Background
She was born Elizabeth Bottomley in Auburn, Massachusetts, United States, the daughter of Frank Bottomley and Helen McLaren.
general manager philanthropist
She was born Elizabeth Bottomley in Auburn, Massachusetts, United States, the daughter of Frank Bottomley and Helen McLaren.
In the early 1950s, Robert Noyce was working on a Doctor of Philosophy at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which is close to Tufts. Robert Noyce received his Doctor of Philosophy in 1953. He would become general manager of Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel Corporation.
She was a 1951 graduate of Tufts University. The couple moved to California where Nobel laureate William Shockley had started Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory in Mountain View, California in 1956. Robert Noyce was one of the "traitorous eight" who left Shockley in 1957 and started Fairchild Semiconductor.
Fairchild"s Robert Noyce and Texas Instruments" Jack Kilby are credited with inventing the integrated circuit.
In 1968, Robert Noyce and Gordon East. Moore started Intel Corporation in Mountain View (later moving to Santa Clara, California in 1971). Intel became a huge financial success.
lieutenant developed the first commercially available dynamic Random Access Memory (11103), the first EPROM (11702), and the first commercially available microprocessor (14004). During this time, the couple lived in Los Altos, California.
They had four, Pendred, Priscilla, and Margaret.
Elizabeth loved New England, so the family acquired a 50-acre coastal summer home in Bremen, Maine. Robert would visit during the summer, but he continued working at Intel during the summer. Robert started an extramarital affair with an attractive, intelligent, 28-year-old, self-sufficient, divorced mother of three, Intel mask designer, Barbara Maness.
The affair was an "open secret" at Intel.
After Elizabeth learned of the affair, the marriage ended in divorce. Elizabeth received half of the couple"s assets under California"s community property law.
Robert later married Ann Bowers, Intel"s head of personnel. She then took up residence at the Maine summer home.
She became the area"s leading philanthropist and art collector.
Among other major gifts, she founded the Libra Foundation. Elizabeth Noyce smoked cigarettes and died from emphysema on September 18, 1996, aged 65, at her Bremen home in Lincoln County, Maine.