Nancy Farley Wood Explained

Nancy Farley Wood
Birth Name:Nancy Lee Farley
Birth Date:12 July 1903
Birth Place:La Monte, Missouri, U.S.
Death Place:Baroda, Michigan, U.S.
Children:6

Nancy Farley "Nan" Wood (12 July 1903 – 19 March 2003) was a physicist and businesswoman who was a member of the Manhattan Project. She was the only daughter of Daniel Lee Farley and Minerva Jane Ross, and a lifelong feminist and proponent of the Women's liberation movement as a founding member of the Chicago National Organization for Women.[1] As a business owner, she designed, developed and manufactured her own line of ionizing radiation detectors. During World War II, Wood taught calculus to U.S. Navy sailors in Chicago. Later, during World War II, she was recruited to the Manhattan Project, where she designed and developed ionizing radiation detectors with John Alexander Simpson in the instrument division at the University of Chicago Metallurgical Laboratory or Met Lab. In 1949, Wood founded the N. Wood Counter Laboratory.[2] [3]

Early life

Wood was born Nancy Lee Farley on a farm in 1903 at La Monte, Pettis County, Missouri and died in 2003 at the home of her son, William in Baroda, Berrien County, Michigan.[4] Wood was the second child of four and the only daughter of Daniel Lee Farley and Minerva Jane Ross. In addition to her three brothers, she also had two half-brothers and a half-sister. In 1928, she married John Curtis Wood and the couple had 6 children, 5 of whom survived to adulthood. Nancy and John Curtis Wood and their daughter Shirley June (who died at the age of two) are buried at Green Ridge Cemetery in Green Ridge, Pettis County, Missouri.[5]

Education

Wood began her education in a one room schoolhouse in Green Ridge, Missouri. The family moved to central Missouri so she could attend college.[2] Wood graduated from the Warrensburg Teacher's College and taught high school mathematics and physics. She attended the University of Chicago and in 1927 received a M.A. degree in education.

World War II and the Manhattan Project

Prior to and during World War II, Wood taught calculus to U.S. Navy sailors in Chicago, Illinois. Toward the end of World War II she was recruited to the Manhattan Project where she designed and developed radiation detectors with John Alexander Simpson in the instrument division at the University of Chicago Metallurgical Laboratory or Met Lab.[2] [3] [6] [7] [8]

N. Wood Counter Laboratory

In 1949, Wood founded the N. Wood Counter Laboratory.[9] The company was located atop the Hyde Park Bank building in Chicago. The company was established to develop, manufacture and supply gas-filled gamma radiation detectors and neutron radiation detectors. The customer base was research laboratories and universities engaged in the development of the peaceful utilization of atomic energy.[2] [10] [11] The N. Wood Counter Laboratory company remained in business for over 50 years to supply a range of BF3 proportional neutron detectors, Geiger-Mueller detectors, proportional gamma counters and gas flow counters. In March 1994, Wood sold the company to her daughter, Marjory Wood Crawford.

In 1957, during the International Geophysical Year, the N. Wood model G-15-34A neutron detectors (Simpson Counters) were utilized to collect data worldwide.

NASA satellite programs

NASA chose the N. Wood Counter Laboratory G-5-3 neutron detectors to be deployed as the initial detectors to operate in the polar orbiting satellites. The N. Wood Counter Laboratory D-5-3L gamma detectors orbited in satellites as part of the following NASA satellite programs:

Patent credits

Works cited, credits for use of N. Wood Counter Laboratory detectors

Feminism and women’s liberation

Community service

External links

Notes and References

  1. Love, Barbara J., Cott, Nancy F. (2015). Feminists Who Changed America, 1963-1975. University of Illinois Press.
  2. Cholo, Ana Beatriz. (17 May 2003). Nancy Farley Wood, 99. Early feminist, business owner. Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois.
  3. Editor. (30 April 2003). Nancy “Nan” Farley Wood. Chesterton Tribune. Chesterton, Indiana.
  4. Obituary, Sedalia (MO) Democrat, 8 April 2003
  5. Web site: Green Ridge Cemetery. 2020-09-15. cousin-collector.com.
  6. Simpson, J. A. (1946). A Precision Alpha Proportional Counter (Vol. 80). War Department, Corps of Engineers, Office of the District Engineer, Manhattan District.
  7. Simpson Jr, J. A. (1947). A Precision Alpha‐Proportional Counter. Review of Scientific Instruments. 18(12): 884-893.
  8. Simpson Jr, J. A. (1948). Air proportional counters. Review of Scientific Instruments. 19(11): 733-743.
  9. Frame, P. (1999). Nancy Wood BF3 Proportional Counter (ca. early 1950s). Oak Ridge Associated Universities. Oak Ridge, TN.
  10. Olsher, Richard H. (October 1991). Calibration correction factors for the Los Alamos neutron well. Proceedings of the Third Conference on Radiation Protection and Dosimetry. Orlando, Florida. (Describes use of the Eberline NRD sphere with N. Wood BF3 detector.)
  11. Zaeh, R.A. (1992). Annual Report. Purchasing and Materials Management Organization. Sandia National Laboratories. Fiscal Year 1992 listed N. Wood Counter Laboratory as doing $1425 in business in 1992.
  12. [Chang-Yun Fan|Fan, C. Y.]
  13. Fan, C. Y., Meyer, P., & Simpson, J. A. (1961). Dynamics and structure of the outer radiation belt. Journal of Geophysical Research. 66(9): 2607-2640.
  14. Simpson, J. A., Fan, C. Y., & Meyer, P. (1960, April). Preliminary results from the space probe Pioneer V. In Washington AGU meeting, Planetary Sciences Program, Fifth Session.
  15. Albert, R., Hess, W., & Gilbert, C. (January 1962). Measurement of charged particles and neutrons on Discoverer flights. Journal of Geophysical Research. 67(9): 3537.
  16. Keith, J. E., & Turkevich, A. L. (1962). Radioactivity induced in Discoverer 17 by solar‐flare protons. Journal of Geophysical Research. 67(12): 4525-4532.
  17. [Ke-Chiang Hsieh|Hsieh, K. C.]
  18. Fan, C. Y., Meyer, P., & Simpson, J. A. (1960). Cosmic radiation intensity decreases observed at the earth and in the nearby planetary medium. Physical Review Letters. 4.
  19. Simpson, J. A., Fan, C. Y., & Meyer, P. (1962). Dynamics of the Outer Radiation Belt. J. Phys. Soc. Japan. 17: (Supplement A).
  20. O'gallagher, J. J., & Simpson, J. A. (1965). Search for trapped electrons and a magnetic moment at Mars by Mariner IV. Science. 149(3689): 1233-1239.
  21. Simpson, J. A., & Wang, J. R. (1967). Dimension of the Cosmic-Ray Modulation Region. The Astrophysical Journal. 149: L73.
  22. Simpson, J. A., & Wang, J. R. (1970). The eleven-year and residual solar modulation of cosmic rays (1952-1969). The Astrophysical Journal. 161: 265.
  23. Garcia-Munoz, M., Mason, G. M., & Simpson, J. A. (1973). The abundances of galactic cosmic-ray carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen and their astrophysical implications. The Astrophysical Journal, 184, 967-994.
  24. Baldwin, W. F., & Berry, J. E. (25 September 1962). Chlorine logging system using neutron capture gamma rays. US 3244882 A. USPTO. U.S. Patent No. 3,244,882. Washington, DC: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
  25. Givens, Wyatt W. (25 March 1969). Production of chemistry-dependent gamma ray and thermal neutron logs corrected for porosity. U.S. Patent No. 3,435,217. Washington, DC: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
  26. Hopkinson, Eric C. & Youmans, Arthur H. (15 April 1969). Radioactive well logging system having a multiple conductor cable. U.S. Patent No. 3,439,165. Washington, DC: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
  27. Pritchett, William C., Gant Jr., Orland J. & Calkins, Ray L. (16 December 1969). Method for chlorine logging wherein both chlorine and calcium are logged using a plurality of select narrow windows." U.S. Patent 3,484,609. U.S. Patent No. 3,484,609. Washington, DC: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.