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Ele Willoughby, PhD
@minouette@spore.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

Happy birthday to trailblazing #programmer & #computer scientist, Beatrice “Trixie” Worsley (1921-1972). My #linocut shows Worsley seated at the first computer in Canada, the FERUT (which she named) & a flow diagram of one of her programs.⁠
⁠
Trixie Worsley earned one of the first doctorates in computer science anywhere, & was supervised by Douglas Hartree & Alan Turing at Cambridge. Amongst the first computer scientists 🧵

#WomenInSTEM #printmaking #sciart #histsci #mastoArt #physics #compsci

My linocut of Trixie Worsley (in brown) seated at the FERUT computer (in dark green) overprinted with a flow chart from one of her papers in a gradient of pale blue.
My linocut of Trixie Worsley (in brown) seated at the FERUT computer (in dark green) overprinted with a flow chart from one of her papers in a gradient of pale blue.
My linocut of Trixie Worsley (in brown) seated at the FERUT computer (in dark green) overprinted with a flow chart from one of her papers in a gradient of pale blue.
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Ele Willoughby, PhD
@minouette@spore.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

in Canada, she was certainly the first woman in the field here. She focused on writing software, development of computer libraries, scientific computation and was co-author of the first compiler Transcode (vital to physicists) as well as teaching in the new field of computer science. Her work provides insight into the history of the nascent field of computer science. She published her computational insights and solutions for problems in physics, biology and computer science.⁠
⁠🧵2/

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Ele Willoughby, PhD
@minouette@spore.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

As soon as she completed her bachelor’s in mathematics at the University of Toronto in 1944, she enlisted in the Women’s Royal Canadian Naval Service, known as the Wrens. As a researcher at the Naval Research Establishment at Her Majesty’s Canadian Ship Establishment Stradacona, in Halifax, NS, she focused on harbour defence. Worsley was one of 6 Wrens amongst 50 scientists, officers and support staff, who were responsible for things like degaussing ships to limit their magnetic signature & 🧵3/

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Ele Willoughby, PhD
@minouette@spore.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

vulnerability to German magnetic mines, torpedo guidance and researching different techniques for harbour defence. Most of this group left the service within a year of the end of the war to pursue further education, with the special opportunities offered to veterans. A small number including Worsley, the only remaining Wren, stayed on. The newly promoted Lieutenant Worsley began researching the badly understood electrochemistry of hull corrosion in 1945, performing experiments at sea. 🧵4/5

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Ele Willoughby, PhD
@minouette@spore.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

She set the Wrens’ record for time at sea, at 150 days, including during the rough mid-winter months. Her endurance and knowledge earned her the respect of the crews, even doing what she called a man’s job. ⁠

https://minouette.etsy.com/listing/595780026

🧵5/5

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