Elmina Wilson

@First Lady of Structural Engineering, Birthday and Family

Elmina Wilson was the first woman to receive a four-year civil engineering degree (BSCE) from Iowa State University (ISU)

Sep 29, 1870

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 29, 1870
  • Died on: June 2, 1918
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: First Lady of Structural Engineering, Engineers, Civil Engineers
  • Gender: Female
  • Sun Sign: Libra
  • Famous as: First Lady of Structural Engineering

Elmina Wilson never married; she dedicated her entire life to her profession. She remained close to her siblings throughout life and loved to travel and sketch in her leisure time. She also enjoyed painting and playing tennis.

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Personal Life

She died after a prolonged illness on June 2, 1918, just months short of her 48th birthday, leaving behind a rich legacy of engineering achievements..

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Personal Life

Elmina Wilson was born on September 29, 1870 to John C. and Olive (Eaton) Wilson, as one of their seven children. Both her parents descended from Scottish immigrants.

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Childhood & Early Life

The Wilsons were very family oriented and the children had close relations with their grandparents. The family also believed in the value of education and encouraged all their children—including the daughters—to study as much as possible.

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Childhood & Early Life

Elmina grew up in a period that was marked by engineering and architectural achievements in the American society. She witnessed the completion of the historic St. Louis Bridge in 1874 and of Chicago’s first skyscraper, the Home Insurance Building, in 1885, among others.

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Childhood & Early Life

From an early age she was interested in mathematics and eventually developed a fascination with bridges, skyscrapers, and towers. Studying engineering seemed to be the most natural choice for the young girl.

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Childhood & Early Life

She enrolled at the Iowa State University (ISU) where the dean of engineering, Anson Marston, a man of progressive values became her mentor. She successfully completed her four-year civil engineering degree (BSCE) in 1892 under his guidance.

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Childhood & Early Life

After completing her studies, Elmina Wilson was appointed an engineering instructor at the ISU, and rose through the ranks to eventually become an associate professor. She took a sabbatical in between to study architectural and engineering works in Europe with her younger sister Alda who was also an engineering graduate.

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Career

In addition to her teaching career, she also worked with engineering and architectural firms, including a stint as a structural engineer for Purdy and Henderson, then the country's leading engineering designer of skyscrapers. One of the major projects she worked on was the historic Flatiron Building in Manhattan.

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Career

Elmina’s father John passed away in 1912. Following this, she went to work as a structural engineer for John S. Browne, consulting engineers. She collaborated with Alda in 1916 to prepare the architectural and engineering drawings for the Teachers Cottage or Helmich House at the Arrowmont Arts and Crafts School in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. The building is today listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Career

The Wilson sisters were also actively involved with groups engaged in promoting women’s rights and were long-time members of local women’s rights groups like the College Equal Suffrage League, Woman Suffrage Party, and Woman’s Political Union.

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Career

Elmina served as president of the Woman Suffrage Club of the 23rd Assembly District, Manhattan Borough, and became acquainted with the prominent supporters of the women’s suffrage movement like Carrie Chapman Catt, Susan B. Anthony, and Eleanor Roosevelt.

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Career

Elmina Wilson was the first woman to receive a Bachelor of civil engineering degree at Iowa State College, and the first one to complete her master’s degree in the field. Known as the "first lady of structural engineering”, she collaborated with Marston to build the 168-foot-tall Ames, Iowa, water tower, the first raised steel tower west of the Mississippi.

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Major Works