Frederica "Freda" Detmers (January 16, 1867—September 5, 1934) was an American botanist.[1][2]
Life and education
Detmers was born in Dixon, Lee County, Illinois, on January 16, 1867, to Henry Detmers and Heimke. Her father was the founder of the Ohio State University Veterinary College. She studied at the University, graduating in 1887 with a B.S. She returned to graduate with an M.S. in 1891.[3]
She suffered from a head injury after a fall in the mountains collecting plants in 1930.[4]
She committed suicide on September 5, 1934, in Los Angeles by consuming poison.[3][4]
Career
Detmers was the first woman to hold a research position in Ohio for the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, holding it from 1880 to 1892. From 1893 to 1906, she taught science and German in Columbus schools, returning to OSU in 1906.[3] Her 1912 dissertation was a study of Buckeye Lake's ecology.[5] In 1914, she became assistant professor. In 1918, she rejoined the experiment station as assistant botanist, moving on to taxonomist and systematist.[3][6]