Jane Ingham

Rose Marie "Jane" Ingham (née TupperCarey /ˌtˈʌpə ˈkɛəri/ ; 15 August 1897  10 September 1982) was an English botanist and scientific translator. She was appointed research assistant to Joseph Hubert Priestley in the Botany Department at the University of Leeds, and together, they were the first to separate cell walls from the root tip of broad beans. They analysed these cell walls and concluded that they contained protein. She carried out experiments on the cork layer of trees to study how cells function under a change of orientation and found profound differences in cell division and elongation in the epidermal layer of plants.

Jane Ingham
Ingham (left) with Albert Ingham (right) in 1966
Born
Rose Marie TupperCarey

(1897-08-15)15 August 1897
Leeds, England
Died10 September 1982(1982-09-10) (aged 85)
Cambridge, England
Alma materUniversity of Leeds (1928 (1928): MSc)
Spouse
(m. 1932; died 1967)
Children2
RelativesMichael Sadleir (brother-in-law)
Scientific career
Fields
  • Apical meristems
  • Gravitropism
  • Plant genetics
  • Plant physiology
  • Secondary growth
Institutions
  • Citadel Hill Laboratory, Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, Plymouth
  • Botany Department, University of Leeds
  • Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics, Cambridge
ThesisGeotropism or Gravity and Growth (1928)
Academic advisorsJoseph Hubert Priestley

At Leeds, Ingham was appointed sub-warden of Weetwood Hall, and honorary secretary of the British-Italian League. In 1930, she joined the Imperial Bureau of Plant and Crop Genetics at the School of Agriculture in Cambridge, England, as a scientific officer and translator. The bureau was responsible for publishing a series of abstract journals on various aspects of crop breeding and genetics. In 1932, she married Albert Ingham, then a fellow and director of studies at King's College, Cambridge. Ingham spent the war years in Princeton, New Jersey, with her two sons, not wishing to return to England after travelling to the US just before the outbreak of World War II. In the last years of her life, she and her husband travelled extensively, and in 1982, she died at Cambridge.

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