In 1946, Kapp returned to RPI as an associate professor.[4][8] In 1952, she was promoted to professor and became the chair of the School of Applied Sciences, along with remaining the chair of the chemistry department.[1] She remained with RPI when it merged with the Medical College of Virginia to become the Virginia Commonwealth University in 1968.[1] In 1970, she stepped down as chair of the chemistry department and retired in July 1973.[4]
Kapp was a fellow of the Virginia Academy of Sciences and a member of the American Chemical Society. In 1952, she was elected as the first woman elected chair of the Virginia section of the American Chemical Society.
Kapp was awarded the Distinguished Service Award of the Virginia Section by the American Chemical Society in 1969.[1][8] She was listed in Who's Who in America.[1]
The Virginia Commonwealth University set up a lecture fund in her honor in 1973.[4] The university hosts a chemist with an international reputation annually to speak at the Mary Kapp Lecture hosted in her honor.[1]
^ abcFreer, Ruskin Skidmore (1969). Virginia Journal of Science. Virginia Academy of Science. p. 89. Retrieved May 24, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)