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Marie
Curie, née Sklodowska, was born in Warsaw on November 7, 1867, the daughter
of a secondary-school teacher. She received a general education in local
schools and some scientific training from her father. She became involved
in a students' revolutionary organization and found it prudent to leave
Warsaw, then in the part of Poland dominated by Russia, for Cracow, which
at that time was under Austrian rule. In 1891, she went to Paris to continue
her studies at the Sorbonne where she obtained Licenciateships in Physics
and the Mathematical Sciences. She met Pierre Curie, Professor in the
School of Physics, in 1894 and in the following year they were married.
She succeeded her husband as Head of the Physics Laboratory at the Sorbonne,
gained her Doctor of Science degree in 1903, and following the tragic
death of Pierre Curie in 1906, she took his place as Professor of General
Physics in the Faculty of Sciences, the first time a woman had held this
position. She was also appointed Director of the Curie Laboratory in the
Radium Institute of the University of Paris, founded in 1914.
Her early researches, together with her husband, were often performed
under difficult conditions, laboratory arrangements were poor and both
had to undertake much teaching to earn a livelihood. The discovery of
radioactivity by Henri Becquerel in 1896 inspired the Curies in their
brilliant researches and analyses which led to the isolation of polonium,
named after the country of Marie's birth, and radium. Mme. Curie developed
methods for the separation of radium from radioactive residues in sufficient
quantities to allow for its characterization and the careful study of
its properties, therapeutic properties in particular.
Mme. Curie throughout her life actively promoted the use of radium to
alleviate suffering and during World War I, assisted by her daughter,
Iréne, she personally devoted herself to this remedial work. She retained
her enthusiasm for science throughout her life and did much to establish
a radioactivity laboratory in her native city - in 1929 President Hoover
of the United States presented her with a gift of $50,000 donated by American
friends of science, to purchase radium for use in the laboratory in Warsaw.
Mme. Curie, quiet, dignified and unassuming, was held in high esteem and
admiration by scientists throughout the world. She was a member of the
Conseil du Physique Solvay from 1911 until her death and since 1922 she
had been a member of the Committee of Intellectual Co-operation of the
League of Nations. Her work is recorded in numerous papers in scientific
journals and she is the author of Recherches sur les Substances Radioactives
(Investigations on radioactive substances) (1904), L'Isotopie et les Eléments
Isotopes (Isotopy and isotopic elements) and the classic Traité de radioactivité
(Treatise on radioactivity) (1910).
The importance of
Mme. Curie's work is reflected in the numerous awards bestowed on her.
She received many honorary science, medicine and law degrees and honorary
memberships of learned societies throughout the world. Together with her
husband, she was awarded half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1903,
for their study into the spontaneous radiation discovered by Becquerel,
who was awarded the other half of the Prize. In 1911 she received a second
Nobel Prize, this time in Chemistry, in recognition of her work in radioactivity.
She also received, jointly with her husband, the Davy Medal of the Royal
Society in 1903 and, in 1921, President Harding of the United States,
on behalf of the women of America, presented her with one gram of radium
in recognition of her service to science.
The Curie's elder daughter, Iréne, married Frédéric Joliot in 1926 and
they were joint recipients of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1935. The
younger daughter, Eve, married the American diplomat H.R. Labouisse. They
have both taken lively interest in social problems, and as Director of
the United Nations' Children's Fund he received on its behalf the Nobel
Peace Prize in Oslo in 1965. She is the author of a famous biography of
her mother, Madame Curie (Gallimard, Paris, 1938), translated into several
languages.
Mme. Curie died at
Savoy, France, after a short illness, on July 4, 1934.
From Nobel Lectures,
Chemistry 1901-1921.
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