Miriam Elizabeth Simpson was an American scientist who in 1921 earned the first Doctor of Philosophy in anatomy conferred from the University of California.
Education
Miriam East. Simpson studied as an undergraduate, and then graduate student, at the University of California, Berkeley. Simpson received her Doctor of Philosophy in anatomy from the University of California in 1921. Her second Doctor of Philosophy in medicine was awarded by Johns Hopkins University in 1923.
Career
Two years later, she was awarded Doctor of Medicine from Johns Hopkins University (1923). She earned an Bachelor of Arts in chemistry in 1915 and Master of Arts in chemistry in 1916. During her time at Johns Hopkins and Berkeley, she worked closely with Herbert McLean Evans conducting research in pituitary glands and hormone injections.
Simpson was an active researcher and instructor in anatomy, focusing on histology and endocrinology.
She taught at University of California Berkeley from 1923 to 1961. Simpson"s research and teaching focus, as well as specialized training in medicine and chemistry, complemented other research in anatomy at the university.
She was promoted to full Professor in 1945, with the “Emerita” distinction added to her title upon her retirement in 1961. After the Institute was dissolved in 1958, she oversaw the establishment of the Microscopic Anatomy course at the University of California, San Francisco, while continuing to share in teaching the course in Berkeley.
This divided appointment continued on the two campuses until her retirement in 1961.
During her long research collaboration with Evans, Simpson led the endocrine research portion of the institute. Together, with Choh Hao Li and Evans, Simpson"s research resulted in remarkable successes in 1943, 1944, and 1949. These were, a purified thyreotropic and adrenocorticotropic hormone Adrenocorticotropic Hormone, growth hormone, and follicle-stimulating hormone (Follicle-stimulating hormone), respectively.