British biochemist (1882 – 1951)
Hilda Mary Judd (1882–1951) was an English biochemist who contributed to research into painkillers and food storage during World War I .
Family and education
Hilda was one of two children of geologist John Wesley Judd , Dean of the Royal College of Science , and his wife Jeannie, daughter of manufacturing chemist John Jeyes .[ 1] Educated at a private school in Hastings , she studied at the Royal College of Science from 1901 to 1904,[ 2] winning the Frank Hatton Prize there in her final year.[ 3]
Early career
Judd carried out research work at Imperial College London , representing the college at the British Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in South Africa in 1905.[ 3] She lectured in science at Goldsmith's College from 1906 to 1915.[ 1] Back at Imperial College from 1916, Judd researched silk, working and co-publishing with chemists Martin Onslow Forster and John B. Farmer .[ 4]
Wartime research
During World War I, Judd was one of a team of women selected by Martha Whiteley to prepare 'certain substances for the Naval hospitals,' that is, painkillers.[ 5] The team consisted of Dorothy Haynes, Winifred Hurst , Hilda Judd, Frances Micklethwait , and Sibyl Widdows working as voluntary researchers, with Ethel Thomas and Louise Woll employed by them.[ 6] Judd and her colleague Dorothy Haynes went on to investigate the chemical changes involved in the cold storage of fruits for the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research .[ 7] [ 8] [ 9]
Later life
The Royal Institute of Chemistry provided her with an allowance as she cared for her mother and brother later in life.[ 1]
She died in 1951.[ 1]
References
^ a b c d Barrett, Anne (2017-02-24). Women At Imperial College; Past, Present And Future . World Scientific. pp. 233– 4. ISBN 978-1-78634-264-5 .
^ Gay, Hannah (2007). The History of Imperial College London, 1907-2007: Higher Education and Research in Science, Technology, and Medicine . Imperial College Press. p. 145. ISBN 978-1-86094-818-3 .
^ a b Gay, Hannah; Griffith, William (2016-11-03). Chemistry Department At Imperial College London, The: A History, 1845-2000 . World Scientific. p. 89. ISBN 978-1-78326-975-4 .
^ Forster, Martin Onslow; Judd, Hilda Mary (1910-01-01). "XXVII.—The triazo-group. Part XII. Derivatives of para-triazobenzaldehyde" . Journal of the Chemical Society, Transactions . 97 : 254– 264. doi :10.1039/CT9109700254 . ISSN 0368-1645 .
^ Fara, Patricia (2018). A Lab of One's Own: Science and Suffrage in the First World War . Oxford University Press. p. 177. ISBN 978-0-19-879498-1 .
^ Rayner-Canham, Marelene; Rayner-Canham, Geoff (2024-09-13). Allies of Pioneering Women Chemists: Some Supportive British Male Chemists and Their Women Students (1880–1930) . Royal Society of Chemistry. ISBN 978-1-83767-494-7 .
^ Creese, Mary R. S. (1991). "British Women of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Who Contributed to Research in the Chemical Sciences" . The British Journal for the History of Science . 24 (3): 275– 305. doi :10.1017/S0007087400027370 . ISSN 0007-0874 . JSTOR 4027231 .
^ Haynes, D.; Judd, H. M. (1919). "The Effect of Methods of Extraction on the Composition of Expressed Apple Juice, and a Determination of the Sampling Error of such Juices" . The Biochemical Journal . 13 (3): 272– 277. doi :10.1042/bj0130272 . ISSN 0264-6021 . PMC 1258870 . PMID 16742862 .
^ Harris, Mary Elizabeth (2019-05-13). Rocks, Radio And Radar: The Extraordinary Scientific, Social And Military Life Of Elizabeth Alexander . World Scientific. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-78634-666-7 .