Lois Tripp Slocum was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, the daughter of Edward Manchester Slocum and Eleanor Victoria Tripp Slocum.[1] She graduated from Smith College in 1921, adding a master's degree in 1924. She held a Lick Observatory fellowship,[2][3] and earned a Ph.D. at the University of California in 1930, completing a dissertation titled "A study of color indices of faint stars in five selected areas in the Milky Way" under advisor Robert J. Trumpler.[4][5]Fred Whipple was in the same astronomy cohort at California, finishing in the same year as Slocum.[6]
Her uncle was astronomer Frederick Slocum, who was a professor at Brown University in Rhode Island, and at Wesleyan University in Connecticut.[7][1]
Career
Lois Slocum taught at Wellesley College with Leah Allen early in her career.[8] She was a member of the astronomy department at Smith College from 1932 to 1943, and in 1944 joined the faculty at Wilson College.[9]
Publications by Slocum included "Occultations of the Pleiades by the moon on February 14, 1932" (Astronomical Journal 1932),[14] and "The eclipsing binary WW Aurigae" (Lick Observatory Bulletin 1942).[15]
Personal life
Lois Tripp Slocum died in 1951, aged 52 years, in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania.[9] In 1967, an endowment from her mother's estate established the annual Lois T. Slocum Lecture at Wilson College, named in her memory.[16]