Jennie Laura Symons Simpson (April 12, 1894 – July, 1977) was a Canadian-American botanist and geneticist.[1] Between 1929 and 1962, she was the professor of botany at Hunter College. Most of her research activities were focused on marinealgae.[2]
Biography
Jennie L. S. Simpson was born on April 12, 1894, in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.[1] She received all her degrees from McGill University (B.A., 1917; M.S., 1921; Ph.D., 1925).[2][3] After receiving her doctorate in 1925, she started her teaching career as a lecturer in botany at McGill University. Later, she became an assistant professor and taught at the University of Toronto and at Swarthmore College.[1]
In 1929, she joined as an assistant professor in the department of biology of Hunter College and retired there as Emeritus Professor in 1962.[4][3] In Hunter College, she taught advanced courses in morphology and evolution of higher plants, and continued her research on the vascular anatomy of Cucurbitaceae.[1][5] She gradually developed interest in marine algae. She and her students collected plant specimens extensively in the New York City area.[6]
In 1925, she married biochemist George Eric Simpson, who died in 1927.[3] With her husband, she visited the University of Cambridge, England, and Kaiser Wilhelm Society in Germany.[1] In 1931, she received United States citizenship.[1]
After her retirement in 1962 from Hunter College, Simpson became a fellow of the San Diego Natural History Museum, where she bequeathed several thousand mounted plant specimens.[2]