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  1. Bettye Washington Greene (March 20, 1935 – June 16, 1995) was an American industrial research chemist. She was one of the first few African American women to earn her PhD in chemistry and she was the first African American female Ph.D. chemist to work in a professional position at the Dow Chemical Company .

    • Bettye Greene, Bettye Washington
    • Willetta Greene Johnson, Victor M. Greene; Lisa Kianne Greene
    • William M. Greene
  2. Oct 27, 2023 · Bettye Washington Greene was a pioneer. When she began her career as a research scientist at The Dow Chemical Company in Midland, Michigan, she became the first female Black American Ph.D. chemist hired in the chemical industry. She was also the fifth Black woman to earn a Ph.D. in chemistry in the U.S.

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  4. Bettye Washington Greene became the first Black American female PhD chemist hired in the chemical industry when she began her career as a research scientist at Dow Chemical in Midland, Michigan ...

  5. Bettye Washington Greene was the first African American female Ph.D. chemist. Originally attending a segregated high school in Fort Worth, Texas before moving to Alabama for college, Greene graduated from Tuskegee Institute with a bachelor of science in chemistry. She then went on to earn her Ph.D. in physical chemistry at Wayne State University.

  6. Photograph of Dr. Bettye Washington Greene (1935-1995), believed to be the first African-American female chemist employed to work in a professional position at the Dow Chemical Company. Bettye Greene was born on March 20, 1935 in Fort Worth, Texas and earned her B.S. from the Tuskegee Institute in 1955 and her Ph.D. from Wayne State University in 1962, studying under Wilfred Heller. She began...

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    • Michigan--Midland
  7. 334. Bettye Washington Greene: An Industrial Chemist and Inventor Who Lit a Path for Innovation. 335. Washington Greene continued her career at Dow Chemical Company in Midland, Michigan, where she was hired as a research chemist in its Edgar C. Britton Research Laboratory.

  8. By the early 1960s, Washington Greene decided she wanted to continue her education. She earned her Ph.D. at Wayne State in 1965. In doing so, she became the fifth Black woman to earn a doctorate in chemistry in the U.S. Later that year, Washington Greene was recruited by Dow. She was the first Black female research scientist on the company’s ...

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