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  1. Anna Jane Harrison ( 23 d'avientu de 1912 , Benton City (es) – 8 d'agostu de 1998 , Holyoke (es) ) foi una química orgánica d' Estaos Xuníos y profesora de Química nel Mount Holyoke College mientres cuasi cuarenta años. Foi la primer muyer presidenta de l' American Chemical Society y receptora de venti título honorarios.

  2. Anna Symmes Harrison wears a head covering with decorative bows in this portrait made by an unknown artist probably in the 1820s or 1830s. In 1795 Anna Symmes married William Henry Harrison who would become the ninth president of the United States—though he died a month after taking office. Anna Harrison, who bore ten children and was often in ill health, never entered the White House as ...

  3. Anna Jane Harrison (23 de diciembre de 1912-8 de agosto de 1998) fue una química orgánica estadounidense y profesora de Química en el Mount Holyoke College durante casi cuarenta años. Fue la primera mujer presidenta de la American Chemical Society y receptora de veinte títulos honorarios. Conocida a nivel nacional por su labor en la ...

  4. books, blogs and socials. Selected list of awards, publications, papers, press and invited keynotes by Dr Anna Harrison.

  5. 3 de may. de 2024 · Anna Jane Harrison (born Dec. 23, 1912, Benton City, Mo., U.S.—died Aug. 8, 1998, Holyoke, Mass.) was an American chemist and educator who in 1978 became the first woman president of the American Chemical Society. She was known for her advocacy for increased public awareness of science. Harrison grew up on a farm in rural Missouri.

  6. Anna Tuthill Symmes Harrison was the wife of the ninth President of the United States, William Henry Harrison. Being married to the president she assumed the First Lady of the United States but this title was only nominal as she never entered the White House during her husband’s one-month term in 1841.

  7. 7 de jun. de 2018 · Anna Harrison será recordada por sus colegas como una voz fuerte y clara para la educación de la química y, como nuestra primera presidenta, una persona que demostró que el liderazgo y la dedicación no entienden de género. Joan E. Shields De izquierda a derecha: Kathleen Zier, Anna Jane Harrison, Mary Sherrill y Marie Mercury.