Remembering Cornelia Clapp

Cornelia M. Clapp (1921). Credit: MBLHistory Project.
Cornelia Clapp
Cornelia M. Clapp (1934). Credit: MBLHistory Project.

Cornelia M. Clapp (born in 1849) was a prominent zoologist and educator, the first woman in the United States to get a doctorate in biology, and an integral member of the Marine Biological Laboratory. Clapp was one of seven educators present for 美女直播做爱鈥檚 inaugural season in 1888 and, at that time, was a highly regarded teacher of zoology and embryology at Mt. Holyoke College in Massachusetts.

Clapp began her MBLcareer as a student and investigator, but went on to serve as lecturer, the institution鈥檚 first librarian, and finally a trustee from 1910 until her death in 1934.

Clapp earned both the first and second Ph.D. in biology degrees awarded to women in the United States, in 1889 from Syracuse University and 1896 from the University of Chicago, under MBLfounding director C.O. Whitman. Her thesis provided the first description of the lateral line system in adult toadfish. The lateral line (also called the 鈥渓ateral line system鈥 or 鈥渓ateral line organ鈥) is a system of sense organs that enables fish to detect movement, vibration, and pressure gradients in the water. It is still studied by biologists today.

Cornelia Clapp
Cornelia M. Clapp. Credit: MBLArchives.

鈥淒r. Cornelia M. Clapp was always a beneficent presence at the Marine Biological Laboratory from the day of its opening in 1888,鈥 former MBLDirector Frank R. Lillie wrote in the May 1935 issue of聽The Mount Holyoke Alumnae Quarterly. 聽鈥淚n the first annual report her name appears as investigator. From that time until 1934, the year of her death, very few indeed were the sessions not graced by her presence.

鈥淓nthusiasm and loyal devotion, humor, modesty and wisdom combined to make her a unique personality, respected and beloved by all her associates,鈥 wrote Lillie.

Clapp came to the MBLnearly every summer from 1881 until her death. She would have been 171 years old today.

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