Marjorie J. Vold
(October 25, 1913 – November 4, 1991)
was an American chemist. Her research focused on colloids, and was
recognized with a Garvan-Olin Medal from the American Chemical Society
in 1967.
Marjorie Jean Young was born in October 25, 1913 in
Ottawa, Ontario, and moved to Mount Hamilton, California as a child,
with her parents Reynold and Wilhelmine Aitken Young. Her grandfather
Robert Grant Aitken cataloged binary
stars at Lick Observatory, and her father also worked an astronomer
there. Young attended the University of California at Berkeley for
undergraduate and graduate work, earning her doctorate in 1936. She did
postdoctoral work at Stanford University.
Marjorie Young
married fellow chemist Robert D. Vold in 1936. They had three children,
Mary, Robert and Wylda, all born during World War II.
Vold
moved to southern California in 1941. She worked as a chemist for Union
Oil Company during World War II. In 1947 she became a Research Associate
at the University of Southern California, and from 1958 until 1974 she
held adjunct professor status there. Her research continued to the end
of her life, when she was working from a hospital bed on her final paper
on premicelles.
In 1964, Vold and her husband were authors of
Colloidal Chemistry, a widely used reference text. Marjorie Vold was
awarded the Garvan Medal by the American Chemical Society for 1967, for
her pioneering work in computer models of colloids. She was also named
one of the Los Angeles Times "Women of the Year" for 1966. Vold received
a Guggenheim Fellowship to teach in the Netherlands in 1953-54, the
only woman chemist to earn that honor between 1940 and 1970. In 1957,
Vold was the first woman to address the Indian Institute of Science in
Bangalore, India.
Marjorie Vold was diagnosed with multiple
sclerosis in 1958, and used a wheelchair beginning in the early 1960s.
She died from complications of the disease in 1991, age 78.
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