neglect of the
physical sciences. Their want of human. interest
has I think had much to do with our indifference to
them.
Brooks died on April 17, 1933, in Montreal and
is buried in that city's Mount Royal Cemetery. She
had suffered from a long time illnes _.r►Q _.t t
to be a radiation -related disease. '
Why has Brooks been overlooked by historians of
science, especially in bibliographies of women in
science?
Historians have a couple of explanations.
Rutherford admitted it was years after Brooks'
career that the significance of her experimental.
work became apparent. Also, we tend to focus on
the more central figures in science at the turn of
the century like Marie Curie and Albert Einstein.
It can be argued that it is Brooks' career that is
more indicative of what is was like to be an out-
standing woman physicist at the turn of the centu-
ry than Curie's more famous exploits.
Though originally from the Exeter area, it's not
known if Brooks has any descendents here and. not
much is known about her before she attended uni-
versity. Anyone with more information on Brooks'
early lie is: encouraged. to call the' Times -Advocate
at (5t9) 235-1331, fax us at (519) 235-0766 or e-
mail uw at cbradford@ta.eedy.com.
-- Information courtesy: Harriet Brooks -- Pioneer nuclear scientist by M.F. Rayner -Canham and G.14/.' Rayner-Ganham, Sir Wilfred
Grenfell College, Corner Brook, Nfld. (supplied by. South Huron District High School vice-principal Peter Heeney); Canadian Women:
Risktakers and Changemakers, Women Inventors Project.
Have a healthy and safe attitude when shovelling snow
HURON- Winter in Midwestern
Ontario has settled in with a vast
amount of snow and cold wind -chili
temperatures. Most people rush out to
shovel their driveway and
sidewalk unprepared. The
strain of snow shovelling
puts an increased demand
on a person's. heart. Just
a few minutes of Lifting
and tossing snow can
cause a dramatic increase
in heart rate and blood
pressure.
In fact, the cardiac work-
out of shovelling is equiva-
lent to running on a treadmill. "The
problem is that many people spend the
off-season as couch potatoes and their
bodies aren't ready for the exertion
required to shovel snow", says Josee
Cayer, physical activity promoter at
Huron County Health Unit.
Two out of every three
Canadians are risking
their health and quality of
life by not being active
enough. The new Physical
Activity Guide to Healthy
Active Living was recently
released by Health
Canada and offers guide-
lines on how to be healthi-
er by making physical
activity an important part
of daily life. The activity guide gives
examples of how much and how often
adults need to be physically active to
stay healthy., "People need to realize
that they should maintain a certain
level of activity all year long to be able
to handle tasks like shovellingsnew",
Cayer says. Here are some tips to -help
prevent cardiac problems and back
injury from cold weather. activities like
snow shovelling.
• Maintain a regular physical activity
program. People who are active on a
regular basis will have less chance of
injury.
• Warm up before going outside. Do
some gradual stretching and loosening
up activities
• Dress warmly.
• Start shovelling slowly.
• Bend your knees, not your waist,
when lifting snow. Whenever possible,
push or sweep snow- ratter thanlifting
it.
• Keel your back straight and use the
strength in your legs and not hi your
back.
• Avoid inhaling coldair by wearing ,t
scarf.
• Wear boots with treads to prevent
slipping or falling.
• Take a break. When you're tired to
reduce your risk of injury.
• See your family physician if you
experience any chest discomfort.
To obtain a free copy of the new
Physical Activity Guide, call the Healthy
Lifestyle Team, Huron County Health
Unit at 482-3416 or 1-800-265-5x84 or
you can get it on the Internet at
www.paguide.com.