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Bertha Lamme Feicht

Bertha Lamme Feicht
Portrait of Bertha Lamme Feicht
Bertha Lamme Feicht in 1892
Born Bertha Lamme
(1869-12-16)December 16, 1869
Bethel Township, Clark County, Ohio, United States
Died November 20, 1943(1943-11-20) (aged 73)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Education Bachelor of Mechanical Engineering, Ohio State University
Occupation Electrical engineer
Years active 1893–1905
Employer Westinghouse
Known for First woman to receive a degree in engineering from Ohio State
Spouse(s) Russell S. Feicht
Children Florence Feicht

Bertha Lamme Feicht (December 16, 1869 – November 20, 1943) was an American engineer. In 1893, she became the first woman to receive a degree in engineering from the Ohio State University. She is considered to be the first American woman to graduate in a main discipline of engineering other than civil engineering.

She was born Bertha Lamme on her family's farm in Bethel Township near Springfield, Ohio on December 16, 1869. After graduating from Olive Branch High School in 1889, she followed in her brother, Benjamin G. Lamme's footsteps and enrolled at Ohio State that fall.

She graduated in 1893 with a degree in mechanical engineering with a specialty in electricity. Her thesis was titled "An Analysis of Tests of a Westinghouse Railway Generator." The student newspaper reported that there was an outbreak of spontaneous applause when she received her degree. She was then hired by Westinghouse as its first female engineer. She worked there until she married Russell S. Feicht, her supervisor and fellow Ohio State alumnus, on 14 December 1905.

She had one child, Florence, born in 1910, who became a physicist for the U.S. Bureau of Mines.

Bertha Lamme Feicht died in Pittsburgh on 20 November 1943 and was buried in Homewood Cemetery.

Her husband Russell died in April 1949.

Some of her personal effects, including her slide rule, T-square, and diploma, are housed in the collections of the Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh. The Westinghouse Educational Foundation, in conjunction with the Society of Women Engineers, created a scholarship named for her in 1973.


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