Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler Explained

Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler
Birth Name:Olga Steindler
Birth Date:28 October 1879
Birth Place:Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Death Place:Vienna, Austria
Field:Physics
Alma Mater:University of Vienna (PhD. 1903)
Doctoral Advisor:Franz Serafin Exner
Spouse:Felix Ehrenhaft

Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler (28 October 1879 – 21 December 1933) was an Austrian physicist and science teacher. In 1903, she became the first woman to earn a physics doctorate at the University of Vienna. She established the first Wiener Handelsakademie für Mädchen (Vienna Commercial Academy for Girls), as well as a grammar school for girls, in 1907.

Biography

Early years

Olga Steindler was born in Vienna to lawyer Leopold Steindler and Caroline Steindler, née Goldberg.[1] She had three siblings.[2] As women could not take the Matura (comparable to A-Level exams) in Vienna at the time, Olga Steindler went to Prague, where she took her exam on 7 July 1899.[3]

Steindler began to study mathematics and physics at Vienna University in 1899, which was then newly possible for women. She wrote her thesis on the validity of the Helmholtz equation for various elements.[4] [5] Her doctoral adviser was Franz Serafin Exner. In 1903, she became the first woman to earn a physics doctorate at Vienna University. In the same year, she took her teacher's exam for secondary schools.[6]

Work for girls' and women's education

For some years, Olga Steindler gave science lectures for women and girls on physics experiments, electricity, and other topics. She also taught at a girls' gymnasium (roughly equivalent to a preparatory high school or a grammar school) in Vienna. In 1907, she founded a girls' gymnasium in Leopoldstadt, Vienna, and the first commercial academy for girls (Wiener Handelsakademie für Mädchen) together with .[7] She became principal of the Handelsakademie, which today is located in Josefstadt.

Private life

In 1908, she married her former fellow student, physicist Felix Ehrenhaft. They had two children, Johannes Leopold Friedrich, born on 10 October 1915, and Anna Maria Luise, born 19 February 1917. Both emigrated to the United States in the 1930s.

Later life and death

Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler was awarded the Austrian honorary title Regierungsrat in 1927 or 1928 for her commitment to girls' and women's education, which was a rare distinction for women at the time,[8] and the honorary title Hofrat in 1931.

She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1929. She had surgery, but never fully recovered. Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler acquired pneumonia in 1933 and died on 21 December that year from lung embolism, aged 54.[9]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Book: Degener. Hermann A.L.. Wer ist's? Unsere Zeitgenossen. Vienna. 1935. de. 345.
  2. Bischof. Brigitte. Olga Steindler (1879 – 1933), Physikerinnen der Universität Wien – Portrait. Koryphäe. 2001. 29. 4f. de.
  3. Web site: Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler. LISE – Mädchen und naturwissenschaftlicher Unterricht. de. 21 April 2022.
  4. Rigorosenakt, Nr. 1579, Archiv der Universität Wien.
  5. Web site: Olga Steindler-Ehrenhaft, Dr.. Posch. Herbert. University of Vienna. de. 9 February 2017.
  6. Book: Biografien österreichischer [Physiker]innen]. Daniela. Angetter. Michael. Martischnig. Österreichisches Staatsarchiv. Vienna. 2005. de. 138f.
  7. Web site: Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler. Österreichische Nationalbibliothek. Christa. Bittermann-Wille. de. 22 April 2022.
  8. Book: Planer. Franz. Jahrbuch der Wiener Gesellschaft. Vienna. 1928. de. 64.
  9. News: Neue Freie Presse. 22 December 1933. Tod der Pädagogin Hofrat Olga Ehrenhaft-Steindler. de. 6.