Authors: Brenda Maddox
âawful crowd of people': RF to parents, 11 Oct. 1938, in ibid.
âridiculous fuss': RF to parents, I Feb. 1939, in ibid.
âhappened to know': RF to parents, 20 Oct. 1938, in ibid.
âtell me all': RF to parents, 16 Mar. 1939, in ibid.
âWho and what': RF to parents, 5 Feb. 1939. The relative and family friend in question was Dr Redcliffe N. Salaman, FRS (1874-1955), an authority on the potato, from the genetic, sociological and economic point of view.
RF to parents, 20 Oct. 1938. âmost exciting': RF to parents, 15 Nov. 1938.
âover which Prof. Bragg': RF to parents, 2 Nov. 1938.
âWhat is a crystal?': RF undergraduate notebook labelled Minerology, 7/8, CAC.
âpeople who choose to go into science': JC interview with Stephen Bragg, II Jan. 1985.
âThe complaint about my chemistry': RF to parents, 20 Jan. 1939.
can't find âonly be because he was American': ibid.
âWhy are you so surprised': RF to parents, âWednesday'.
âI don't know what you see in Ros': GCD (the former Peggy Clark) to AS, 9 Jun. 1976, ASA.
âI would not have gone': RF to parents, 15 Nov. 1938.
âApart from your letters': RF to parents, 20 Nov. 1938.
âThe young American historian': A.M. Schlesinger Jr,
A Life in the 20th Century,
p. 208.
âunsuitable either climatically':
The Times,
22 Nov. 1938, âJewish Refugees, Settlement Plans in the Colonies', âAdmissions to Britain Limited'.
âThe statement effectively limited': S. Sofer,
Zionism and the Foundations of Israeli Diplomacy,
p. 34.
âI cannot see why there has not been more criticism': RF to parents, 24 Nov. 1938, in Schlesinger, op. cit., p. 207.
âWhereas my forefathers': Clause 34, will of A.E. Franklin, signed 16 Jul. 1935.
âI earnestly request my named': Clause 35, ibid.
âshe knows her work': RF letter to parents, 18 Apr. 1939.
âI have made a frightful mess': RF letter to parents, 20 May 1939.
âif you are less intelligent': RF to parents, âTuesday', May ?1940.
âNow I really feel': RF letter to parents, âNewnham Tuesday'.
âThis holiday', described in M. Franklin,
Portrait,
pp. 200-1.
âHer father at first': Glynn, op. cit., p. 270, and JG to author, 2 Jul. 2001.
âI have just had a great triumph': RF to parents, 5 Oct. 1940.
âGeometrical basis': RF notebook headed âX-ray Crystallography II', 7/3.39, CAC.
âwhite things looking like eggs': RF to parents, 13 Mar. ?1940.
âOne of the social features': Gillian Sutherland, âNasty Forward Minxes', in S. J. Ormrod (ed.),
Cambridge Contributions,
p. 98.
âI am
not
one of the people': RF to parents, 26 Feb. 1940.
âthat the reply': ibid.
âI don't understand': RF to EF, 16 May 1940.
âour King': RF to parents, âTuesday', May 1940.
âwe are being beaten': RF to EF, 16 May 1940.
âExams begin': RF letter to parents, âTuesday', May 1940.
âgot a scrap of brain': RF to parents, ibid.
âShe had got a first': information from RF's letter to parents, 12 Jul. 1940, and Dainton's to AS, 8 Nov. 1976, ASA.
âquite exceptionally bad': RF to parents, âTuesday', May 1940.
âYou frequently state': RF to EF, no date; Glynn, op. cit., p. 272, places it as âpossibly summer 1940'.
âconsciously a Jew': Glynn, ibid., p. 272.
âUrsula felt': author's interview with UR, 21 Jan. 1999.
âIf it does not go': RF to parents, 12 Oct. 1940.
âI suppose ââunfurnished”': RF to MF, 1940.
âI want to have you': Fred Dainton to AS, 8 Nov. 1976; subsequent details also from this long letter and its follow-up to AS, 24 Nov. 1976, ASA.
Rosalind's St Paul's friend: Jean Kerlogue: âMemories of Rosalind'.
âbribed her fourteen-year-old brother': C. Franklin, op. cit.
âplease send my evening dress': RF to parents, 18 Feb. 1940.
âI can't think why': RF to parents, 19 Nov. 1940.
âIt was all rather exciting': RF to parents, 25 Nov. 1940.
âThe general attitude': âWomen's Place in Industry, War-time Needs and After, Engineer Trainees',
The Times,
16 Jan. 1941.
âShe was inflexible': Dainton, op. cit.
âalmost incapable': RF to parents, Newnham, 24 May 1940.
âI'm sure it sounds silly': RF to parents, 24 May 1941.
ânot sleeping': ibid.
âRosalind confessed': I.F. Neuner to AS, 22 Jan. 1971, ASM.
Â
FIVE
Holes in Coal
âbad tempered': this and other details of Norrish's character taken from Fred Dainton to AS, 24 Nov. 1976, ASA.
âon the pretext': RF to parents, 3 Oct. 1941.
âI've never had so much time': RF to parents, â7 Mill Road, Sunday'.
âa baby wireless': RF to parents, 30 Jul. 1941.
â50 per cent': A. Briggs,
The War of Words,
p. 48.
âone bomb in three': R. Neilands,
The Bomber War,
p. 58.
âYou can think it': JDB to C.P. Snow, 11 Apr. 1961, Dept. of Physics Archive, Birkbeck College, University of London.
âConsidering the experiences': RF to parents, âThe Lab, Wednesday'.
âI like long sentences': RF to parents, â7 Mill Road, Saturday'.
âquite incapable': RF to parents, â7 Mill Road, Tuesday'.
âWhen I stood up to him': RF to parents, âThe Lab, Wednesday'.
âhe on the right': this and subsequent quotes about the dinner from K.C. Paice to AS, 14 Apr. 1976, ASA.
ânot thrilling': RF to parents, â7 Mill Road, Sunday'.
âI don't know whether': ibid.
âI certainly don't mind': RF to EF, I Jun. 1942. I am extremely sorry': ibid.
â a room full of junk': ibid.
âshe was extremely kind': author's interview with Marianne Weill Baruch, II Oct. 1999.
âas I can never see it': RF to parents, 27 Jul. 1942.
âI could hardly keep': RF to MF, 7 Jun. 1942.
âIn industry': ibid.
âand a daily supply of liquid air': RF to parents, 27 Jul. 1942.
âI think the work sounds': ibid. Even washing-up': RF to Evi Ellis, 25 Jul. 1944.
âinternational reputation': see Peter J.F. Harris, Rosalind Franklin's work on coal, carbon and graphite', pp. 204-9.
âturned the signs around': Sayre, op. cit., p. 65.
âtoo good': Irene Neuner to AS, 22 Feb. 1971, ASA.
âdriven more by my fear': A. Piper, âLight on a dark lady', p. 152.
âThere are only two': Kerlogue, op. cit.
âShe wanted a swim': ibid.
âIrene will be taking': EF to CF, 10 Oct. 1943, in
Portrait,
p. 261.
âthe house will be': ibid.
âOf course, for anyone': RF to Evi Ellis, 25 Jul. 1944.
âalien Jews': RF to CF, 24 Dec. 1944,
Portrait,
p. 267.
âFinding a queue': RF to parents, 4 Jul. 1945.
âHe's merely expressed': RF to parents, 27 Jun. 1945.
âForty-three years': Hertha Ayrton in Joan Mason, The Women Fellows' Jubilee', p. 127.
â Some press reports': R.L. Sime,
Lise Meitner,
p. 327.
âIf ever you hear': RF to AW, 3 Feb. 1946, in Glynn, op. cit., p. 276.
âThermal Expansion': D.H. Bangham and R. E. Franklin, Thermal Expansion of Coals and Carbonised Coals'.
âI make you notice': Gaetan Foquet to RF, 18 Jul. 1946.
âI am quite sure': RF to MF.
â She did not talk': Kerlogue, op. cit.
âI think she would have liked': ibid.
âabrupt. . . enemies': C.H. Carlisle, Serving My Time in Crystallography at Birkbeck.'
Â
SIX
Woman of the Left Bank
âFrench speciality': JC interview with VL, 14 Jun. 1985.
âIt was a technique': Dr M. Oberlin, memorandum on Rosalind's experience at the Laboratoire Central des Services Chimiques de l'Etat; memo courtesy of A. Oberlin.
âAt great risk to himself': author's interview with Rachel Glaeser, 4 Apr. 2000.
âknowing who was alive': author's interview with Marianne Weill Baruch, II Oct. 1999.
âunEnglished': D.H. Lawrence,
Mr Noon,
pp. 134-5.
âFrance's No. 1': D. Bair,
Simone de Beauvoir,
p. 327.
âthe owner is': RF to parents, early 1947.
âwhile London mists': RF to parents, ibid.
âOf course my standard': RF to EF, 4 May 1947.
âpure research': ibid.
âOne only feels rich': ibid.
âthe newly nationalised': the basic holiday travel allowance for an adult was £100, Apr. 1946-47, falling briefly to £35 in autumn 1947, then to nil. (Source, Sanctions Unit, Bank of England Press Office.)
âliberal, Cartesian': Dr M. Oberlin to Prof. Michio Inagaki, âRosalind E. Franklin - Who was She?', published in
Energeia,
p. 4.
âsound and cheerful': ibid.
âtime of her life': ibid.
âI've been told': RF to parents, 12 May 1948.
âI've had dress material': RF to parents, 11 Oct. 1947.
âpost-war style': Jane Mulvagh to author, 7 Nov. 2001.
âdelightfully clean': RF to parents, 25 Jul. 1947.
âBananas suddenly appeared': RF to parents, 27 Jan. 1948.
âAs for your remark': RF to EF, 4 May 1947.
âgolden hands': author's interview with VL, 26 Oct. 1998.
âWhen Vittorio and Rosalind': AS interview with Dr June Goodfield, 1981, ASA.
âHe was Jewish': author's interview with VL, 26 Oct. 1998.
âToutes les jeunes filles',
author's interview with Denise Tchoubar, 4 Apr. 2000.
âAt the same time': AS interview with Mering, 28 May 1970, ASA, and author's interview with Rachel Glaeser, 4 Apr. 2000.
âpuritanical': AS interview with Rachel Glaeser, 28 May 1970, ASA; Glaeser actually used the word âprotestant'.
âterrible, hearty': AS interview with Adrienne Weill, 11 Jun. 1970, ASA.
âSomething
happened':
author's interview with UR, 20 Jan. 1999.
âsome sort of sexual': author's interview with Anne Piper, 13 Jan. 1999.
âsomething': AS interview with Jacques Mering, 28 May 1970, ASA.
âWe started out': RF to CF, 16 Aug. 1947, in Glynn, op. cit., p. 276.
âin black hat': RF to parents, 3 Apr.
âI've just had an absurd': RF to parents, 12 May 1948.
âRealities in Palestine':
Economist,
27 Mar. 1948.
âseen the 1914 war': RF to EF, 26 Mar. 1948.
âthe absence of': RF to parents, 9 Sep. 1947.
âto avert': Evelyn Waugh,
Vile Bodies,
p. 16.
âwith a good five minutes': RF to parents, âWednesday', 1948.
âIt's not dirt': Dr M. Oberlin, memo on Rosalind's experience at the Laboratoire Central des Services Chimiques de l'Etat.
âher radiation monitoring badge': G. Friedman and M. Friedland,
Medicine's 10 Greatest Discoveries,
p. 209.
âRequisitioned by the Germans': author's interview with Rachel Glaeser, 23 Mar. 2000.
âNor, come to that': CF to author, 31 Jul. 2000.
âutterly exhausted': RF to parents, âHotel di Fango, Wednesday'.
âshe settled her sleeping bag': Mering retold this story
en riant
to, among others, Denise Tchoubar: author's interview with Tchoubar, 4 Apr. 2000.
âwas like Queen Victoria': Rachel Glaeser to AS, 28 May 1970, ASA.
âmost unpleasant': RF to parents, 2 Sep. 1948.
âNor, come to that': CF to author, 31 Jul. 2000.
âDenise observed': AS interviews with Denise Luzzati, 27 and 29 May 1970, ASA.
Agnes Oberlin, for her part, believed that Mering wanted to be loved and would have returned any love he felt directed to him. Rosalind, in her view, was one of three examples of Mering accepting the boundless admiration and slavish devotion of one of his female staff, only to reject them swiftly and with rancour at the first sign of independence or intellectual discord. Oberlin to BM, 12 May 2001.
âRosalind burned': ibid.
âvery crisp and very pretty': AS interview with Dr June Goodfield, April 1981.
âwhite-shirt, dark-skirt': fashion interpretation by Jane Mulvagh, 2 Nov. 2001.
âI wish you wouldn't': RF to parents, âThursday'.
âit would be a
bad
idea': RF to Muriel, âMonday'.
âI can't face the man': RF to parents.
âTuesday'.
âDon't you realise?': R. Olby in
Daedalus,
p. 244.
âentirely reasonable': Charles Coulson to RF, II Jun. 1949, CAC.
âRosalind certainly planned': Margaret Nance Pierce to author, 22 Jan. 2001.
âalso claimed descent': CF to author, 8 Oct. 2001.
âI shan't come home': RF to CF, 10 Oct. 1949.
Â
SEVEN
Seine v. Strand
âIf you are interested': Coulson to RF, II Jun. 1949 in Olby,
The Path to the Double Helix,
p. 345.
âI am, of course': RF to Coulson, 23 Mar. 1950 in ibid., pp. 345-6.
âPhilip, an American war veteran': author's interview with Philip Hemily, 3 Nov. 1998.
âMonsieur J. Mering, for his guidance': R. Franklin, âThe Interpretation of diffuse X-ray Diagrams of Carbon.'
âhalf of me': RF to parents, 3 Mar. 1950.
âThe best I ever': RF to parents, 15 May 1950.