Anna Margaret Mullikin (March 7, 1893 – August 24, 1975) was a mathematician who was one of the early investigators of point set theory.[1][2] She received her BA from Goucher College in 1915 and went on to attend University of Pennsylvania for doctoral work. She was Robert Lee Moore's third student, graduating in 1922 with a dissertation titled Certain Theorems Relating to Plane Connected Point Sets. Her dissertation was published that year in Transactions of the American Mathematical Society[3] and subsequently became the catalyst for significant advances in the field.[1] She spent most of her subsequent career as a secondary school mathematics teacher. During 1921–1922 she had taught at Oak Lane Country Day School, which served preschool and elementary-aged children. She later became a mathematics teacher at Germantown High School (Philadelphia); there she became a mentor to Mary-Elizabeth Hamstrom, who became a student of Moore and professional mathematician herself.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Bartlow, T. L. and Zitarelli, D. E. (2009) Who Was Miss Mullikin?, American Mathematical Monthly 116(2), 99-114.
  2. Zitarelli, D. E. (2009) Connected Sets and the AMS: 1901-1921, Notices of the American Mathematical Society 56(4), 450-458.
  3. Mullikin, A. (1922) Certain Theorems Relating to Plane Connected Point Sets, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 24, 144-162.
  4. Wetzel, John E. (Spring 2010), "In Memoriam: Mary-Elizabeth Hamstrom" (PDF), Math Times, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Department of Mathematics, pp. 12–13. Also published as "Mary-Elizabeth Hamstrom", News-Gazette, December 10, 2009.


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