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Rosalind Franklin
Rosalind Franklin always liked facts. She was logical and
precise, and impatient with things that were otherwise. She
decided to become a scientist when she was 15. She passed the
examination for admission to Cambridge University in 1938, and
it sparked a family crisis. Although her family was well-to-do
and had a tradition of public service and philanthropy, her
father disapproved of university education for women. He refused
to pay. An aunt stepped in and said Franklin should go to
school, and she would pay for it. Franklin's mother also took
her side until her father finally gave in.
War broke out in Europe in 1939 and Franklin stayed at
Cambridge. She graduated in 1941 and started work on her
doctorate. Her work focused on a wartime problem: the nature of
coal and charcoal and how to use them most efficiently. She
published five papers on the subject before she was 26 years
old. Her work is still quoted today, and helped launch the field
of high-strength carbon fibers. At 26, Franklin had her PhD and
the war was just over. She began working in x-ray diffraction --
using x-rays to create images of crystalized solids. She
pioneered the use of this method in analyzing complex,
unorganized matter such as large biological molecules, and not
just single crystals.
She spent three years in France, enjoying the work atmosphere,
the freedoms of peacetime, the French food and culture. But in
1950, she realized that if she wanted to make a scientific
career in England, she had to go back. She was invited to King's
College in London to join a team of scientists studying living
cells. The leader of the team assigned her to work on DNA with a
graduate student. Franklin's assumption was that it was her own
project. The laboratory's second-in-command, Maurice Wilkins,
was on vacation at the time, and when he returned, their
relationship was muddled. He assumed she was to assist his work;
she assumed she'd be the only one working on DNA. They had
powerful personality differences as well: Franklin direct,
quick, decisive, and Wilkins shy, speculative, and passive. This
would play a role in the coming years as the race unfolded to
find the structure of DNA.
Franklin made marked advances in x-ray diffraction techniques
with DNA. She adjusted her equipment to produce an extremely
fine beam of x-rays. She extracted finer DNA fibers than ever
before and arranged them in parallel bundles. And she studied
the fibers' reactions to humid conditions. All of these allowed
her to discover crucial keys to DNA's structure. Wilkins shared
her data, without her knowledge, with James Watson and Francis
Crick, at Cambridge University, and they pulled ahead in the
race, ultimately publishing the proposed structure of DNA in
March, 1953.
The strained relationship with Wilkins and other aspects of
King's College (the women scientists were not allowed to eat
lunch in the common room where the men did, for example) led
Franklin to seek another position. She headed her own research
group at Birkbeck College in London. But the head of King's let
her go on the condition she would not work on DNA. Franklin
returned to her studies of coal and also wrapped up her DNA
work. She turned her attention to viruses, publishing 17 papers
in five years. Her group's findings laid the foundation for
structural virology.
While on a professional visit to the United States, Franklin had
episodes of pain that she soon learned were ovarian cancer. She
continued working over the next two years, through three
operations and experimental chemotherapy and a 10-month
remission. She worked up until a few weeks before her death in
1958 at age 37.
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