Close icon

2022-07-30 00:29:38 By : Ms. Wendy Wang

As Virginia Woolf famously said, "I would venture to guess that Anon, who wrote so many poems without signing them, was often a woman." 

Throughout history, women have often been sidelined, either due to peer pressure, lack of opportunity, or flat-out sexism. And many times, women who invented items — from disposable diapers to Monopoly — weren't given credit for their work.

Women are responsible for early sketches of the computer, the discovery of the DNA double helix, and even splitting the atom. But men claimed those advancements as their own. 

March is Women's History Month, and to celebrate, here are 14 things you didn't know were invented by women.

America's favorite board game was created by Elizabeth Magie Phillips. She called it "The Landlord's Game," and it aimed to both demonstrate the benefits of Henry George's system of land-grabbing economics and protest monopolists of the time, like John D. Rockerfeller. 

Phillips filed for a patent in 1903, and the game began to circulate among niche communities — but right as it was catching on, Charles Durow stepped in and secured a copyright for his own "enhanced" version, called Monopoly, which featured a few variations that made it easier to play. Durow then sold his game to Parker Brothers, and Phillips was largely lost to history.

Astrophysicist Vera Rubin worked with fellow researcher Kent Ford in the '60s and '70s. Together, they studied galaxies — and wondered why things like stars were able to move so rapidly without falling apart.

Rubin's calculations led her to surmise that there was an invisible force at play called "dark matter" — an idea first proposed by Fritz Zwicky in the 1930s. Fellow astronomers were initially reluctant to accept her theory, but soon physicists like Jeremiah Ostriker and James Peebles provided further framework, which cemented dark matter's place in science. 

The evidence Rubin gathered was extraordinary, and ushered in "a Copernican-scale change in cosmological theory," according to The New York Times. But Rubin never received a Nobel Prize. 

A rebellious debutante, Caresse Crosby was just 19 when she got so angry at her corset while getting ready for a ball, she called her maid for new materials including silk handkerchiefs, cord, ribbons, and a needle and thread. She sewed what we now know as a bra on the spot. 

In 1914, Crosby was able to patent her invention, which she called the "backless brassiere" — and start the Fashion Form Brassiere Company in Boston.

But she soon sold her design — for a mere $1,500 — to the Warner Brothers Corset Company, which detached her name from its history. Warner would go on to make $15 million off Crosby's invention over the next 30 years. 

Held in the same esteem as Marie Curie, experimental physicist Chien-Shiung Wu worked on the Manhattan Project — and she made a groundbreaking discovery in 1956.

Using radioactive cobalt, Wu conducted a series of experiments that disproved the Law of Parity. Two other reserachers, Tsung-Dao Lee and Chen-Ning Yang, had already theorized the invalidity of the Law — but they needed the evidence that Wu got.

Lee and Yang were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954, and Wu received nothing. She said on the matter, "Although I did not do research just for the prize, it still hurts me a lot that my work was overlooked for certain reasons." 

After working in a paper bag factory, inventor Margaret Knight realized that packing a bag would be easier if the bottoms were flat. So she created a working machine that formed and folded square-bottomed paper bags and helped them become mass-produced items.

As she set out to patent her invention, a man named Charles Annon stole her idea, going so far as to get a patent of his own. But Knight took it to court, and though Annon's defense was that "no woman could invent such an innovative machine," she ultimately won and got her patent in 1871.

While researching at King's College in 1951, Rosalind Franklin began taking X-Ray photographs of DNA structure. 

She presented her findings — which included a shot of the double helix — at a lecture, and James Watson was in attendance. He reportedly "didn't pay attention" during her presentation, and was later shown the photograph by Franklin's supervisor.

Watson and Crick's "double helix" idea was just a theory at the time, but Franklin's photographic discovery confirmed its existence. The men published their study alongside the image in 1953. 

Watson and Crick received the Nobel Prize in 1962, shortly after Franklin's death in 1958. She never received credit for it in her lifetime.

Austrian-Swedish physicist Lise Meitner conducted research on uranium with her lab partner, Otto Hahn. 

In the early 1940s, they discovered that the act of atomic nuclei splitting during "fission" releases tremendous amounts of energy. Meitner herself wrote the first theoretical explanation of the fission process after the discovery.

But her partner, Otto Hahn, received sole credit — and was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1944. Though Meitner was known as the "mother of the atomic bomb," Hahn repeatedly defended her exclusion from the prize.

During World War II, Hedy Lamarr was the epitome of beauty — but she also had brains.

She worked alongside composer George Antheil to develop her idea of "frequency hopping," which would've prevented military radios from being bugged. Her patent was brushed off by the US Navy, who classified it and filed it away — until they gradually began developing technologies based on it, with zero credit to her.

Luckily, a researcher unearthed the original patent, and Lamarr was given the Electronic Frontier Foundation Award shortly before her death in 2000.

But frequency hopping is the reason we have many modern technologies like WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS. Its invention spawned a multi-billion dollar industry of the 21st century — which Lamarr's estate still hasn't received a cent of.

Per her obituary in The Guardian, Esther Lederberg, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford University "did pioneering work in genetics, but it was her husband who won a Nobel prize."

Esther Lederberg and her husband, Joshua Lederberg, were both microbiologists who collaborated on their research — which largely focused on the transfer of bacterial colonies.

Esther discovered a virus that infects bacteria in 1951. And the couple's successful technique of transferring, called The Lederberg Method, is still being used today. 

But in 1985, Joshua accepted a Nobel Prize for Physiology of Medicine because of advancements in replica plating — for which Esther was equally as responsible. 

Mary Anderson was visiting New York City in 1902 when she noticed her driver's inconvenient solution to the snow falling — getting out of the car and wiping it off the windshield himself.

When she got home to Birmingham, Alabama, she sketched out her invention — windshield wipers — and got a patent. 

But manufacturing companies weren't interested, and Anderson didn't have any male connections in the industry to help her idea become a reality. 

So her patent expired — but she lived long enough to see windshield wipers appear on almost every car in the country. Anderson was inducted into the Inventors Hall of Fame in 2011, but she never received monetary compensation for her invention.

Ada Lovelace, unlike her literary father, loved mathematics.

She worked with a partner, inventor Charles Babbage, and the two came up with an idea for an "Analytical Machine."

In 1843, she wrote notes detailing how the device should "weave algebraic patterns just as the Jacquard loom weaves flowers and leaves" — which is essentially computer programming.

But for years historians debated who the "real" author of the notes was, assuming Lovelace couldn't have written them. Lovelace and Babbage's detailed correspondence, however, suggest the notes were hers. 

Nettie Stevens discovered XY chromosomes at the exact same time as E.B. Wilson in 1905.

After receiving degrees from Stanford and Bryn Mawr — which was groundbreaking for the time — Stevens set out to revive and expound on Mendel's genetic research.

But E.B. Wilson published his "discovery" of sex determinism at the same time, and was widely lauded as the sole discoverer. Interestingly, their reports differed slightly — Wilson claimed environmental factors affected sex, whereas Stevens thought it was only genetic.

And time has shown Stevens was the right one.

Marion Donovan was a new mom in the late '40s — and she began to get exasperated with her babies immediately soiling diaper after diaper. 

So first she invented — using her own shower curtain — a waterproof diaper cover. This was a smash hit at Saks Fifth Avenue in 1949, and by that time, Donovan was busy developing the disposable paper diaper. 

But this idea didn't catch on as quickly. Ten years after it was patented, Victor Mills decided to "use" her idea and start Pampers — without crediting Donovan. 

You've probably heard about Johnson from the Oscar-winning 2016 film "Hidden Figures."

But before her cinematic fame, Johnson was known around NASA — where she worked for 35 years — for her genius-level math skills. They earned her a place on the teams that worked on the first spacecraft launch in 1961 and the first moon landing in 1969.

Her path, however, wasn't easy. As a female African American working in the throes of the Civil Rights movement, her accomplishments often went unnoticed by her male coworkers — and she dealt with racial discrimination.