Carlia S. Westcott Explained
Carlia S. Westcott was an American engineer. She was the first woman to receive a license in Marine Engineering in the United States, in December 1921. She was highlighted on the cover of The Woman Engineer after the New York Times covered her. She was from Seattle, Washington.[1] [2] [3] [4]
Notes and References
- News: SHE URGES WOMEN TO SHOW INGENUITY; Inventive Capabilities Can Be Utilized in Domestic Engineering, Says Mrs. Gwynne-Howell. ON LABOR-SAVING DEVICES Electric Equipment Comes First in the Order of Appliances to Save Lost Motion, She Says. Fields for Women Inventors. Danger of Overdoing. Electrical Equipment First. . The New York Times . 29 May 1922.
- News: Image 1 of The Washington times (Washington [D.C.]), December 25, 1921, (SUNDAY MORNING) ]. Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.
- Book: Heald . Henrietta . Magnificent Women and their Revolutionary Machines . 19 September 2019 . Unbound Publishing . 978-1-78352-679-6 . en.
- March 1922. American Woman's Success. The Woman Engineer. 1. 10. 138.