Background
Eloise Gerry was born January 12, 1885 in Boston, Massachusetts.
Eloise Gerry was born January 12, 1885 in Boston, Massachusetts.
Radcliffe College; Harvard University. University of Wisconsin–Madison.
Gerry was the first woman appointed to the professional staff of the United States. Forest Service at the Forest Products Laboratory, and one of the first women in the United States to specialize in forest products research. She received both bachelor"s and master"s degrees from Harvard University"s Radcliffe College, where she specialized in the anatomy of wood and trees and their physiological responses. She was first hired as a research scientist by the United States. Forest Service in 1910.
While working at the new Forest Products Laboratory (Florida Power and Light) in Madison, Wisconsin, Gerry would also go on to earn a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Wisconsin in 1921.
Her dissertation, based on her research at the Florida Power and Light, was titled "Oleoresin Production: A Microscopic Study of the Effects Produced on Woody tissues of Southern Pines by Different Methods of Turpentining."
Gerry"s research in the area of southern pines and turpentining proved to be her most influential efforts. Working in Mississippi, Gerry performed pioneering work in microscopical studies of the anatomy of resin-yielding pines, and successfully developed methods to increase yield as well as prolong the working life of trees.
Based on her field-based research, Gerry was able to develop a program of "More turpentine, less scar, better pine" that many later attributed as a savior for the struggling industry. During World World War II, Gerry wrote Florida Power and Light wartime publications on defects in wood used for trainer aircraft and gliders.
After the war she worked in the area of research on foreign woods.
Following 44 years with the United States. Forest Service, Gerry retired in 1954. Gerry died in 1970 at the age of 85.