Christa Jungnickel (11 April 1935 – 12 August 1990) was a German-American historian of science.
Life
Jungnickel was originally from Germany, one of three daughters of a German soldier who was lost in Russia during World War II. As a teenager, she emigrated with her family to the US; her mother, formerly an office worker, became a house cleaner in San Francisco. Jungnickel herself began work after high school as a typist and later an accountant for a stock broker, while studying part-time at the University of San Francisco. She eventually transferred to full-time study at Stanford University, working there with historian Jacqueline Strain. After graduating in 1969, she began graduate study at the University of Pennsylvania, but transferred in 1972 to Johns Hopkins University, and completed her doctorate at Johns Hopkins in 1978 with a dissertation concerning the Royal Saxon Academy of Sciences.[1]
Jungnickel's doctoral supervisor was Russell McCormmach, whom she married.
When Jungnickel fell ill of cancer in 1983,[1] McCormmach left academia and they moved to Eugene, Oregon,[2] where they remained until she died in 1990 of an unrelated heart condition.[1]
With McCormmach, Jungnickel also wrote a biography of Henry Cavendish, the book Cavendish (American Philosophical Society, 1996), updated as Cavendish: The Experimental Life (Bucknell University Press, 1999).[5]
References
^ abcPyenson, Lewis (September 1991), "Eloge: Christa Jungnickel, 11 April 1935–12 August 1990", News of the profession, Isis, 82 (3), University of Chicago Press: 519–520, doi:10.1086/355840, S2CID143462003
Crawford, Elisabeth (December 1988), "Competition and centralisation in German and French science in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: The theses of Joseph Ben-David", Minerva, 26 (4): 618–626, JSTOR41820821
Deltete, Robert J. (March 2019), HOPOS: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science, 9 (1): 209–211, doi:10.1086/701866, S2CID172027895{{citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
^Gregory, Frederick (June 1988), "Prize announcements", News of the profession: Annual Meeting of the History of Science Society 29 October–1 November 1987, Isis, 79 (2): 239–242, doi:10.1086/354698, JSTOR233607, S2CID145663751
^Reviews of Cavendish and Cavendish: The Experimental Life: