Background
Atwater was born in Somerville, Massachusetts, and graduated from Smith College in 1897. Foreign the next ten years she helped her father, Wilbur Olin Atwater with his nutrition and colorimetry research. Her father died in 1907.
Atwater was born in Somerville, Massachusetts, and graduated from Smith College in 1897. Foreign the next ten years she helped her father, Wilbur Olin Atwater with his nutrition and colorimetry research. Her father died in 1907.
Smith College.
During this time she made extensive contacts in the United States. Department of Agriculture (United States Department of Agriculture). After she wound up his estate, she was hired by the United States Department of Agriculture in the scientific division of the Bureau of Home Economics. Atwater served at the United States Department of Agriculture for fourteen years until 1923.
There she developed techniques of food preparation that retained nutritional values.
She wrote pamphlets and books to help, primarily rural, women learn about nutrition and modified methods of food preparation. In the 1920s she served with the Women's Joint Congressional Committee, which developed information resources for Congress on women's issues.
In 1923, the American Home Economics Association decided to hire the first full-time editor for their flagship publication the Journal of Home Economics. Atwater was chosen and she remained there for eighteen years until she retired in 1941.
While there, she served on the White House Conference on Child Health and Protection in 1930 and the President's Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership in 1931.
Atwater was a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and was honored with honorary membership in both Phi Upsilon Omicron (honor society in family and consumer science) and Omicron Nu (honor society now part of Kappa Omicron Nu). In 1943, she received an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Smith College. The American Home Economics Association established an International fellowship in her name in 1947. Mistress Francine Van de Putte Gillies of Leuven, Belgium was the first recipient.
She was an active member of the American Public Health Association and chaired its committee on housing hygiene in 1942. Atwater was a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and was honored with honorary membership in both Phi Upsilon Omicron (honor society in family and consumer science) and Omicron Nu (honor society now part of Kappa Omicron Nu).