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Women's History Month
Rachel Carson

Rachel Carson, writer, scientist, and ecologist,
grew up simply in the rural river town of Springdale, Pennsylvania. Her mother
bequeathed to her a life long love of nature and the living world that Rachel
expressed first as a writer and later as a student of marine biology. Carson
graduated from Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham College) in 1929,
studied at the Woods Hole Marine biological laboratory, and received her MA in
zoology from Johns Hopkins University in 1932.
She was hired by the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries to write radio scripts during the
Depression and supplemented her income writing feature articles on natural
history for the Baltimore Sun. She began a fifteen-year career in the
federal service as a scientist and editor in 1936 and rose to become chief of
all publications for the
U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service. She wrote pamphlets on
conservation and natural resources and edited scientific articles, but in her
free time turned her government research into lyric prose, first as an article
"Undersea" (1937, for the Atlantic Monthly), and then in a
book, Under the Sea-Wind (1941). In 1952 she published her prize-winning
study of the ocean, The Sea Around Us, which was followed by The Edge
of the Sea in 1955. These books constituted a biography of the ocean and
made Carson famous as a naturalist and science writer for the public. Carson
resigned from government service in 1952 to devote herself to her writing.
She wrote several other articles designed to teach people about the wonder and
beauty of the living world, including "Help Your Child to Wonder,"
(1956) and "Our Ever-Changing Shore" (1957), and planned another book
on the ecology of life. Embedded within all of Carson's writing was the view
that human beings were but one part of nature distinguished primarily by their
power to alter it, in some cases irreversibly.
Disturbed by the profligate use of synthetic chemical pesticides after World War
II, Carson reluctantly changed her focus in order to warn the public about the
long term effects of misusing pesticides. In Silent Spring (1962) she
challenged the practices of agricultural scientists and the government, and
called for a change in the way humankind viewed the natural world.
Carson was attacked by the chemical industry and some in government as an
alarmist, but courageously spoke out to remind us that we are a vulnerable part
of the natural world subject to the same damage as the rest of the ecosystem.
Testifying before Congress in 1963, Carson called for new policies to protect
human health and the environment.
Rachel Carson died in 1964 after a long battle against cancer. Her witness for
the beauty and integrity of life continues to inspire new generations to protect
the living world and all its creatures.
Woman's History
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